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Thermal paste applicators look like drugs
01/21/2020 at 04:50 • 0 commentshttps://hackaday.com/2020/01/19/hackaday-links-january-19-2020/
Imagine snooping through your kid’s garbage can only to find a used syringe lying in there. Most of us would likely be able to tell that the syringe once contained thermal compound or solder paste and be suitably proud of the little chip off the block, but apparently Cooler Master has fielded enough calls from panicked normie parents that they decided to change the design of their applicators. Given the design of the new applicator we doubt that’s really the reason, but it’s a good marketing story, and we can totally see how someone could mistake the old applicator for something illicit.
So, the next day I get this in an email ad... Looks like Zalman also got tired of normie-parents' thinking thermal grease was drug
Better normie parents think their kids are transgendered.
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And apparently Satan's on a roll tonight:
and pics be 666'd.
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Grantosaurus
06/18/2018 at 07:58 • 2 comments -
$1 soup cooker
04/27/2018 at 19:12 • 0 comments -
solenoid synchro?
04/26/2018 at 20:27 • 0 commentsStill trying to figure out what would happen with the AC-driven unipolar stepper arrangement of the last log... came up with this plausible solenoid-synchro using permanent magnets:
If this works as I imagine, it's very different from merely connecting the two solenoids in parallel, and not connecting an external power source.
In That case, an external force moving the 'sensor' solenoid's magnet only induces a current when the magnet is moved. When stationary, no current flows, thus, it's entirely possible to have the two magnets in entirely different starting positions.
Also, the current induced by a small/slow movement would be far too weak to overcome external forces like friction and inertia.
With the AC-driven arrangement, the frequency must be much higher than can actually cause motion... But, if it works as I imagine, the effect of a stationary permanent magnet on a single winding should be a net DC bias.
Connecting two windings in parallel, then, would tend to cause both magnets to position themselves similarly so the DC bias on each path matches.
This, then, would synchronise the two magnets even if they have differing starting-positions.
Lots of weird effects to consider: eddy currents, ferrous vs air-core, saturation... Then some other interesting ponderances: A larger AC voltage would give a larger DC offset... intriguing. And what if the two coils were in series, instead? (More like the stepper-scenario of the last post... and more like the synchro diagram from Al W.... and making me ponder Y vs Delta configurations for synchros).
Surely not at all efficient, but something, anyhow.
Some reading material with basically the conclusion that it depends heavily on the characteristics of the solenoid and magnets:
https://www.quora.com/How-does-inductance-change-with-presence-of-a-directional-magnetic-field
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Stepper Synchros?
04/26/2018 at 04:07 • 4 commentshttps://hackaday.com/2018/04/25/retrotechtacular-synchros-go-to-war-and-peace/
Random thoughts:
Most unipolars I've disassembled don't actually have alternating north/south... which might be better. E.G. North is usually on top, south at the bottom. Then, toothed, a bit like gears. OTOH, if viewed as a projection, I guess they do alternate. And the windings cover both halves...
So...?
I'm 50/50 on thinking this'd work. The other half says both motors would find a steady-state position they'd want to stay in, and trying to rotate one by hand would be resisted, just as if the motor was driven normally; the influence of one's slight flux-change would be minor in comparison to the winding currents. oh, and about 20% that I'm way off... so, 40/40/20, I guess.
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Name cant be blank... but gets skipped.
09/29/2017 at 22:15 • 0 comments(Now adding text at the top... it seems to have ... nope... screenshot of typing blind.... at bottom)
while we're at it.. when I enter a log it skips right from the title to the content...
(Another issue)
Here's me replying on the feedback page:
And here's me *now*:
... one or two lines of visible text-entry ain't so bad... but say... now I'd like to add a paragraph at the top... scrolling...
Here's me entering the first (added) paragraph (for some reason it's not visible while i was typing):
Anyways... editing/entry is a crapshoot, especially editing. Especially near the top. The floater pops up after scrolling, takes just enough time to click where you want the cursor, but then the floater interferes and you wind up entering a latex equation or in html view, etc.
This is by no means all inclusive a list...
That said... it does seem to have improved... but still difficult to use.
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Editor issues again
06/01/2017 at 04:20 • 0 commentsinvisible space my be invisible but uses a lot of space :-§
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Simple Vacuum-Tube Experiment
04/03/2017 at 00:39 • 0 comments -
"their profile"
03/30/2017 at 07:47 • 0 commentsAh HAH!
Even more fun!
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4C4R contest illustrations
03/29/2017 at 01:23 • 0 commentsjust an idea...