H
hwh
Yes, but don't forget the Belgian system H with 1.25MHz vsb ...
http://stjarnhimlen.se/tv/tv.html
A list of systems is one of the many facts on this page.
gr, hwh
Yes, but don't forget the Belgian system H with 1.25MHz vsb ...
tankloads of really radioactive crap that's still there, 65 years later
QUOTE
Hanford officials had estimated there were about 10 kilograms of
plutonium in the site's 56 million gallons of radioactive sludge.
UNQUOTE
That is a most excellent website!hwh said:
In message said:In message <[email protected]>, David Looser
[]Well it might, but in practice there don't seem to have been many problems
caused by not harmonising spectrum use with the the continent. To be honest
I think the government made the right decision, the limited VHF spectrum
available in Bands 1 & 3 would only just have been enough for one extra
625-line TV channel.
? - one on band I and at least one on band III, surely? I lived in
(West) Germany in the 1960s and '70s, and I'm sure we could get at least
two channels on band III (yes, I know B and G channels are narrower, but
not that much).
Were both channels available nationwide or just in densely populated
areas?
Or is German topography more amenable to providing large area coverage
with fewer transmitters?
There were indeed such plains east of Dortmund; our lot* went there a(I'm thinking here of the German plains that we were told for many years
provided ease of access for Soviet tanks ...)
Mike Tomlinson said:IIRC, it was to make it easier for colour-blind people to identify.
There's also been another change: the cores in T&E (=romex) used to be
red and black for phase and neutral, now it's been harmonised with
Europe to brown and blue.
Three-phase wiring has been harmonised from red, blue and yellow for the
It _does_ seem odd. Not only the change keeping black but for aphases and black neutral to brown, black, black and blue neutral. Yeah,
I know...
Its hardly a "claim", its there in Black & White in Appendix 7 of BS7671:J. P. Gilliver (John) said:It _does_ seem odd. Not only the change keeping black but for a different
purpose, but also having _two_ of the phases the same colour. (If that
_is_ truly the case and not one of them grey, as some have claimed in this
thread.)
I'm sure it is, but as we've already established that the "exact point inMichael A. Terrell said:That's very easy to do with film. I should know. I loaded and ran
truckloads of 16 mm film on a pair of RCA TP66 projectors in the '70s.
How do you confuse the bright orange medical grade with the ivory
white or brown consumer hardware?
I'll beleive that when pigs fly, and I'm not talking about 'PIGS IN
SPACE!!!' ;-)
Michael A. Terrell said:We wouldn't need to do it, if you Europeans would stop starting World
Wars.
Michael A. Terrell said:They had UK outlets, and the 'voltmeter was about 1/2" * 3/4" like the
tiny VU meters that were popular 30 years ago in battery powered tape
recorders.
David Looser said:According to the history books the US entered WW2 because it was attacked by
the Japanese. It seems that Michael A. Terrell thinks that Japan is in
Europe.
I'm also still puzzled by the claim that "tourists" are buying socket
outlets in flea markets in the US to bring home with them. Socket outlets
are simply far too cheap here to make it worth the bother and expense of
purchasing with foreign currency and then having to pack in one's
weight-limited luggage.
"Look what I've brought you as a souvenir of my holiday in Florida, its a
cheaply made Chinese copy of a BS1363 outlet",
David said:According to the history books the US entered WW2 because it was attacked by
the Japanese. It seems that Michael A. Terrell thinks that Japan is in
Europe.
Geoffrey said:Looking back in hindsight, it would have been very likely that if Europe was
not invaded in 1994, by 1946 the Luftwaffe would of had a jet engine
bomber that was undetectable until 20 miles of the coast, able to
fly to New York and an atomic bomb to drop from it.
Andy said:No, the phases are *NOT* brown, black & black, they are brown, black and
grey - with blue as neutral.
Old German (flex - I don't know about house) colours were red, black,
and grey - I can't remember which was which.
Looking back in hindsight, it would have been very likely that if Europe was
not invaded in 1994, by 1946 the Luftwaffe would of had a jet engine
bomber that was undetectable until 20 miles of the coast, able to
fly to New York and an atomic bomb to drop from it.