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#41
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#42
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Soliloquy wrote:
Clock trivia, notice the display on clocks that use Roman numerals. It goes I, II, III, IIII, IV, V, VI, VII, IX, X, XI, XII. Standard Roman numerals denote IIII as IV. The Non-Standard application above is used to keep symmetry in the display, keeping the character use in units of 4. (4 all Is, 4 with Vs, 4 with Xs) Not all clock with Roman numerals use this system, but the use is widespread.. I've never seen a clock face with IIII AND IV on it. |
#43
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In article . edu, William
Mutch writes: Where I work there is a clock who'se face has been altered to read: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C Nice !!! |
#44
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William Mutch wrote in
ell.edu: We have PLCs at work, Allen Bradley, and they use Octal for the numbering system. For the longest time, I wondered why the electronics department have the schematics hand scribbled "actual slot 8" for the slot that the schematic has labeled as having an address of 10. It's quite easy using the octal addresses. Fortunately we don't do any programming, so all we need to do is to find the correct input/output and look for voltages and logic states. Now Hex, I think that would make things a little harder for me to understand. But I like the clock idea, that would be a great conversation piece. Regards In article , says... "snip" The arbitrary sacrifice of Analog Displays by the younger generations is truly a sad thing. I have seen teenagers unable to tell the time on an analog clock. We do not have digital minds, and digital electronics are not necessarily bringing the bliss to society that the modern public has been programmed... Where I work there is a clock who'se face has been altered to read: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C |
#45
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"Mark S. Holden" wrote in
: Am I missing something? I notice that you have capitalized "AND" in the sentence excerpt "IIII AND IV on it." I've never seen a clock with both on it either. But the IIII or the IV are common Roman numeral markings on clocks. Regards. Soliloquy wrote: Clock trivia, notice the display on clocks that use Roman numerals. It goes I, II, III, IIII, IV, V, VI, VII, IX, X, XI, XII. Standard Roman numerals denote IIII as IV. The Non-Standard application above is used to keep symmetry in the display, keeping the character use in units of 4. (4 all Is, 4 with Vs, 4 with Xs) Not all clock with Roman numerals use this system, but the use is widespread.. I've never seen a clock face with IIII AND IV on it. |
#46
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Panasonic RF- 2600, 2800, 2900, 4800, 4900
Sony ICF- 6500W, 6800W CRF-1, 320A, 330K Thanks, Starman. I must admit my experience has been with comm receivers, not shortwavers. Bob also pretty much answered my question, Panasonic-wise. And, Bob, I'd buy your dream receiver. I'd want one little thing, though: an antenna trimmer. And they can leave out the battery power option. A serious receiver wouldn't be operated portable, not here anyhow. I don't even operate my DX-392 portable. (It eats D cells.) Now I would want a slope-faced case. The usual little stands are too much angle. Or else, make the stands adjustable. Bill, K5BY |
#47
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I've never seen a Roman numeral clock without an VIII, either. G
Bill, KVBY |
#48
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Then there's the Aggie clock (clockwise):
12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 Bill, K5BY |
#49
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WShoots1 wrote:
I've never seen a Roman numeral clock without an VIII, either. G Bill, KVBY I guess if you put 4 on there twice, you have to drop one of them. But I do remember seeing a clock with each hour marked "5" and the face read "No Cocktails before 5 O'clock" |
#50
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You can add a digital dial to many radios by getting a kit from
http://www.aade.com/ I haven't tried any yet myself, but I'd sure like to. Doug, K8RFT "WShoots1" wrote in message ... Stinger: I think the Grundig S350 is exactly that. I haven't used one, but that is what I understand the features are. No, the 350 is about like the jWIN, tuning-wise. What I'd like is an analog dial with analog tuning, but with a digital readout to provide the actual frequency (as opposed to using crystal markers and analog dial correction). It would require an analog receiver, with a frequency counter that would read the freq diff between the LO and the IF output. Or something like that. Bill, K5BY |
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