Thread: Power Inverters
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Dave Plowman (News) Dave Plowman (News) is offline
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Default Power Inverters

In article ,
Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Can't be that good if you had to repair over 1000.



I did it for a living, in a large city. That 1000+ radios was all
brands. The Delcos usually took less time to repair than it took to
write the service ticket. The Philco, Motorola & Bendix took a half
hour to one and a half hours, while the Blaupunkt repairs averaged nine
months, because they were so damn slow to ship parts to their US
distributor. No part we needed was EVER in stock.


Right. So your opinion of a design is clouded by spares availability?


They were durable, because they were
better designed. Philco was the worst US design, followed by the
Japanese radios, then the European designs. I never saw anything from
Russia, but I've heard that they were even worse.


ignorance may be bliss, but it damages lots of equipment.

Sure it might if you're stupid enough to disconnect the battery with
the engine running.


So, you claim that batteries never fail, or battery lugs come loose?


It's not common, no. And the usual first symptom is the car won't start.



Are you really that ignorant? A lot of failures occur while on the
road. A worn battery cable can arc to the frame, cusing a large splie.
The fusible link can open, a battery cable can come off. It has all
happened, more than once. I can see you aren't smart enough to
uderstand the ramiofications, so this will be my last reply to your
ignoerant comments.


Strange. I've owned - and had experience of - hundreds of cars. And never
had this happen. Despite the majority having Lucas electrics.


You've never seen an open fusible link? You are just a parts changer
who doesn't understand the intimate details of a design.


Heh heh. That from the one who thinks early Blaupunkt was badly made...



They were crap. At least whatever they exported to the US was. We
were the only shop for 100 miles who would even repair them in the
'70s. The parts were crammed in tightly, the wiring harnesses were
brittle, and broke quite easily. I still have some manuals, showing what
crap they were. Some had clusters of cheap Japanese style resistors
standing on end, that vibrated & cracked the leads. Just trying to
locate the bad one would break several that were already weak from metal
fatigue.


My first one was a Frankfurt bought in the '60s when it was one of the few
available with FM - as well as LW, MW and SW. The only thing that went
wrong with that in a long life was the on/off switch which was part of the
volume control. A new part was in stock. And it appeared to be very well
made. I've no experience of their OEM stuff - I've no doubt it was made
down to a price same as all other OEM radios. It was transferred from car
to car - for a long time. I didn't junk it after buying a cars with
reasonable factory fit stuff - and sold it on Ebay not that long ago for
more than it cost new.



http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=com.microsoft%3Aen-us%3AIE-SearchBox&rlz=1I7GGLD&q=automotive+electrical+load +dump

Results 1 - 10 of about 177,000 for automotive electrical load dump.
(0.30 seconds)


You seem very hung up about it. Is it the latest fad?



Hung up? Fad? 177,000 hits isn't a fad, idiot.


You don't know much about search engines, do you?

It has been well
known by electrical engineers who designin automotive electronics since
the early '60s. One of the first hits was from the IEEE, but I doubt
you have any idea who or what they are.


Go to news:sci.electronics.design and let some of the older engineers
tell you of the damaged equipment and explosions from load dumps in the
labs.


In the labs. Says it all.



Its nothing like Ni-Cad 'Memory effect' which was reported in
some spacecraft that had the exact same charging cycle, over and
over due to their constant orbit. The effect was proven in the lab
by duplicating the charging cycles. By varying the charge cycles
that doesn't occur.


Indeed. But plenty thought it could happened to their mobile phones, etc.



Plenty of idiots who failed science class and who believe in old
wives tales and don't understand the chemietry involved.


My point exactly.

Have you ever done any real design work, or ar you just another
ignorant parts changer? My design work is in space. Some is aboard the
International Space Station, comprising one of the main audio, video &
data communications systems. Definitely a place where you have to be
damn sure that your designs will not take out the main DC power buss, or
be affected by transients.


Lucas called themselves Lucas Aerospace...

--
*I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe*

Dave Plowman London SW
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