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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#121
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "N_Cook" wrote in message ... one reply got into print * The Guardian, * Thursday April 10 2008 Getting the lead out Thank you for publishing the article on tin whiskers (Within a whisker of failure, April 3). Too much attention has been given to well-meaning people who are pushing the environmental agenda but with very little science behind what they are trying to achieve. Some of the green community captured the public attention and pushed through the no lead on electronics, when there was not sufficient test data available (actually there was a lot of data on US military aircraft). Now we are finding the problems of having a political agenda and not one based on science and facts. Steven Adamson, IMAPS president and Asymtek market manager -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ Very nicely put by Mr Adamson and, whilst The Guardian is not one of my favourite rags, all credit to them for at least publishing a reply that swims against the tide, and does not tow the government line ... It's good to see some 'alternative' views finally making themselves heard in the public domain ! Arfa |
#122
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
Whenever I see references to amalgam fillings in this context, I always wonder just how 'real' the improvement in perceived well-being is. I don't doubt that you feel better now you have had them removed, but I really wonder how much of that is because you *expected* to feel better, because that's why you were having them removed? It's been shown that amalgam fillings release mercury vapor only when you grind down hard on them. They're otherwide inert. I grind my teeth a lot at night, and my mercury fillings never rasp found twinkle fertilizer instilled doric plate. -- "Theoretically, there is nothing that can stop the government from taxing 100% of income so long as the people get benefits from the government commensurate with their income which is taxed." -- Barack Obama |
#123
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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Archimedes' Lever wrote:
On 10 Apr 2008 08:18:32 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: I put it right there in front of you: They measure ELECTRIC POTENTIAL otherwise known as "VOLTAGE", between a filling and a reference point. TOATAL BULL****, you ****ing idiot! I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. If anything, I admit that discussing this topic in a group related to electronics is highly inappropriate, and I feel *very* embarrassed that I unwittingly led the discussion in this direction. I hope to wind this down soon. I've posted enough links to Wikipedia that anyone who has interest can just go read them, and learn much more than I have to offer on my own. And don't knock my little story without checking out the reader's comments to Dr. Huggins' book on Amazon.com if you haven't already. If those things don't do it for you, I don't think anything will ... and that's perfectly ok with me! Enjoy your own reality however you prefer it. Jay Ts -- To contact me, use this web page: http://www.jayts.com/contact.php |
#124
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() Jay Ts wrote: I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. Haven't you figured out that you are playing with the resident SED troll? -- aioe.org is home to cowards and terrorists Add this line to your news proxy nfilter.dat file * drop Path:*aioe.org!not-for-mail to drop all aioe.org traffic. http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM |
#125
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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#126
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() krw wrote: In article , says... Jay Ts wrote: I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. Haven't you figured out that you are playing with the resident SED troll? "The"??? Ok, the HEAD troll. Happy now? ;-) -- aioe.org is home to cowards and terrorists Add this line to your news proxy nfilter.dat file * drop Path:*aioe.org!not-for-mail to drop all aioe.org traffic. http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM |
#128
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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[previous discussion of mercury, not lead in solder, snipped]
Arfa Daily wrote: Hmmm. Your passion for this subject is clear. I do, however, remain unconvinced that this is anything other than placebo effect, which has been shown in proper clinical trials, to be an extremely powerful entity. I totally understand, and if things had gone just a little differently in my life, I might have written something very similar to what you did just above. Aside from appearances, I really don't want to try to convince people. If anything, my motivation for writing on the topic of heavy metal toxicity here is to share my personal experiences, and maybe help others. The _last_ thing I want is for people to read my posts, and immediately decide, based solely on what I wrote, to go get their mercury fillings removed. Or for that matter, make any huge change in their lifestyle. If that happened, it would _seriously_ disturb me. I do not want to have that much responsibility over anyone else's life. I would very likely decide to stop posting stuff online for at least 2 years, while I tried to figure out what went wrong and how to avoid it ever happening again in the future. I am not such an expert, and my own story is not compelling enough, that I alone can or should have any effect such as that. But some people might want to look into the subject more, and suspect that some health issue may be related to heavy metals in their body, and carefully explore options. If you could show me a study that didn't call on hearsay and personal anecdotal evidence, and that could show that a body's mercury content decreased, or at least arrested in its upward climb after such fillings had been removed, then I might be more inclined to accept that there's something in it. Can you show any such study conducted under proper scientific protocols ? If you're looking for something like that, then you need to consult an expert on the subject. You might be able to find something through those Wikipedia links I posted yesterday. I was really surprised at how much has happened in this area since I first learned about it. I don't think I can do better discussing this subject than post the links, as I said in my other post today. If this thread doesn't go any farther for me, I want to at least thank all the people who disagreed with me, even "Archimedes", for pushing me to find the additional information that supports what I had earlier written. I'm wise enough to know that there is a completely different side to the matter. Someone else can take the position that mercury is safe, and some people have even argued that it has benefits, and supported that position with scientific research. This amazes me, but the bottom line is that if you believe or believe in something, and decide that it is "what's real", it will at least seem real to you, and the darned thing about it is that you'll perceive all sorts of evidence to support your reality. So I try to respect other people in their views (even Archimedes, although that's definitely a challenge). Peace to everyone, Jay Ts -- To contact me, use this web page: http://www.jayts.com/contact.php |
#129
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() krw wrote: In article , says... krw wrote: In article , says... Jay Ts wrote: I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. Haven't you figured out that you are playing with the resident SED troll? "The"??? Ok, the HEAD troll. Happy now? ;-) Ok, but that makes Junior the ASS troll. A reputation he has worked very hard to maintain, too. ![]() -- aioe.org is home to cowards and terrorists Add this line to your news proxy nfilter.dat file * drop Path:*aioe.org!not-for-mail to drop all aioe.org traffic. http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM |
#130
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Jay Ts wrote: I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. Haven't you figured out that you are playing with the resident SED troll? Sorry, I'm new here. But yes, it's quite obvious at this point. Jay Ts -- To contact me, use this web page: http://www.jayts.com/contact.php |
#131
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On 10 Apr 2008 22:48:41 GMT, Jay Ts
wrote: Archimedes' Lever wrote: On 10 Apr 2008 08:18:32 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: I put it right there in front of you: They measure ELECTRIC POTENTIAL otherwise known as "VOLTAGE", between a filling and a reference point. TOATAL BULL****, you ****ing idiot! I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. If anything, I admit that discussing this topic in a group related to electronics is highly inappropriate, and I feel *very* embarrassed that I unwittingly led the discussion in this direction. I hope to wind this down soon. I've posted enough links to Wikipedia that anyone who has interest can just go read them, and learn much more than I have to offer on my own. And don't knock my little story without checking out the reader's comments to Dr. Huggins' book on Amazon.com if you haven't already. If those things don't do it for you, I don't think anything will ... and that's perfectly ok with me! Enjoy your own reality however you prefer it. --- Read this: http://www.quackwatch.com/01Quackery...s/mercury.html JF |
#132
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "John Fields" wrote in message ... On 10 Apr 2008 22:48:41 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: Archimedes' Lever wrote: On 10 Apr 2008 08:18:32 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: I put it right there in front of you: They measure ELECTRIC POTENTIAL otherwise known as "VOLTAGE", between a filling and a reference point. TOATAL BULL****, you ****ing idiot! I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. If anything, I admit that discussing this topic in a group related to electronics is highly inappropriate, and I feel *very* embarrassed that I unwittingly led the discussion in this direction. I hope to wind this down soon. I've posted enough links to Wikipedia that anyone who has interest can just go read them, and learn much more than I have to offer on my own. And don't knock my little story without checking out the reader's comments to Dr. Huggins' book on Amazon.com if you haven't already. If those things don't do it for you, I don't think anything will ... and that's perfectly ok with me! Enjoy your own reality however you prefer it. --- Read this: http://www.quackwatch.com/01Quackery...s/mercury.html JF Yes, that's more like it. At least it cites relevant research, which *appears* to have been carried out by scientific people using proper methodology. Arfa |
#133
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On 11 Apr 2008 00:53:54 GMT, Jay Ts
wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: Jay Ts wrote: I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. Haven't you figured out that you are playing with the resident SED troll? Sorry, I'm new here. But yes, it's quite obvious at this point. Jay Ts On behalf of those that are able to debate a subject on its merits, instead of spewing profanity laced drivel, I would like to thank you for taking the time to detail your experiences. I find them rather interesting reading. I'm undecided on the amalgam issue, but do recognize that some people are more sensitive to toxins than others. What works for some, may not work for everyone. Congratulations on your recovery. I blundered across this article on how much of the methyl mercury found in the water supply may come from dentists working with mercury: http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/dental-chair-possible-source-neurotoxic-mercury-waste-15747.html One of my customers is manufacturer of dental apparatus and a former dentist. I once asked him for his position on the mercury issue. The answer was something like "total useless". However, when I asked why, I got an interesting answer. At the time, there was a surplus of dentists. The leading dental colleges were controlling admissions. Americans in general were getting better dental care, fewer cavities, and fewer profits. Dental insurance plans were becoming part of employee health insurance plans. Dentists were looking for ways to "fill the dentist chair". He theorized that filling replacement was one expensive way to do that. I tend to agree, having been propositioned by my current dentist. As this procedure is NOT covered by dental insurance plans, the hourly rate can be astronomical. Recently, hard times have caused many companies to limit employee benefits. Usually the dental insurance is the first to go. The result is that many poorer families do not visit the dentist as often. There is also a large (illegal) immigrant population that generally lacks dental care. This article sorta hints at the problem: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/11/business/11decay.html?em&ex=1192248000&en=39838c7fa5c22b6f& ei=5087 Thanks again. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#134
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#135
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I quit that radio + phonograph room because they SUCK!
cuhulin |
#136
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 16:21:23 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
place than the living hell they came from. Eventually, space travel will be mundane enough for the carpetbaggers, bureaucrats, politicians, hookers, pimps, salesmen, and the rest of the trash that constitutes civilization. What is it you don't like about hookers? Too much like true Free Market Capitalism? ;-) Thanks, Rich |
#137
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() Rich Grise wrote: On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 16:21:23 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: place than the living hell they came from. Eventually, space travel will be mundane enough for the carpetbaggers, bureaucrats, politicians, hookers, pimps, salesmen, and the rest of the trash that constitutes civilization. What is it you don't like about hookers? Too much like true Free Market Capitalism? ;-) If you have to pay for it you're doing something wrong. -- aioe.org is home to cowards and terrorists Add this line to your news proxy nfilter.dat file * drop Path:*aioe.org!not-for-mail to drop all aioe.org traffic. http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM |
#138
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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#139
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given
wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. |
#140
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling .... :-) Arfa |
#141
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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more printed followup
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/17/1 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 17 2008 Tin woes solder on Congratulations on the very interesting article on tin whiskers (Within a whisker of failure, April 3). You may be interested to hear of another phenomenon associated with lead-free solders in electronics, known as tin pest. Research was carried out into the allotropy of tin 80 years ago. Tin pest was found to occur by a process of nucleation and growth of "grey" tin (a form found below 13C), and was very slow - often requiring years to complete. Since the transition from "white" to "grey" tin involved a 27% increase in volume, its formation was restricted to the surface. Recently, tin pest has been reported in bulk samples of lead-free solder alloys following a few years' exposure at -18C, the usual freezer temperature. To date it has not been observed on actual joints. But lead-free interconnections have been in service for a relatively short time. Although we do not know whether it is necessary to shut the stable door, we should make more effort to understand and control tin pest formation. Only time will tell whether it represents a real problem in electronics. Professor Bill Plumbridge Faculty of Technology The Open University -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#142
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. |
#143
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa |
#144
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![]() "N_Cook" wrote in message ... more printed followup http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/17/1 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 17 2008 Tin woes solder on Congratulations on the very interesting article on tin whiskers (Within a whisker of failure, April 3). You may be interested to hear of another phenomenon associated with lead-free solders in electronics, known as tin pest. Research was carried out into the allotropy of tin 80 years ago. Tin pest was found to occur by a process of nucleation and growth of "grey" tin (a form found below 13C), and was very slow - often requiring years to complete. Since the transition from "white" to "grey" tin involved a 27% increase in volume, its formation was restricted to the surface. Recently, tin pest has been reported in bulk samples of lead-free solder alloys following a few years' exposure at -18C, the usual freezer temperature. To date it has not been observed on actual joints. But lead-free interconnections have been in service for a relatively short time. Although we do not know whether it is necessary to shut the stable door, we should make more effort to understand and control tin pest formation. Only time will tell whether it represents a real problem in electronics. Professor Bill Plumbridge Faculty of Technology The Open University -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ 'Plumb' -ridge. What an appropriate name for someone versed in lead matters ! Seriously though, I'm really glad that the scientific establishment is finally making some anti lead-free noise, and backing up with genuine science, what we lowly service engineers have been trying to tell the world, since the first day that this hateful material was foisted on us by self serving bureaucrats with a politically 'green' agenda ... Arfa |
#145
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. |
#146
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message m... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa |
#147
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 01:18:25 GMT, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message om... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa Most of those will be converted to HID lighting or induction lighting instead of cfl over the longevity characteristics. |
#148
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 01:18:25 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message . .. On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news:06b004htd49j569u0ttk8sin5p39dc2llv@4ax. com... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa Most of those will be converted to HID lighting or induction lighting instead of cfl over the longevity characteristics. ????????? Arfa |
#149
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "Archimedes' Lever" wrote in message ... On Fri, 11 Apr 2008 15:17:37 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "John Fields" wrote in message . .. On 10 Apr 2008 22:48:41 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: Archimedes' Lever wrote: On 10 Apr 2008 08:18:32 GMT, Jay Ts wrote: I put it right there in front of you: They measure ELECTRIC POTENTIAL otherwise known as "VOLTAGE", between a filling and a reference point. TOATAL BULL****, you ****ing idiot! I've already done as much as I can to help this guy, who obviously can not live up to the name he is using. Instead of discussing the matter respectfully, and abiding by Usenet "netiquette", he is just attacking me personally. If anything, I admit that discussing this topic in a group related to electronics is highly inappropriate, and I feel *very* embarrassed that I unwittingly led the discussion in this direction. I hope to wind this down soon. I've posted enough links to Wikipedia that anyone who has interest can just go read them, and learn much more than I have to offer on my own. And don't knock my little story without checking out the reader's comments to Dr. Huggins' book on Amazon.com if you haven't already. If those things don't do it for you, I don't think anything will ... and that's perfectly ok with me! Enjoy your own reality however you prefer it. --- Read this: http://www.quackwatch.com/01Quackery...s/mercury.html JF Yes, that's more like it. At least it cites relevant research, which *appears* to have been carried out by scientific people using proper methodology. Arfa The fact is that the amalgam used by the dentists uses the Mercury to bind the other metals together covalently. As the dentist presses the silver amalgam into the filling cavity, the mercury squeezes out and is recaptured by the dentist.. This means that your fillings are like 95% Silver, and a few percent of other metals, and less than one percent of metallic form Mercury. NOT A HEALTH HAZARD. My feeling too ... Arfa |
#150
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 08:44:11 GMT, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 01:18:25 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news:06b004htd49j569u0ttk8sin5p39dc2llv@4ax .com... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa Most of those will be converted to HID lighting or induction lighting instead of cfl over the longevity characteristics. ????????? Arfa Most street lighting is HPS currently with a normal ballast, there are some MH lamps with normal ballasts. LED street lighting is being experimented with. Caltrans in using induction lighting on signs and may branch out into other uses. Since induction lighting is targeted at hard to maintain locations in commercial and industrial settings there are design differences from household CFL where cheap is the dominant factor. Where we will see CFL is on smaller apartment buildings with penny-pinching owners / managers. |
#151
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 08:44:11 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message . .. On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 01:18:25 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message m... On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news:06b004htd49j569u0ttk8sin5p39dc2llv@4a x.com... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa Most of those will be converted to HID lighting or induction lighting instead of cfl over the longevity characteristics. ????????? Arfa Most street lighting is HPS currently with a normal ballast, there are some MH lamps with normal ballasts. LED street lighting is being experimented with. Caltrans in using induction lighting on signs and may branch out into other uses. Since induction lighting is targeted at hard to maintain locations in commercial and industrial settings there are design differences from household CFL where cheap is the dominant factor. Where we will see CFL is on smaller apartment buildings with penny-pinching owners / managers. Ah, OK. I see what you're saying now. I guess that LED lighting is going to become the standard when they can get them high enough powered. This can't be too far away, as I see that car manufacturers are starting to experiment with LED headlights. Already, Audi seem to have LED front running lights, set into the headlight units, and some of the front lamps used on bicycles now output enough light to see the road ahead. A local night club had coloured floodlights on the front of the building, which were LED based, and I was amazed at just how good a job they did. Elektor magazine carried out an interesting project last month. They took a DLP video projector with a standard expensive HID lamp and colour wheel, and canibalised it to fit an array of red, green and blue Luxeon LEDs in its place. They then programmed up a cheap microcontroller to emulate the rotation of the colour wheel, by switching the colours of the LEDs with 3 FETs. They also fed a colour sync signal from the micro to the original optical sync pickup, so that the LED switching remained synced to the DLP chip drive. Colour balance was achieved by tweaking the 'on' times of the LED colours, in software. The conclusion was that although not as bright as the original HID lamp, the projector did produce a perfectly useable picture, which proved what they set out to, which was that it was perfectly possible to use LEDs in place of a lamp, and that it would be just as good, once they had got the luminous output up just a bit more. Arfa |
#152
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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and some balancing comment
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/24/2 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 24 2008 A whisker of doubt I believe there are several inaccuracies in Kurt Jacobsen's article (Within a whisker of failure, April 3). He cites the Swatch watch company as recalling a "huge batch" of watches that amounted to a financial loss, when in fact Swatch was denied its request for a RoHS exemption, as another supplier makes lead-free quartz movements it could use with no whisker issues. Also, Swatch makes no mention of a recall in its EU request. The nuclear power plant failure example and others are also misleading, as these were failures due to pure-tin formulations that predate RoHS. The new formulations reduce these issues. Here's a good article that refutes the "gloom and doom" predictions: tinyurl.com/4wxmkz. Marcus England, by email -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#153
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "N_Cook" wrote in message ... and some balancing comment http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/24/2 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 24 2008 A whisker of doubt I believe there are several inaccuracies in Kurt Jacobsen's article (Within a whisker of failure, April 3). He cites the Swatch watch company as recalling a "huge batch" of watches that amounted to a financial loss, when in fact Swatch was denied its request for a RoHS exemption, as another supplier makes lead-free quartz movements it could use with no whisker issues. Also, Swatch makes no mention of a recall in its EU request. The nuclear power plant failure example and others are also misleading, as these were failures due to pure-tin formulations that predate RoHS. The new formulations reduce these issues. Here's a good article that refutes the "gloom and doom" predictions: tinyurl.com/4wxmkz. Marcus England, by email -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ Hmmm. Have you ever come across any solder that's pure tin ? It would take a blowtorch to melt it. Also, there is plenty of research that shows that the lead in tin-lead solder alloy, mitigates the growth of tin whiskers, whereas copper doesn't. And anyway, none of the whisker issues alter the fact that the bloody stuff just doesn't make reliable joints on many component forms, as anyone involved at the sharp end, would attest to ... The article that Mr England cites, does not instil a great deal more confidence in me. Whilst it may be true that *some* cellular phones have been manufactured in lead-free since 2001, this 'fact' tells us nothing about the long-term reliability of them, as most are owned primarily as a fashion statement - even amongst 'mature' businessmen - and only secondarily as a communications device. This, as well as the fact that the battery only lasts a short while, dictates that it is replaced on a yearly basis, which is encouraged by the cellular operators, when they give the latest all singing and dancing models away, as an incentive to stick with their network. Further, this is just one single low power device, As all of us involved in electronic service work know, there are many other consumer devices such as TV sets, DVD players, HiFi, microwave ovens etc which, unlike cellphones, contain large power components and connectors, which do not enjoy good long term - or often even short term - reliability, when jointed using lead-free solders. This in no way supports the statement in the article that :- "This field data indicates the reliability of lead-free assemblies is equal to, or better than, tin-lead soldered assemblies". You simply can't make statements like that based on a single product group, and claim them to have blanket validity. The further statement .... "While laboratory studies suggest lead-free solder does not perform as well in high-stress applications, such as might occur in a ‘drop test', many applications with these types of concerns (i.e. military) are currently exempted from RoHS. Meanwhile, alloy developmental work to address lead-free shortcomings is already underway." ..... contains three areas of concern in that (1) lead-free solder does not perform *as well* ... (2) some applications e.g. military have concerns about this, and (3) that it is accepted that the technology has shortcomings that need to be addressed. Further, I also have a problem with the first paragraph in the article :- "Most people incorrectly think the primary intent of RoHS is to protect the environment. In truth, the fundamental purpose of RoHS is to make recycling EEE easier and safer." Protection of the environment was the ticket on which RoHS in general - and this substitute lead-free technology in particular - was originally sold to an unsuspecting world. It seems to me that those who make up this eco-legislation (as they go along, I suspect) are now discovering the error of their original concept as to why the mature and proven lead solder technology needed replacing, and are now seeking to bury that error in a different concept altogether. I can't remember ever before seeing any reference anywhere to RoHS being primarily to improve the ease and safety of WEEE recycling, rather than as an environmental issue. So, far from this article "refuting the gloom and doom", I think it serves only to further highlight the well known shortcomings of lead-free solder technology, and unfortunately for Mr England's case, I don't believe that his letter holds a candle to the two from the other side of the coin, which preceded it. Arfa |
#154
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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Arfa Daily wrote in message
... "N_Cook" wrote in message ... and some balancing comment http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/24/2 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 24 2008 A whisker of doubt Protection of the environment was the ticket on which RoHS in general - and this substitute lead-free technology in particular - was originally sold to an unsuspecting world. It seems to me that those who make up this eco-legislation (as they go along, I suspect) are now discovering the error of their original concept as to why the mature and proven lead solder technology needed replacing, and are now seeking to bury that error in a different concept altogether. I can't remember ever before seeing any reference anywhere to RoHS being primarily to improve the ease and safety of WEEE recycling, rather than as an environmental issue. So, far from this article "refuting the gloom and doom", I think it serves only to further highlight the well known shortcomings of lead-free solder technology, and unfortunately for Mr England's case, I don't believe that his letter holds a candle to the two from the other side of the coin, which preceded it. Arfa What exactly can be recycled from say a PC? As far as I can see the steel casing and perhaps some copper if it is not too widely distributed , fragmented, needing human separation and plastic separation environmental problems. RoHS for recycling implies component level recycling - recycling 3 to 10 year old pc ICs - pull the other one. Failing that, recycling processed sand and hard plastic after desoldering, very unlikely. Leaves just the solder itself, which is just as recyclable with or without lead presumably . -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ |
#155
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "N_Cook" wrote in message ... Arfa Daily wrote in message ... "N_Cook" wrote in message ... and some balancing comment http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/apr/24/2 # The Guardian, # Thursday April 24 2008 A whisker of doubt Protection of the environment was the ticket on which RoHS in general - and this substitute lead-free technology in particular - was originally sold to an unsuspecting world. It seems to me that those who make up this eco-legislation (as they go along, I suspect) are now discovering the error of their original concept as to why the mature and proven lead solder technology needed replacing, and are now seeking to bury that error in a different concept altogether. I can't remember ever before seeing any reference anywhere to RoHS being primarily to improve the ease and safety of WEEE recycling, rather than as an environmental issue. So, far from this article "refuting the gloom and doom", I think it serves only to further highlight the well known shortcomings of lead-free solder technology, and unfortunately for Mr England's case, I don't believe that his letter holds a candle to the two from the other side of the coin, which preceded it. Arfa What exactly can be recycled from say a PC? As far as I can see the steel casing and perhaps some copper if it is not too widely distributed , fragmented, needing human separation and plastic separation environmental problems. RoHS for recycling implies component level recycling - recycling 3 to 10 year old pc ICs - pull the other one. Failing that, recycling processed sand and hard plastic after desoldering, very unlikely. Leaves just the solder itself, which is just as recyclable with or without lead presumably . -- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on http://home.graffiti.net/diverse:graffiti.net/ That would appear to me to be the nub of the matter, so it sounds as though you agree with me that this 'ease of recycling' thing is a subtle shift of tack to better handle the changing wind direction ... I know that they do recover gold from gold-plated connectors and IC pins, but other than that, I agree that there's not a lot that can be recycled from a purely practical point of view in terms of cost-effectiveness, both from purely monetary and energy budget considerations. Arfa |
#156
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() Arfa Daily wrote: I know that they do recover gold from gold-plated connectors A couple of microns ? and IC pins Since when have "IC pins" had gold on them ? but other than that, I agree that there's not a lot that can be recycled Indeed and it seems almost no-one in Europe wants to touch the stuff. Trying to 'recycle' electronics pcbs strikes me as an utter waste of time. What do end up with of any use ? Nothing ! Graham |
#157
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() Arfa Daily wrote: "N_Cook" wrote in message ... What exactly can be recycled from say a PC? As far as I can see the steel casing and perhaps some copper if it is not too widely distributed , fragmented, needing human separation and plastic separation environmental problems. RoHS for recycling implies component level recycling - recycling 3 to 10 year old pc ICs - pull the other one. Failing that, recycling processed sand and hard plastic after desoldering, very unlikely. Leaves just the solder itself, which is just as recyclable with or without lead presumably . That would appear to me to be the nub of the matter, so it sounds as though you agree with me that this 'ease of recycling' thing is a subtle shift of tack to better handle the changing wind direction ... I know that they do recover gold from gold-plated connectors and IC pins, but other than that, I agree that there's not a lot that can be recycled from a purely practical point of view in terms of cost-effectiveness, both from purely monetary and energy budget considerations. Arfa There is a process where they grind up scrap PC boards, then use acid to remove the metal. The remaining Fiberglas is washed, then used with new fiberglass and epoxy to make things like bathtubs, or fiberglass boats. The plastic is common grades of thermoplastic, which has been recycled, for decades. It is shredded, melted, and 're-pelletized', making it ready to use for new injection molding. Western Electric started reusing their scrap plastic when they stopped making telephones with bakelite cases and handsets. -- http://improve-usenet.org/index.html Use any search engine other than Google till they stop polluting USENET with porn and junk commercial SPAM If you have broadband, your ISP may have a NNTP news server included in your account: http://www.usenettools.net/ISP.htm |
#158
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Arfa Daily wrote: I know that they do recover gold from gold-plated connectors A couple of microns ? and IC pins Since when have "IC pins" had gold on them ? Since they put about a million of them on the bottom of a big chunk of ceramic, called it a processor chip, and then tried to persuade all those pins to make a good electrical connection via a ZIF socket ... I saw a TV programme about a facility in the UK that recycles computers, and removes the gold from various bits and pieces at a 'secret' location, and I was astounded by the amounts of gold that were recovered, that not only made this worth it from a recycling point of view, but also extremely financially lucrative for the company doing it. Take a look at this link for more facts than I could give you http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/fs060-01/fs060-01.pdf Arfa |
#159
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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Eeyore wrote:
snip Since when have "IC pins" had gold on them ? Since perhaps 1960 when cerdips first appeared and for milspec packages of various sorts. Not so much after 1979 or so. Michael |
#160
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.misc,sci.electronics.design
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 08:35:27 GMT, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 08:44:11 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 01:18:25 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message om... On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 23:50:18 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 09:22:41 GMT, "Arfa Daily" wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message news:06b004htd49j569u0ttk8sin5p39dc2llv@4 ax.com... On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:45:28 +1200, Terry Given wrote: Jay Ts wrote: Smitty Two wrote: Terry Given wrote: these are great, they look fantastic, unity power factor, dimmable, and last 50,000 hours. Yeah, and they're only $145 each: http://www.lampsplus.com/products/s_lr6/ And only 650 lumens, which is less than a 60 watt incandescent (890 lumens). I'm using 4 27 watt (100 watt equivalent) 6500K CFLs to light my work room, so to replace them with those LED bulbs, it would cost ... oh, forget it, I don't even want to do the math! No way. and how many lumens come out of your fixture with the 890 lumen lamp in it? CFLs are terrible for that. they are measured in the light sphere sans fixture, which can make a tremendous difference. easily 20-30%. Oh, and the LR6 bulbs are spotlights, which is a no-go just by itself. And they aren't daylight balanced (5500-6500K), another definite no-go. they are not bulbs. They are light fittings with integral lamps. that alters the C-B calcs substantially. I think it's still going to be a while until 100-watt equivalent, daylight balanced LED bulbs are available with an "ouchless" startup cost, and I'm not holding my breath waiting. Just hoping that it will happen, and won't be awfully long. Jay Ts its a total cost of ownership thing. efficiency wise they pay for themselves (I have seen the ROI calcs but cant recall them) in a few years. the main market is for people who dont change their own lightbulbs (eg companies) where it costs a lot to get a single lamp changed, so they often get a sparky to change all lamps whether or not they need it, eg annually or bi-annually. And if its in say a tall atrium and you need scissor lifts, these things pay themselves off in less than the lifgetime of a single incandescent, CFL or flouro. Cheers Terry For street lighting, warehouse lighting, and industrial lighting there is a competing technology: Induction lighting. Typical lamp/bulb life 50,000 to 75,000 hours. Twice the life and better luminous efficacy at a 50% surcharge compared to HID lighting. It is starting to get a lot of notice. Oh, and better electrical efficiency, takes about half the power for the same amount of light. I don't know how much take-up of this technology there has been in the UK. It does beg the question of how much trouble it could cause, if a single streetlamp or warehouse luminaire went 'rogue'. Already, I see fellow hams bleating all the time about HF bands interference problems from rogue CFLs, and SMPS's and PLT and so on. Imagine the potential for interference if a high power streetlight ballast, feeding an induction lamp 50ft up a pole, started radiating on 13 odd megs. Or a factory one 50ft up in the ceiling ... :-) Arfa In the US they have to meet FCC radiated and conducted emission standards. Thus the CFLs going rouge probably only statistically meet those standards, such is part of the nature of regulation. They have to meet strict emission regulations here too, which I'm sure for the most part, when in full working order, they do. The problems arise when the crappy little filter caps in the front end of the switching driver for the tubes, go open circuit or high ESR, due no doubt to the unventillated enclosure in the bottom of the lamp, that the electronics sit in, running very hot. Once that cap has failed, the inverter radiates like a *******, swamping the airways with broadband hash. It's bad enough when one goes rogue like this, 6 foot off the deck in someone's driveway light outside their house. Think what it would be like if one went bad 50 foot up in the air ... Arfa Please explain under what situations would a cfl be mounted 50 feet above ground. Block of flats ? Might be 100 feet up in the air or more in that case. When the EU morons responsible for all this eco-******** legislation finally ban incandescents in the UK, as they have stated that they will in short order, then tower blocks will be full of CFLs, as there will be no alternative, yes ? Originally, when we got onto lighting being 50 foot up in the air, we were talking about induction lighting in street lamps and factory ceiling lights. The point was that these devices use high frequency generators to couple the energy into the lamps, and these generators follow similar design principles to the tube driver inverters in CFLs. Thus, if low power CFL inverters go bad, and create the RF havoc that they sometimes do at just a few feet off the ground, then imagine how bad the situation would be if the high power HF generator for an induction lamp, 50 foot up a pole, when similarly bad. With my thinking now ...? Arfa Most of those will be converted to HID lighting or induction lighting instead of cfl over the longevity characteristics. ????????? Arfa Most street lighting is HPS currently with a normal ballast, there are some MH lamps with normal ballasts. LED street lighting is being experimented with. Caltrans in using induction lighting on signs and may branch out into other uses. Since induction lighting is targeted at hard to maintain locations in commercial and industrial settings there are design differences from household CFL where cheap is the dominant factor. Where we will see CFL is on smaller apartment buildings with penny-pinching owners / managers. Ah, OK. I see what you're saying now. I guess that LED lighting is going to become the standard when they can get them high enough powered. This can't be too far away, as I see that car manufacturers are starting to experiment with LED headlights. I have more than one co-worker with a car with LED headlights. Infinity, Lexus, BMW and others do this already. Already, Audi seem to have LED front running lights, set into the headlight units, and some of the front lamps used on bicycles now output enough light to see the road ahead. I have LED bicycle headlights myself. A local night club had coloured floodlights on the front of the building, which were LED based, and I was amazed at just how good a job they did. Elektor magazine carried out an interesting project last month. They took a DLP video projector with a standard expensive HID lamp and colour wheel, and canibalised it to fit an array of red, green and blue Luxeon LEDs in its place. They then programmed up a cheap microcontroller to emulate the rotation of the colour wheel, by switching the colours of the LEDs with 3 FETs. They also fed a colour sync signal from the micro to the original optical sync pickup, so that the LED switching remained synced to the DLP chip drive. Colour balance was achieved by tweaking the 'on' times of the LED colours, in software. The conclusion was that although not as bright as the original HID lamp, the projector did produce a perfectly useable picture, which proved what they set out to, which was that it was perfectly possible to use LEDs in place of a lamp, and that it would be just as good, once they had got the luminous output up just a bit more. Arfa And the last is a nice change from jumbotrons. |
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