E
Eeyore
martin said:Eeyore wrote
20 what, pushups? ....
I'd need to exercise a bit to do 20.
Mind you, I fancy my chances over Jim Thompson any day.
Graham
martin said:Eeyore wrote
20 what, pushups? ....
I'm going to have some 7,000G shock testing done real soon. That should beJoerg said:Hello Jim,
There are various grades when simulating "truck". There is the smooth
glide along Interstate 80, then there is the not so smooth rumble from
Shannon Airport to Ballinsloe, and then there is the driver who tries to
find the "speed of least shaking" on a sastrugi track through the Sahara
desert.
After finishing a hi-rel module they showed me the impact tables where
it'll all be tested. Now I knew where that regular ka-bummmmph sound was
coming from. They raised the unit several feet and then let it drop onto
a concrete pad. Then again. And again. Every once in a while someone
would pour another layer. The concrete slowly became a pillar that drove
itself into the ground.
sorry, G, not going on that personal insult route.I'd need to exercise a bit to do 20.
Mind you, I fancy my chances over Jim Thompson any day.
Graham
I'm going to have some 7,000G shock testing done real soon. That should be
really interesting to watch. Not often does one get to play with explosive
charges.
(I'm not doing it: a contract lab so should be safe)
martin said:sorry, G, not going on that personal insult route.
Jim's probably ok in real life, the pics I saw of him, just a happy
family![]()
Nah, sorry not going there, as far as I'm concerned ( when sober)He called me fat though !
Just look at those pics !
Graham
Hello John,
Wooden? Oh man. I hope it has at least a light-weight upper floor and
roof, for when the next big one hits. I remember a picture you posted
with a scarily mounted lifting crane.
During an EMI job on an ultrasound machine they didn't really believe we
had shortwave radio interference. Until I asked them for the register
address that could change the Doppler CF and fiddled with it. The sound
of Big Ben was echoing through the engineering lab and the BBC World
Service news came out of the speakers...
Once I saw that from a plane taking off. Only the top stuck out after we
punched through the thick cloud layer. I could still bite myself that I
had left the camera in the baggage bin.
martin said:Nah, sorry not going there, as far as I'm concerned ( when sober)
personal comments/insults are not what I'm here for, I may dislike
what Mr.T votes for, but I'll try not to insult Jim personally, but it
can be difficult, can't it![]()
Indeed, their lossiness is very handy.
Have you ever tried intentionally injecting modulated RF into a front end btw ?
Graham
It sounds to me like we're comparing lossy low-pass filters to common-mode
chokes here. Isn't that kind of like apples and tomatoes?
On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 08:28:34 -0800, John Larkin
[snip]
You're very polite, John.
Eeyore/Graham IS stupid AND ignorant ;-)
...Jim Thompson
Well, at least he does let his emotions interfere with his thinking.
John
Sno-o-o-o-ort ;-)
...Jim Thompson
On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 10:34:26 -0700, Jim Thompson
On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 08:28:34 -0800, John Larkin
[snip]
You're very polite, John.
Eeyore/Graham IS stupid AND ignorant ;-)
...Jim Thompson
Well, at least he does let his emotions interfere with his thinking.
John
Sno-o-o-o-ort ;-)
...Jim Thompson
Wasn't meant to be a joke, actually. One of the hardest things to do
in this business is to not let your emotions distort your perceptions
or screw up your judgements.
John
... I tend to be persistently difficult and don't let clients push me
into a quick crappy solution... makes some of them angry with me :-(
Yep. Probably my worst short-coming, or maybe it's a long-coming ;-)
... I tend to be persistently difficult and don't let clients push me
into a quick crappy solution... makes some of them angry with me :-(
On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 08:28:34 -0800, John Larkin
The load cell based weigh scales used for mixing semiconductor gasses
at Praxair have a 100 kg capacity with 1 mg resolution - 8 digits. The
plant manager claimed that they were the most accurate scales in
existence. I didn't get the linearity spec, but I would be surprised
if it was worse than 7 digits, as linearity is the only thing that
counts in this application and cost is nearly irrelevant. Some
processes require dopants mixed to concentrations as low as 200 ppb
(in multiple dilution steps), where once mixed it is impossible to
verify mixing accuracy with any existing instrument. If you can come
up with a mass spectrometer that can measure dopant and impurity
concentration with a few ppb accuracy (as opposed to the few tens of
ppb now available) you could probably sell at least one to every
semiconductor gasses plant in existence. All 3 of them IIRC.
Have you looked at the TI ADS1232/4 - looks pretty good for moderate
accuracy load cell weighing, as does the older and more available
AD7730 (I am still waiting for my ADS1232 eval board to arrive,
ordered several months ago). I intend to put it in the load cell with
only a few cm of strain gage leads inside the shielded load cell
enclosure, with filtering then only required on the power leads to a
precision linear regualtor also inside the load cell enclosure.
I'm going to have some 7,000G shock testing done real soon. That should be
really interesting to watch. Not often does one get to play with explosive
charges.
(I'm not doing it: a contract lab so should be safe)
M Walter
Eeyore said:If he'd stop his own insulting behaviour......
He's simply on the receiving end of what *he* started.
Graham
Jim said:On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 08:28:34 -0800, John Larkin
You're very polite, John.
Eeyore/Graham IS stupid AND ignorant ;-)
or strip a bit of braid off a hank of coal
and make a more local source you can wave around.