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"Paul Burridge" wrote - I regularly visit your site and grab what I can! Anyone with any sense would! Will that suffice? ;-) =========================== Well, it will have to do. Thanks Paul! For the last one or two years of my varied career I was listed in the firm's phone directory as "Chief Standards Engineer". I had under some sort of control the Quality Managers of 3 factories and laboratories. Strictly speaking, "Quality" is defined as the ability to conform to specified requirements. It can be statistically measured as can anybody's performance. But in my case I would prefer the more lax and broader definition of Quality : The ability to serve the intended purpose. "Reliability" is defined as Quality versus Time. My programs, produced in retirement for a variety of reasons and purposes, have now been available to the 'rabble' for 5 or 6 years. ;o) Here I go again - pouring out my heart with the aid of a bottle of Valencia red. It's supposed to be good for the arteries. It didn't do Franco any harm. But a pity about Guenica as depicted by Pablo Picasso. He should have done Nagosaki (which I witnessed from the air) and Hiroshima (which I visited on foot). Unfortunately my camera had a pin-hole in the bellows but the experience, nevertheless, profoundly influenced, you could say biassed, my early education. --- Reg, G4FGQ |
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Hash: SHA1 Allodoxaphobia wrote in : Ever see a Sears ratchet glowing WHITE HOT? Ya, but... You can take it back and they'll replace it. HI!HI! They do insist that all tools be cooled well below the point of emitting visible light before return, though. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 8.1 - not licensed for commercial use: www.pgp.com Comment: Encrypt; it makes people wonder what you're up to. iQA/AwUBQSRZDqauO3Snl+t6EQLmBQCgpxSU1g1LxJ0E+K+WSebUlI Fm4dcAoP/e Qp+oYIKPPglTzRq6IqIwnQ3z =uavw -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
My story may not be extremely spectacular, but I think it has a rather
amusing moral... I had for a number of years not bothered screwing down the top cover of my 13.8VDC 10A power supply, for whatever reason. Of course, every so often the top cover would move and expose the inside working of the supply, but that wasn't really a problem!(?) Then one day, while doing my electronics trade course, we moved to the subject of AC safety and how not to fry yourself! Very interesting lesson and I scored 100% in the final exam for that subject. Then I came home, rather pleased, reached down to switch off my power supply, and promptly shorted the 240V AC main switch with my finger! What was that about AC electrical safety again???? ---- Another event, some years later, I was working on a tape deck on my workbench. I had to reach over the tape deck to get a screwdriver from the back of the bench, but of course I forgot it was still pluged in and promptly shorted the AC transformer inout with my forearm... Luckily for me we had just installed earth leakage breakers and it didn't take long for it to trip... After that, whenever someone asked me "how long do these breakers take to cut out" I would always answer with "oh, about ARRRGG" Cheers Martin, VK2UMJ |
My dad tells a story of his days working as a maintenence engineer in
a building where the power was carried along exposed buss bars. Another worker had a screwdriver in his back pocket and backed into a buss, blowing himself across the room and leaving a notable set of scars from the molten screwdriver blade. |
High school.
My buddy Pete has one of those continuous AC electrical outlets on the side of his desk. You know. Two continuous brass strips in a foot long plastic housing with two slots, into which you shove the (older two bladed) plug. Well, one day he needed some line cord, which he ALSO had hanging on the peg-board on the side of his desk SO... He reaches around the end...grabs some line cord and proceeds to cut off a piece with scissors... Blam! ... notched scissors! Outlet strip had the same kind of brown, two conductor cord. -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. "Mike Silva" wrote in message m... My dad tells a story of his days working as a maintenence engineer in a building where the power was carried along exposed buss bars. Another worker had a screwdriver in his back pocket and backed into a buss, blowing himself across the room and leaving a notable set of scars from the molten screwdriver blade. |
In message , Steve Nosko
writes SO... He reaches around the end...grabs some line cord and proceeds to cut off a piece with scissors... Blam! ... notched scissors! On a vaguely similar line my father was rewiring an outside building and carefully removed all the fuses from the fuse box before cutting out all the old cabling. He then came across a cable he had forgotten and cut this too, BANG!! It was the input to the fuse box. One very badly melted pair of cutters and a rather startled father. -- Bill |
Bill wrote:
In message , Steve Nosko writes SO... He reaches around the end...grabs some line cord and proceeds to cut off a piece with scissors... Blam! ... notched scissors! On a vaguely similar line my father was rewiring an outside building and carefully removed all the fuses from the fuse box before cutting out all the old cabling. He then came across a cable he had forgotten and cut this too, BANG!! It was the input to the fuse box. One very badly melted pair of cutters and a rather startled father. I gotta. I just gotta. About 25 years back, I was a new systems programmer for a government agency which I'll cleverly call WeBuildHighways. Our sister shop, the Department of inHuman Services, was fairly close, and we spent a fair amount of time visiting and swapping hints and kinks. One day I was there while some remodeling was being done: an old door wsa being blocked and a new one cut. I heard a Skilsaw fire up, saw a blade movingd ownward, and cringed: there was a quad-box about a foot below the blade and in its path. My counterpar was a bit quicker, and shouted "Turn Off All Your Terminals RIGHT _NOW_!!" -- just before the blue flash and the great dark silence. This was before PCs, and so we only lost some 3270 terminal sessions to the mainframe. It was ... interesting. Another time I'll tell about The Guy Who Blew Himself Through The Door. -- Mike Andrews Tired old sysadmin |
12 years back there was a CB'er that had a double 3-500 Z amp with 3500
volts on the plate that lived next door to me. One day he noticed he was running about half power instead of full bore so he popped the top of the amp and noticed one of the wires on the tube caps (PLATE) had come unsoldered.....so instead of turning the amp off he melted the solder a bit with his insulated soldering iron and forced the wire back into the molten puddle....It worked!.......Then holding a large roll of bare solder in his hand he added a bit more to the molten solder It didnt take him long to let go of that roll of solder in his bare hand!!! His entire hand was burnt white! "Mike Andrews" wrote in message ... Bill wrote: In message , Steve Nosko writes SO... He reaches around the end...grabs some line cord and proceeds to cut off a piece with scissors... Blam! ... notched scissors! On a vaguely similar line my father was rewiring an outside building and carefully removed all the fuses from the fuse box before cutting out all the old cabling. He then came across a cable he had forgotten and cut this too, BANG!! It was the input to the fuse box. One very badly melted pair of cutters and a rather startled father. I gotta. I just gotta. About 25 years back, I was a new systems programmer for a government agency which I'll cleverly call WeBuildHighways. Our sister shop, the Department of inHuman Services, was fairly close, and we spent a fair amount of time visiting and swapping hints and kinks. One day I was there while some remodeling was being done: an old door wsa being blocked and a new one cut. I heard a Skilsaw fire up, saw a blade movingd ownward, and cringed: there was a quad-box about a foot below the blade and in its path. My counterpar was a bit quicker, and shouted "Turn Off All Your Terminals RIGHT _NOW_!!" -- just before the blue flash and the great dark silence. This was before PCs, and so we only lost some 3270 terminal sessions to the mainframe. It was ... interesting. Another time I'll tell about The Guy Who Blew Himself Through The Door. -- Mike Andrews Tired old sysadmin |
In message , Ernie
writes ......Then holding a large roll of bare solder in his hand he added a bit more to the molten solder It didnt take him long to let go of that roll of solder in his bare hand!!! I trust you entered him for the "Darwin award"? -- Bill |
On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 21:20:01 -0400, "Ernie" wrote:
12 years back there was a CB'er that had a double 3-500 Z amp with 3500 volts on the plate that lived next door to me. What a delight to live next-door to. :-( -- "What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793. |
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