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Yeah, and you can put symbols inside the triangle symbol to denote analog ground, digital ground, power-line ground, signal ground, antenna ground, Angus beef ground (my favorite)... ad infinitum. Grounds can be very creative.Yes, I would think the triangle common ground would be the appropriate symbol.
What! I didn't have to do that? What am I gonna do with that eight feet of copperweld steel rod, laboriously buried in the backyard as part of a counterpoise for my end-fed inverted "L" amateur radio antenna? That was quite a chore until I realized it could be driven vertically instead of laid horizontally eight feet deep.Make me wonder how many people have driven ground rods into the earth trying to satisfy the ground symbols.
"A pint's a pound" refers to the fact that a US pint of water weighs (about) one pound, as do most edible things packaged in pint jars of density similar to water. It's just a rough "rule of thumb" with no legal definition AFAIK. More than you ever wanted to know about pint measure can be found here.A pint is a measurement of volume not weight. A liquid US pint does equal 16fl oz.
It was the 'World around' that I had the issue with."A pint's a pound" refers to the fact that a US pint of water weighs (about) one pound, .
Yep, That's why they stipulate "liquid" or "fluid". So just saying pint by itself means area. If I have 2 pint containers, one filled with molasses and the other with cotton candy, they are going to weigh quite differently."A pint's a pound" refers to the fact that a US pint of water weighs (about) one pound, as do most edible things packaged in pint jars of density similar to water. It's just a rough "rule of thumb" with no legal definition AFAIK.
Thanks for bringing us back on task.BTW, the circuit as drawn does not identify the amplifier output as pin 5.
Not sure I follow, the US pint of water is 16fl oz and the Imp pint of the same is 20Fl oz .The saying should ring true then.
A (liquid US) pints a pound(US), and a (liquid imperial) pints a pound (imperial).
You could pack the cotton candy down to the density of molasses to make the weight the same while filling the same volume of container... just saying. Anyone besides me and my wife notice how the "standard" one pound can of food is now less than a pound and the cost is either the same or more than before? Didn't the marketing bozos realize they could save even more money by shrinking the container too?Yep, That's why they stipulate "liquid" or "fluid". So just saying pint by itself means area. If I have 2 pint containers, one filled with molasses and the other with cotton candy, they are going to weigh quite differently.
Anti-clockwise actually (unless you have one of those joke clocks).