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Test Equipment / Re: New 2ch pocket DSO+SG - Zeeweii DSO2512G
« Last post by tunk on Today at 12:50:53 pm »
FY3224s has quite good precision (frequency response) up to 10MHz / 10V, but is not very accurate, i.e. the multimeter shows slightly different values in certain voltage ranges from what is set on the FY3224s.
It may be caused by the multimeter - multimeters also have a frequency renge.
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Beginners / Re: Convert US standard 115V to International 230V
« Last post by tooki on Today at 12:45:55 pm »
Somehow we need to get through to you that you have got to be more receptive to feedback and more accepting of others’ expertise, and to make a real effort to read carefully and thoroughly before responding to threads.

I don't know why you decided that I don't listen to feedback. […]
Because you don’t, and that entire reply is proof of this. You just bark back, but never accept responsibility for mistakes, nor accept that others are correct. Look at the part of my sentence above that is in italics. (And which was in italics in the original.)

Your first reply in this thread, long after OP had listed the part numbers of the power supplies used, you suggested 1. using a motor-generator set, and 2. to consider switching to an SMPS inside.

Both of those suggestions are completely irrelevant and useless at that point in the discussion because it had already been established that it uses two universal-input SMPSs. This shows you did NOT read the discussion before replying. When this was pointed out to you, you responded that the total power didn’t add up, even though this also had already been explained in the prior discussion. Rather than just saying “oh crap, sorry, I responded before reading everything” or “my apologies, you’re right, I missed that detail when reading” (which are things that happen to ALL of us!), you just keep digging and digging for why you can’t possibly be wrong… And that’s why people (plural) got annoyed, and expressed that.
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Unless by “anywhere”, you mean on a more microscopic level as it applies to my original question.
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I mean, it’s just the stator by itself right now, fairly easy to clean.
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Power/Renewable Energy/EV's / Re: SMPS input filter cut off frequency
« Last post by mtwieg on Today at 12:40:22 pm »
The reasoning is likely as follows:
The power supply's control loop will attenuate line disturbances below the controller's crossover frequency.
The LC filter will attenuate disturbances above its cutoff frequency.
In order to attenuate disturbances at all frequencies, then these two bands should overlap, thus the LC filter fc should be lower than the controller's crossover fc.

Of course, whether this is actually worthwhile is very application-specific.
For example, if your primary concern is just passing EMC tests, then there's not much reason to attenuate below 150kHz (or whatever the lower test frequency your device requires).
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Sanding or wire wheeling will produce metal swarf which can go anywhere, not really desirable.
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You may be right, I thought that switch has 12V output. Any recommendation for footswitch that would have directly the 12V output?
How would it? There’s no standardized 12V plug, unlike the 120V mains plug and receptacle.
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Greetings,

I have an old radial arm saw that I’m rebuilding. I’ve cleaned it up, put new bearings in the motor and now want to paint it. The motor has exposed laminations on the body, presumably to save space or something.

As far as I know, there’s usually insulation between laminations, perhaps in the form of “backlack” or other varnish-y type material. Is this insulation also applied to the edges of each lamination? If I were to sand or wire wheel off the existing paint, do I run the risk of removing insulation and causing some lamination to lamination shorts? My thought is that the distance between laminations is already set by the thickness of the insulation between lamination, so I wouldn’t be shorting any together unless i applied severe pressure, enough to deform the laminations “into each other”.

Any thoughts?

Thanks,
Tim
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Beginners / Re: Convert US standard 115V to International 230V
« Last post by radiolistener on Today at 12:32:28 pm »
Somehow we need to get through to you that you have got to be more receptive to feedback and more accepting of others’ expertise, and to make a real effort to read carefully and thoroughly before responding to threads.

I don't know why you decided that I don't listen to feedback. Regarding to the point that OP uses PSU which is already compatible with both standard, I heard this argument and accepted it. But I didn't agreed that this is enough info to make decision that there is no change required for medical device. IanB tried to ague that the medical device power consumption can be checked with a cheap Chinese meter and that information can be used to decide if used power supply is enough. But I argued that such approach is not acceptable for medical devices. Then Zero999 decided to support IanB mistaken idea that there is nothing to worry about and all can be checked with cheap meter. And then you're join and support Zero999...

As I can see you're didn't listen to my feedback. Instead you're started to blame me that I don't listen.

Usually person starts to blame some other person when he don't have enough knowledge for proper argument on the subject, that's the child way for discussion. And I see that you're started to talking about persons instead of topic subject. Isn't it?

I already proposed you to talk about technical subject instead of sharing your zero-cost subjective opinion about persons. If you don't have technical arguments, then I leave that discussion.
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Security / Re: Microsoft repackages apps with a telemetry .NET wrapper
« Last post by tooki on Today at 12:30:13 pm »
Quote
Some developers use telemetry to figure out how people use their software

Shouldn't that be done in-house, or at minimum with users that agree to be monitored?
But users do agree to it. That’s why software installers literally ask you whether you agree to share usage data or not. Any legitimate vendor makes it clear what is and isn’t collected. (For example, that your data itself won’t be shared.)

Are you happy with your car telling the manufacturer where you went, what speeds you did where, how you used the brakes, your acceleration, where you were looking, how you flash the lights, etc? What time you go to work, the shops, hey - is that the place where Ms Periwinkle's car is parked and it's always 8pm to 10pm?
Completely different from usage statistics.

A correct analogy would be that it shares things like: what percentage of the time is your foot on the gas pedal? How many times do you use the brake on a typical drive? What’s the average length of your drives, in km and in minutes? What’s your acceleration style (jackrabbit starts or slow off the line)? How long is the car idle between drives?

The stuff you list is more like if Word was sending not only that, but also uploading your documents and a live keyboard log.

I am absolutely aware that some companies, like Google and Meta (and the essentially scammers who make “free” phone apps whose main raison d’être is to collect user data), do collect and upload all kinds of sensitive personal data, like location logs, to use for commercial purposes. But not all software companies do, and it’s unfair to extrapolate the true offenders into being typical of the entire industry.
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