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On Nov 15, 9:31*am, Lord Valve wrote:
wrote: On Nov 14, 9:59 am, Lord Valve wrote: John Smith wrote: On 11/13/2011 2:19 PM, Lord Valve wrote: John Smith wrote: On 11/13/2011 10:25 AM, Lord Valve wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 08:38:28 -0700, Lord Valve * wrote: dave wrote: On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 11:39:03 +0000, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote: It is much more important to know exactly how long and how well your satellite is going to work than to hope to get longer by using a technology that might last longer, but will more probably die unexpectedly when struck by a cosmic ray burst. Sometimes you can not predict how long a satellite will be used. A friend of mine worked on a civilian satellite for a defense contractor and just before the division was sold off, cleaned out any old documents and files they had on it. Since the satellite he had worked on was way past its expected life (but still in use), the contracts had long expired, the work was not classified and a new improved one was due to be launched in a few days, he was told to dump it all. A few days later, the booster exploded on the pad, and the replacement was destroyed. The sattelite was kept running for many years, although there were no documents on what to do or how it was built. Geoff. What good is a diagram if the unit is 24,000 miles in the air? It had better *not* be in the air... *;-) Besides - I saw mention upthread of using the ambient vacuum with just the tube elements, rather than a typical evacuated glass (or other material) enclosure...is the vacuum in geosynchronous orbit really hard enough? It would seem to me that there are probably plenty of gas molecules floating around at that height, even if it would still qualify as a "soft" vacuum. *Anybody? Lord Valve For all sorts of other reasons, standard enclosed tubes are used. Main reasons are first to contain the electrons so other metalwork doesn't get involved, and second to maintain the correct physical positioning. The helix is of very fine tolerance in both pitch and positioning. Space is certainly hard enough, but the environment around a satellite is frequently not space, but a diffuse cloud of exhaust gas which would extinguish a TWT immediately. d Ah. Good point! Satellites do indeed need to use propellant of some sort to keep in position; I didn't think of that at all. *And it would seem that even if the ambient vacuum were hard enough, conventional construction of the TWT would be needed to keep contaminants out of it during the satellite assembly process down on Terra firma. But I must admit, the idea of using ambient vacuum tickles my fancy a bit. *;-) Lord Valve I don't recall anyone ever claiming there was no enclose on the devices ... just the reasons for enclosing them the way we do on earth is now gone ... Regards, JS Do you actually read this ****, or have you been into the medicine cabinet? Lord Valve shrug I usually don't read imbecilic stuff ... such as yours. *But, if I do, I certainly do not take it seriously ... perhaps you will have better luck with others. Regards, JS Oh. So, you're just another garden-variety ****. *shrug Y'all have a Real Nice Day now, y'heah? Got guns? Lord Valve American - so far- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - John Smith confessed once *that he sleeps with a side arm under his pillow! He can't keep it on the nightstand like everyone else? You don't want a pistol in the sack with you...you might blow your balls off by accident. *Although, in his case... Got guns? Lord Valve American - so far- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll prempt the probability that LV will call me a **** and say to all, respectfully as any gentleman can, that when I am a ****, I know it, and so LV needn't tell me about it. Is LV getting WORSE as he's gettin older? wer'e into about 3 posts from him with the firstie dissing JS for imbecilic reasons, during a detailed discussion regarding 10,993.5 ways of building a radio and including side issues of tubes used in satellites. Innocent stuff. And who'd have guessed so many would have sprung from the woodwork to discuss tubey radio thingies when most ppl here thought only 3 people read r.a.t most days? Anyway, then after such brevity from LV, we get stuff about guns, and being American. I reckon LV is frightened witless about the world outside himself. I invite him to calm down, nobody is about to force him to be un- american, and probably nobody would find it interesting to do a home invasion at LV's house. Surely both activities would be boring, no? Fat lotta good it does to have a shooter under the pillow when ya snoring ya head off while someone steps out the window with the family silver. Well, plasma TV set maybe. But lemme tell ya, one does sure wake up fast when ya reach fo the gun while half asleep and ya shoot ya ****ing dick off. Dozen madder; being dickless at 60 yo probably improves a man. But such an event does has ya thinkin fast about a doctor - **** the TV set, let 'em have the darn thang. Funny thing, I never had no need to ever even consider gettin a gun. Jus' no need. There's no need for a front fence, and no need for any dog. There used ta be a shiela livin 5 doors away down my street who used to have a couple of those horrible little yappie terriers. Story was that some bloke got slightly too amarous with her when she was 17, about 20 years before and she never got over it. She had one of those figures and a face that had blokes jus thinkin only one thing, but she just couldn't handle any man's advance. Anyway, kids round our way would chuck small rocks at her house windows whenever they walked past, and this set off the dogs, and that'd set off her neighbours, and they'd harrange the poor bitch about her 2 noisy dogs and all dogs and humans involved took an hour to calm down. Comical it was. Anyway, she musta moved because we don't cop the yap-yap or the argy-bargy neighbours any more. Lucky it was that nobody had a gun, and that nobody shot anyone, deliberately, or by mistake. Such is life in Austrayan suburbs, where of course there are always a few ppl who have gorn astray, as ppl do, but remarkably, there is very little blood on the footpaths. Patrick Turner. |
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