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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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#1
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Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile
phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? |
#2
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On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote:
Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. |
#3
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"Tom Biasi" wrote in message
... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got a mobile phone with which we link with WiFi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no "moving parts" unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens its working life. Not so. There aren't any obvious failure mechanisms in solid-state devices (other than dopant migration in high-power output transistors). It's also true that most mechanical devices "like" moderate use. Letting anything mechanical "sit" most of the time will probably cause it fail sooner than if receives regular use. It's now possible to build computers without moving parts (other than the optical drives). My new computer has a solid-state "hard disk", and you wouldn't believe how fast it boots up, or how fast programs start to run. |
#4
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On 10/2/2012 5:43 PM, William Sommerwerck wrote:
"Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got a mobile phone with which we link with WiFi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no "moving parts" unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens its working life. Not so. There aren't any obvious failure mechanisms in solid-state devices (other than dopant migration in high-power output transistors). It's also true that most mechanical devices "like" moderate use. Letting anything mechanical "sit" most of the time will probably cause it fail sooner than if receives regular use. It's now possible to build computers without moving parts (other than the optical drives). My new computer has a solid-state "hard disk", and you wouldn't believe how fast it boots up, or how fast programs start to run. There are many factors that cause something to fail. I you don't use it, it has no working life. I don't wish to play semantics but if you use it you are using up it's working life. |
#5
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There are many factors that cause something to fail. I you
don't use it, it has no working life. I don't wish to play semantics but if you use it you are using up its working life. Not so. With mechanical devices, regular moderate use provides a longer useful lifetime than using the device only rarely. |
#6
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
optical drives). My new computer has a solid-state "hard disk", and you wouldn't believe how fast it boots up, or how fast programs start to run. These, if flash memory, do have a definite wear out mechanism, although they do try to avoid writing to the same spot, even if the software does, to mitigate this. |
#7
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On 10/2/2012 6:32 PM, William Sommerwerck wrote:
There are many factors that cause something to fail. I you don't use it, it has no working life. I don't wish to play semantics but if you use it you are using up its working life. Not so. With mechanical devices, regular moderate use provides a longer useful lifetime than using the device only rarely. I don't agree but will say no more. Regards, Tom |
#8
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On Tue, 02 Oct 2012 18:57:07 -0400, Tom Biasi
wrote: On 10/2/2012 6:32 PM, William Sommerwerck wrote: There are many factors that cause something to fail. I you don't use it, it has no working life. I don't wish to play semantics but if you use it you are using up its working life. Not so. With mechanical devices, regular moderate use provides a longer useful lifetime than using the device only rarely. I don't agree but will say no more. Regards, Tom Not sure if my News server supports x-posts to the entire Usenet, but I digress. An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. Equipment with lots of thermionic devices like very early computers were, as far as practical, never switched off because of the likelihood of failure. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#9
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![]() "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? Some web forum ? |
#10
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![]() "Phil Allison" wrote in message ... "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? Some web forum ? I believe turning the bulbs on and off can induce thermal shock which causes premature failure. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_shock See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermionic_valves "The common wisdom was that valves—which, like light bulbs, contained a hot glowing filament—could never be used satisfactorily in large numbers, for they were unreliable, and in a large installation too many would fail in too short a time".[13] Tommy Flowers, who later designed Colossus, "discovered that, so long as valves were switched on and left on, they could operate reliably for very long periods, especially if their 'heaters' were run on a reduced current". |
#11
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"David Woolley" wrote in message
... William Sommerwerck wrote: My new computer has a solid-state "hard disk", and you wouldn't believe how fast it boots up, or how fast programs start to run. These, if flash memory, do have a definite wear out mechanism, although they do try to avoid writing to the same spot, even if the software does, to mitigate this. Correct. SSDs are an exception. They contain "leveling" software that makes sure the disk is written to evenly. The Crucial disk I use is spec'd at about 40TB of total writes. |
#12
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![]() "JoRob64" "Phil Allison" "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? Some web forum ? I believe turning the bulbs on and off can induce thermal shock which causes premature failure. ** ******** it does. There are many applications where incandescent lamps are turned on and off constantly and their life span is the same. The OP's hypothetical example ( don't ya just LOVE them) is typical of domestic lamp use. ****wit. ..... Phil |
#13
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![]() Phil Allison wrote: "JoRob64" "Phil Allison" "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? Some web forum ? I believe turning the bulbs on and off can induce thermal shock which causes premature failure. ** ******** it does. There are many applications where incandescent lamps are turned on and off constantly and their life span is the same. The OP's hypothetical example ( don't ya just LOVE them) is typical of domestic lamp use. ****wit. .... Phil No Phil, that is not correct. If he only listens to Rap , its lifespan will be shortend greatly. Buffalo |
#14
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On Oct 2, 6:28*pm, "Phil Allison" wrote:
"Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? * * *Some web forum ? He is right, the stresses involved in the turn-on of the bulb each time is equal to several hours of continuous running. If you cycle a bulb on and off every few seconds, the total on time before the bulb fails will be only a few hundered hours for a 1000 hour rated bulb, |
#15
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On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 09:28:13 +1000, "Phil Allison"
wrote: "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? It's not nonsense. The inrush current of a cold filament can shorten the filament life. That's why light bulbs usually blow up when you turn them on, not while they're running. The induced magnetic field also tends to "twang" the filament, which can break the filament if it were somehow mechanically weakened. While attending kollege in the 1960's, I worked for a short time as a non-union projectionist at a movie theater. Besides babysitting the projectors, I had to deal with the flashing light bulb marquee. I vaguely recall that there were something like 2000 40 watt light bulbs. Roughly once per week, my job was to replace the blown bulbs from a rickety pre-OSHA 20ft wooden ladder, sometimes at night. I didn't keep count, but every week, we would lose about 20 light bulbs. Doing the math, that means after about 2 years, ALL the light bulbs would have been replaced at least once. At 8 hrs run per day, that's 800 hrs lifetime which isn't all that great, especially since we were running the bulbs at reduced voltage to improve the lifetime. We used the same bulbs in the theater foyer and lobby, where they were NOT cycled on and off like the flashing marquee. I rarely replaced those bulbs and they seemed to last forever. Some web forum ? If you repeat something often enough, it eventually becomes dogma. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#16
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"Tom Biasi" wrote in message
... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. Seems to go against the whole ethos of exercising. Never get out of bed and live forever ... |
#17
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"jim stone" wrote in message
... Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? You'll have dropped it well before it wears out :-). BTW, a cheap PC speaker set might be handy if you want a little more volume. And you can probably find a decent streaming client if you have your music sitting on a PC somewhere. Paul DS. |
#18
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
There are many factors that cause something to fail. I you don't use it, it has no working life. I don't wish to play semantics but if you use it you are using up its working life. Not so. With mechanical devices, regular moderate use provides a longer useful lifetime than using the device only rarely. Yes, this is also true with EM (Electro-Mechanical) devices like pinballs and jukeboxes (and other arcade games)- regular use keeps the contacts on the relays clean from their designed in rubbing action (overtravel). If the machine is not used then the contacts tend to oxidize and not pass electrical current well leading to service calls. HOWEVER the topic here is a solid state mobile phone - and that device really doesn't care too much if it is on or off as long as it operates in a reasonable temperature range (around 20 - 35C). Chances are it will be obsolete before it fails if it runs cool to the touch. Heat is the enemy of electronics, mostly capacitors - and their life gets quite short the warmer the operating temperature gets above 50C...just read the spec sheets. Typical electrolytics endurance: - up to 5,000 Hours at 105°C or about 210 days (7 months) running 24/7. John :-#)# -- (Please post followups or tech enquiries to the newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 Call (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
#19
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Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 09:28:13 +1000, "Phil Allison" wrote: "Graham." An incandescent light bulb is a good example, If it lasts 1000 hours when run continuously, its life will be considerably shorter if run (say) 4 hours a day and the time it is on added up. ** Where ever did you get that nonsense from ?? It's not nonsense. The inrush current of a cold filament can shorten the filament life. That's why light bulbs usually blow up when you turn them on, not while they're running. The induced magnetic field also tends to "twang" the filament, which can break the filament if it were somehow mechanically weakened. While attending kollege in the 1960's, I worked for a short time as a non-union projectionist at a movie theater. Besides babysitting the projectors, I had to deal with the flashing light bulb marquee. I vaguely recall that there were something like 2000 40 watt light bulbs. Roughly once per week, my job was to replace the blown bulbs from a rickety pre-OSHA 20ft wooden ladder, sometimes at night. I didn't keep count, but every week, we would lose about 20 light bulbs. Doing the math, that means after about 2 years, ALL the light bulbs would have been replaced at least once. At 8 hrs run per day, that's 800 hrs lifetime which isn't all that great, especially since we were running the bulbs at reduced voltage to improve the lifetime. We used the same bulbs in the theater foyer and lobby, where they were NOT cycled on and off like the flashing marquee. I rarely replaced those bulbs and they seemed to last forever. Some web forum ? If you repeat something often enough, it eventually becomes dogma. Well-designed lighting circuits provide 'keep-alive' voltage to the filaments to reduce most of the inrush current. Might have put you out of that job though... John :-#)# -- (Please post followups or tech enquiries to the newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 Call (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
#20
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On 03/10/2012 01:25, Phil Allison wrote:
There are many applications where incandescent lamps are turned on and off constantly and their life span is the same. There were many installations using thermionic valves where very long life was achieved by leaving them running continuously. The GPO had discovered this and it influenced Bletchley Park with their early computers, some did not believe they would get a reliable system but the GPO engineers working there convinced them that it was possible. There are frequent stories in the press of incandescent light bulbs that have been running continuously for very long periods - tens of years. |
#21
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Just like not using it does in fact.
Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. |
#22
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In article
, hr(bob) wrote: He is right, the stresses involved in the turn-on of the bulb each time is equal to several hours of continuous running. If you cycle a bulb on and off every few seconds, the total on time before the bulb fails will be only a few hundered hours for a 1000 hour rated bulb, It would be a strange way to rate the life of a lamp - on constantly, since this pretty well never happens. Do you find the 'flasher' lamps on your car failing more quickly than similar lamps which don't flash? -- *A plateau is a high form of flattery* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#23
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In article , William Sommerwerck
scribeth thus "Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got a mobile phone with which we link with WiFi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no "moving parts" unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens its working life. Not so. There aren't any obvious failure mechanisms in solid-state devices (other than dopant migration in high-power output transistors). Yes interesting that especially in high power RF transistors, 'tho I believe in such cases its paralled emitter connections that start going open circuit... It's also true that most mechanical devices "like" moderate use. Letting anything mechanical "sit" most of the time will probably cause it fail sooner than if receives regular use. It's now possible to build computers without moving parts (other than the optical drives). My new computer has a solid-state "hard disk", and you wouldn't believe how fast it boots up, or how fast programs start to run. Indeed they do just got one, not in this machine but very fast indeed. They still it seems fail though... -- Tony Sayer |
#24
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On Wed, 03 Oct 2012 09:12:34 +0100, MB wrote:
There are frequent stories in the press of incandescent light bulbs that have been running continuously for very long periods - tens of years. 110 years: http://www.centennialbulb.org Of course, the lifetime of light bulbs is part of an international conspiracy to promote planned obsolescence: http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/light-bulb-conspiracy/ -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#25
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Tom Biasi wrote:
Not so. With mechanical devices, regular moderate use provides a longer useful lifetime than using the device only rarely. I don't agree but will say no more. Laser printers. I have given away for parts several laser printers because they sat unused 99% of the time, and started to jam when I printed the one or two pages a month I needed them for. Not only did the rubber wheels dry out and lose their ability to grab paper, they flatten where they are pressed against something. I have a perfectly good Samsung laser printer in that condition now. My choices are to once a week clean out a jam, and clean the feed roller; print something everyday (a waste of paper); spend $15 for a new roller (including postage) and an hour to install it; or wait for a sale (every 2-3 months) and buy a newer faster, higher resolution model with a 2,000 page toner cartridge included for less than the cost of a full load toner. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, N3OWJ/4X1GM/KBUH7245/KBUW5379 "Owning a smartphone: Technology's equivalent to learning to play chopsticks on the piano as a child and thinking you're a musician." (sent to me by a friend) |
#26
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![]() "Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. I can vouch for the remark made but I can give you more details too: I use smartphones, tablets and laptops to listen to internet radio all the time and I've only had one device that suffered because of that. What happened to that particular device is the WiFi quit working and it doesn't even work after a factory reset. But out of all the other devices I've used they haven't demonstrated any problems at all. Rocky |
#27
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Using anything shortens its working life.
I can vouch for the remark made but I can give you more details too: I use smartphones, tablets and laptops to listen to internet radio all the time and I've only had one device that suffered because of that. What happened to that particular device is the WiFi quit working and it doesn't even work after a factory reset. Who knows why the WiFi quit? The radio could have failed simply because the chip went bad. HP has had problems with the radios in some of its notebooks. |
#28
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![]() "William Sommerwerck" wrote in message ... Using anything shortens its working life. I can vouch for the remark made but I can give you more details too: I use smartphones, tablets and laptops to listen to internet radio all the time and I've only had one device that suffered because of that. What happened to that particular device is the WiFi quit working and it doesn't even work after a factory reset. Who knows why the WiFi quit? The radio could have failed simply because the chip went bad. HP has had problems with the radios in some of its notebooks. Yes, I've heard that and I've even seen one person that no longer has WiFi on their HP notebook but they claimed it was the switch itself that quit working so I try not to use the hardware WiFi switch on an HP notebook. Me, I've had a power plug fail on an HP ZD7000 notebook and that was common for that particular notebook. I've also had a DVD fail on an HP DV8000 notebook but when the second DVD failed too I went back to the first DVD and it has been working fine since then. I doubt if I'll ever figure that one out unless if it was a problem with the connector. Other than that, I've seen a lot of videos on youtube with problematic HPs where if it isn't the WiFi that goes out it is the video. Case in point: HP 's Worst Laptop Ever - Pavilion ZD8000 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2stqQtQePcM&hd=1 Oddly enough I skipped getting the HP ZD8000 because I went from an HP ZD7000 to the HP DV8000 where the ZD8000 looks more like the ZD7000 than the DV8000. FYI the only device I had that lost the WiFi was a Pharos Traveler 137 that I got real cheap when a place was getting rid of them so I wasn't too upset when the WiFi quit on that. http://www.pharosgps.com/products/proddetail.asp?prod=001_PTL137_8.00 But the video on certain Dell Laptops? Don't get me started. Rocky |
#29
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On 10/03/2012 05:12 AM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , hr(bob) wrote: He is right, the stresses involved in the turn-on of the bulb each time is equal to several hours of continuous running. If you cycle a bulb on and off every few seconds, the total on time before the bulb fails will be only a few hundered hours for a 1000 hour rated bulb, It would be a strange way to rate the life of a lamp - on constantly, since this pretty well never happens. Do you find the 'flasher' lamps on your car failing more quickly than similar lamps which don't flash? I don't know of any data that supports this common idea, but I'd be interested in reading about it if anybody's actually done the experiment carefully. Electromigration is a smaller effect in an AC bulb, since the leading order effect cancels. I suspect that the notion that cycling is hard on bulbs comes from the way that the bulb often fails at turn-on, when the thinnest hot spot vapourizes before the rest of the filament has a chance to come up to temperature and reduce the inrush current. The tungsten in the lamp is run within a few hundred kelvins of its melting point, so it's always in the fully annealed state, which ought to mean that there are no metal fatigue mechanisms operating, just material migration due to sublimation. Cheers Phil Hobbs -- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal Consultant ElectroOptical Innovations LLC Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 160 North State Road #203 Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 hobbs at electrooptical dot net http://electrooptical.net |
#31
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On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 08:38:54 +0100, "Paul D Smith"
wrote: "jim stone" wrote in message ... Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? You'll have dropped it well before it wears out :-). You'll wear out the batteries before you drop it and you'll want the new iThingy before the batteries die. Full employment for the phone company. BTW, a cheap PC speaker set might be handy if you want a little more volume. And you can probably find a decent streaming client if you have your music sitting on a PC somewhere. |
#32
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On 10/2/2012 17:21, jim stone wrote:
Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Does the mobile have a subscription plan; i.e. periodic payments? |
#33
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On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 07:01:25 +0100, "MikeS"
wrote: "Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. Seems to go against the whole ethos of exercising. Never get out of bed and live forever ... Blanket absolute statements are often wrong... You have to match the logic to the device. Light bulbs? Off makes them last longest. A car engine? You better exercise that sucker once in awhile if it sits outside fully fueled. Many electronic devices can tolerate 24/7 with few failures. Disk drives? Now that's a question. The early ones (sealed ones - not the very early ones where the platters were removable 12" disks) seemed to do better if they ran 'til they croaked. The early drum recorders seemed to last forever as long as they didn't stop running. (the heads rode on a wave of silicon oil and never touched the belts unless they stopped) |
#34
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
Using anything shortens its working life. I can vouch for the remark made but I can give you more details too: I use smartphones, tablets and laptops to listen to internet radio all the time and I've only had one device that suffered because of that. What happened to that particular device is the WiFi quit working and it doesn't even work after a factory reset. Who knows why the WiFi quit? The radio could have failed simply because the chip went bad. HP has had problems with the radios in some of its notebooks. This might be where a Knoppix disk can help arbitrate between a software/configuration problem and a hardware failure. Any time I have something fail, I do the "Remove Device"/"Add Device" dance, then update drivers. If that fails, out comes the Knoppix disk. If it *still* fails, it's most likely hardware. I've been lucky so far and nothing has needed a lot of scrounging for Linux device drivers. -- Les Cargill |
#35
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On 10/3/2012 1:01 AM, MikeS wrote:
"Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. Seems to go against the whole ethos of exercising. Never get out of bed and live forever ... Be sure to use all ten fingers on the tv remote, make them last longer. |
#36
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![]() "jim stone" wrote in message ... Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? The bits that will fail [first] in a mobile phone are the battery and display. You can replace the battery and switch off the display. I have two 40+ year old solid state radios that still work. |
#37
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On Wed, 03 Oct 2012 14:48:40 -0500, amdx wrote:
On 10/3/2012 1:01 AM, MikeS wrote: "Tom Biasi" wrote in message ... On 10/2/2012 5:21 PM, jim stone wrote: Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? Using anything shortens it's working life. Seems to go against the whole ethos of exercising. Never get out of bed and live forever ... Be sure to use all ten fingers on the tv remote, make them last longer. The TV, the remote, or the fingers? |
#38
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On Wed, 3 Oct 2012 21:52:53 +0100, "R. Mark Clayton"
wrote: "jim stone" wrote in message ... Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? The bits that will fail [first] in a mobile phone are the battery and display. You can replace the battery and switch off the display. Except phones with hardwired batteries. I have two 40+ year old solid state radios that still work. My 39YO HP45 still works but the power switch is too flaky to be usable. |
#39
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On Wed, 03 Oct 2012 10:32:57 -0400, Phil Hobbs
wrote: I don't know of any data that supports this common idea, but I'd be interested in reading about it if anybody's actually done the experiment carefully. It's an accelerated life test. The deration curve of the incandescent light bulb is well known and assumed to be (Vapplied/Vdesign)^-12 to ^-16 * Life at design voltage http://www.welchallyn.com/documents/Lighting/OEM_Halogen_Lighting/MC3544HPX_Catalog_2_11_09.pdf See Fig 5 on Pg 5 for the graph. Nobody wants to wait 1000 hours for a bulb to blow. So, they increase the applied voltage, which dramatically decreases the lifetime down to reasonable test times. Using a rack of bulbs, they obtain an average (or median) lifetime at the higher voltage. Then, they work backwards on the curve to estimate what it would be at the design voltage. When I was specifying lamps for a direction finder for the USCG, I had to deal with minimum lifetime specs. I asked the vendor (Dialight) how they tested their T-1 3/4 bulbs and was told that they did an accelerated lifetime test on a few bulbs from each lot to insure adequate lifetime along with the usual sampled 1.5% AQL failure test. Electromigration is a smaller effect in an AC bulb, since the leading order effect cancels. Yep. As I understand it (possible wrong), AC filaments break in the middle, mostly from vibration flexing. I suspect that the notion that cycling is hard on bulbs comes from the way that the bulb often fails at turn-on, when the thinnest hot spot vapourizes before the rest of the filament has a chance to come up to temperature and reduce the inrush current. Yep. See my comments on the relatively high failure rate on the 40watt theater marquee lamps due to cycling. The same lamps in the lobby and foyer were not cycled and seemed to last forever. The tungsten in the lamp is run within a few hundred kelvins of its melting point, so it's always in the fully annealed state, which ought to mean that there are no metal fatigue mechanisms operating, just material migration due to sublimation. Yep, but different failure mode. When the extremely thin layer of tungsten plating evaporates, the light becomes dimmer. Below some brightness level, it is considered to have failed. However, most such tungsten coated filaments fail due to corrosion of the base steel alloy wire which is exposed to the internal gases inside the bulb after the tungsten evaporates. The gases (mostly nitrogen and some argon) are inert, but there's a little water vapor outgassing from heating the glass envelope, which eventually corrodes the filament. Other failure modes are hot spots and notches caused by manufacturing variations and tungsten evaporation. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#40
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On 2012-10-02, jim stone wrote:
Not being able to find a small internet radio to buy we liked, we got mobile phone with which we link with wi-fi to a modem router, and use it as an internet radio. Keeping the phoned plugged into its charger all the time, we are using it to play *all-day* background classical music through an amplifier and speakers. Since the phone has no 'moving parts' unlike a computer, we are wondering if this continuous playing all day of the phone is going to shorten its working life ? It may be bad for the battery -- š‚šƒ 100% natural --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
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