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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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On Fri, 5 Oct 2018 06:49:02 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 18:52:25 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message ... On Mon, 01 Oct 2018 11:27:46 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 09:58:49 -0700, "Bob La Londe" wrote: Hydraulics are too messy with tiny tractors. Having done it I disagree, though finding components small enough to fit into the cramped spaces was tricky, and I had to make several hydraulic parts including the adjustable pressure regulator, bushings to adapt the cylinder seals I could find to the pistons and the oil-tight welded frame / reservoir. The oil strainer housing is a 2" pipe tee, in the side, out the top, and drain at the bottom. I guess you like messy. ![]() It ceased being messy after I learned to do things right. Messy = overly complicated (to me). Whatever works for ya. -- "I have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined and that we can do nothing to change it look before they cross the road." --Steven Hawking |
#2
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Fri, 5 Oct 2018 06:49:02 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message . .. On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 18:52:25 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message m... On Mon, 01 Oct 2018 11:27:46 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 09:58:49 -0700, "Bob La Londe" wrote: Hydraulics are too messy with tiny tractors. Having done it I disagree, though finding components small enough to fit into the cramped spaces was tricky, and I had to make several hydraulic parts including the adjustable pressure regulator, bushings to adapt the cylinder seals I could find to the pistons and the oil-tight welded frame / reservoir. The oil strainer housing is a 2" pipe tee, in the side, out the top, and drain at the bottom. I guess you like messy. ![]() It ceased being messy after I learned to do things right. Messy = overly complicated (to me). Whatever works for ya. Hey, I designed and built my first computer and coded its operating system and editor/assembler. By comparison making a hydraulic bucket loader was quick and easy. -jsw |
#3
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On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 18:50:38 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 5 Oct 2018 06:49:02 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message ... On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 18:52:25 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message om... On Mon, 01 Oct 2018 11:27:46 -0700, wrote: On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 09:58:49 -0700, "Bob La Londe" wrote: Hydraulics are too messy with tiny tractors. Having done it I disagree, though finding components small enough to fit into the cramped spaces was tricky, and I had to make several hydraulic parts including the adjustable pressure regulator, bushings to adapt the cylinder seals I could find to the pistons and the oil-tight welded frame / reservoir. The oil strainer housing is a 2" pipe tee, in the side, out the top, and drain at the bottom. I guess you like messy. ![]() It ceased being messy after I learned to do things right. Messy = overly complicated (to me). Whatever works for ya. Hey, I designed and built my first computer and coded its operating system and editor/assembler. By comparison making a hydraulic bucket loader was quick and easy. Har! I guess so. I remember flipping a sequence of toggle switches on the (Altair?) computer to load the bootloader from the 14" hard disc for the old Baird Gamma Camera from the '70s eons ago, so I vaguely grok your design. -- "I have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined and that we can do nothing to change it look before they cross the road." --Steven Hawking |
#4
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 18:50:38 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: ... Hey, I designed and built my first computer and coded its operating system and editor/assembler. By comparison making a hydraulic bucket loader was quick and easy. Har! I guess so. I remember flipping a sequence of toggle switches on the (Altair?) computer to load the bootloader from the 14" hard disc for the old Baird Gamma Camera from the '70s eons ago, so I vaguely grok your design. It was functionally similar to an Altair or PDP-8. The company was very supportive of my effort to learn computer engineering and programming and gave me the 8080 CPU and some samples of 6116 (2K x 8) CMOS memory that I kept alive with NiCads so I wouldn't have to enter the bootstrap loader each time. A Teletype saved programs on paper tape until I built an FSK modem to store them on a cassette recorder. The I/O ports were similar to an IBM PC's except the video which was a monochrome version of the Radio Shack Color Computer's. I bought an RSP1A at a hamfest last weekend. https://www.sdrplay.com/ In the 90's at Mitre I built prototypes of software-controlled digital radios like that but always turned them over to the engineers to play with. The free SDRuno program makes it a universal radio receiver for up to 2 GHz, and it can also be a spectrum analyzer over that range. While it doesn't have the calibrated accuracy, wide scan width or tracking generator output of my HP spectrum analyzer the signal display is good, and looks much better on an HDTV. On my suggestion the seller set up the demo to receive ADS-B data from nearby aircraft and overlay their locations onto Google Maps as a virtual radar, which had been a 90's Mitre project. ADS-B is at 1090 MHz, weather satellites are at 137 MHz. The aircraft band is 118-136 MHz. The Grants Pass tower is at 122.8 MHz, Cascade Approach is 124.3, and your weather (wx) is at 120.0. . I bought a 25-1300 MHz discone antenna for it that I haven't set up yet, since I spent yesterday helping a neighbor fix his garage roof. The feed from my 50 foot high TV antenna was good enough to receive an AM broadcast station at 900 KHz. -jsw |
#5
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On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 08:57:09 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message .. . On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 18:50:38 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: ... Hey, I designed and built my first computer and coded its operating system and editor/assembler. By comparison making a hydraulic bucket loader was quick and easy. Har! I guess so. I remember flipping a sequence of toggle switches on the (Altair?) computer to load the bootloader from the 14" hard disc for the old Baird Gamma Camera from the '70s eons ago, so I vaguely grok your design. It was functionally similar to an Altair or PDP-8. The company was very supportive of my effort to learn computer engineering and programming and gave me the 8080 CPU and some samples of 6116 (2K x 8) CMOS memory that I kept alive with NiCads so I wouldn't have to enter the bootstrap loader each time. A Teletype saved programs on paper tape until I built an FSK modem to store them on a cassette recorder. The I/O ports were similar to an IBM PC's except the video which was a monochrome version of the Radio Shack Color Computer's. I always wondered why Terry didn't rig something like that, because hand loading was a PITA. I bought an RSP1A at a hamfest last weekend. https://www.sdrplay.com/ In the 90's at Mitre I built prototypes of software-controlled digital radios like that but always turned them over to the engineers to play with. The free SDRuno program makes it a universal radio receiver for up to 2 GHz, and it can also be a spectrum analyzer over that range. While it doesn't have the calibrated accuracy, wide scan width or tracking generator output of my HP spectrum analyzer the signal display is good, and looks much better on an HDTV. Having a spectrum analyzer sounds fun. Will it show the freq field with spikes at the currently transmitted freqs? And will it work for everything broadcasting at the moment, or be tuned only to the radio receiver you're working? I'm curious as to how it can be used, other than to tune/verify a radio transmitter freq or such. On my suggestion the seller set up the demo to receive ADS-B data from nearby aircraft and overlay their locations onto Google Maps as a virtual radar, which had been a 90's Mitre project. ADS-B is at 1090 MHz, weather satellites are at 137 MHz. The aircraft band is 118-136 MHz. The Grants Pass tower is at 122.8 MHz, Cascade Approach is 124.3, and your weather (wx) is at 120.0. . Cool. I'll save that data and check it out on my UV-5R. I'm going to have to relearn it, I'm afraid. I bought a 25-1300 MHz discone antenna for it that I haven't set up yet, since I spent yesterday helping a neighbor fix his garage roof. The feed from my 50 foot high TV antenna was good enough to receive an AM broadcast station at 900 KHz. Have fun! I wonder if the hams will broadcast the fights if the Leftists kick it off after coming out of the closet as peaceniks. This November election may drive them into action as they watch themselves lose more and more seats. Stay safe. Gunner's Great Cull may take place as a reaction to the Left's total unhingement. Vote early and take cover after removing political stickers from your vehicles. ![]() -- "I have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined and that we can do nothing to change it look before they cross the road." --Steven Hawking |
#6
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 08:57:09 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: Having a spectrum analyzer sounds fun. Will it show the freq field with spikes at the currently transmitted freqs? And will it work for everything broadcasting at the moment, or be tuned only to the radio receiver you're working? I'm curious as to how it can be used, other than to tune/verify a radio transmitter freq or such. https://www.electronics-notes.com/ar...r-overview.php They are more useful than oscilloscopes for working with RF, nearly useless for almost anything else. Actually the instrument I used most at Mitre was a network analyzer which applies a frequency-swept signal to the input of a circuit and measures the output. The RSP1A sweeps over a maximum of 10MHz so one 6 MHz wide HDTV channel takes up most of the screen. You can place the mouse cursor on any digit of the frequency display and roll it up or down with the mouse wheel to move the on-screen frequency band. |
#7
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"Larry Jaques" wrote in message
... On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 08:57:09 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: It was functionally similar to an Altair or PDP-8. The company was very supportive of my effort to learn computer engineering and programming and gave me the 8080 CPU and some samples of 6116 (2K x 8) CMOS memory that I kept alive with NiCads so I wouldn't have to enter the bootstrap loader each time. ... I always wondered why Terry didn't rig something like that, because hand loading was a PITA. I started with power-hungry 256x4 SRAM. I don't know when the 6116 became available but I got the samples around the time the PC-XT was introduced. The company built RAM test stations for major manufacturers and received pre-production samples of new product to evaluate. IIRC the samples I had were slower than production versions. |
#8
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On Tue, 16 Oct 2018 10:36:24 -0700, Larry Jaques
wrote: On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 08:57:09 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Larry Jaques" wrote in message . .. On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 18:50:38 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: ... Hey, I designed and built my first computer and coded its operating system and editor/assembler. By comparison making a hydraulic bucket loader was quick and easy. Har! I guess so. I remember flipping a sequence of toggle switches on the (Altair?) computer to load the bootloader from the 14" hard disc for the old Baird Gamma Camera from the '70s eons ago, so I vaguely grok your design. It was functionally similar to an Altair or PDP-8. The company was very supportive of my effort to learn computer engineering and programming and gave me the 8080 CPU and some samples of 6116 (2K x 8) CMOS memory that I kept alive with NiCads so I wouldn't have to enter the bootstrap loader each time. A Teletype saved programs on paper tape until I built an FSK modem to store them on a cassette recorder. The I/O ports were similar to an IBM PC's except the video which was a monochrome version of the Radio Shack Color Computer's. I always wondered why Terry didn't rig something like that, because hand loading was a PITA. I bought an RSP1A at a hamfest last weekend. https://www.sdrplay.com/ In the 90's at Mitre I built prototypes of software-controlled digital radios like that but always turned them over to the engineers to play with. The free SDRuno program makes it a universal radio receiver for up to 2 GHz, and it can also be a spectrum analyzer over that range. While it doesn't have the calibrated accuracy, wide scan width or tracking generator output of my HP spectrum analyzer the signal display is good, and looks much better on an HDTV. Having a spectrum analyzer sounds fun. Will it show the freq field with spikes at the currently transmitted freqs? And will it work for everything broadcasting at the moment, or be tuned only to the radio receiver you're working? I'm curious as to how it can be used, other than to tune/verify a radio transmitter freq or such. On my suggestion the seller set up the demo to receive ADS-B data from nearby aircraft and overlay their locations onto Google Maps as a virtual radar, which had been a 90's Mitre project. ADS-B is at 1090 MHz, weather satellites are at 137 MHz. The aircraft band is 118-136 MHz. The Grants Pass tower is at 122.8 MHz, Cascade Approach is 124.3, and your weather (wx) is at 120.0. . Cool. I'll save that data and check it out on my UV-5R. I'm going to have to relearn it, I'm afraid. I bought a 25-1300 MHz discone antenna for it that I haven't set up yet, since I spent yesterday helping a neighbor fix his garage roof. The feed from my 50 foot high TV antenna was good enough to receive an AM broadcast station at 900 KHz. Have fun! I wonder if the hams will broadcast the fights if the Leftists kick it off after coming out of the closet as peaceniks. This November election may drive them into action as they watch themselves lose more and more seats. Stay safe. Gunner's Great Cull may take place as a reaction to the Left's total unhingement. Vote early and take cover after removing political stickers from your vehicles. ![]() Vote early and vote often. If it works for Democrats..it has to work for Republicans __ "Poor widdle Wudy...mentally ill, lies constantly, doesnt know who he is, or even what gender "he" is. No more pathetic creature has ever walked the earth. But...he is locked into a mental hospital for the safety of the public. Which is a very good thing." Asun rauhassa, valmistaudun sotaan. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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