Re: Hughes IMPATT
Hello, We can see a full system here : https://www.ebay.com/itm/235000009591 Best regards Eric
By
f1ghb
·
#147382
·
|
Re: Introduction
No apology needed, Ross!? That's a keeper!? In fact, I will print it out.? A good excuse to buy a 3 cm loop and an extra long flexible coaxial cable.? I will have to measure the loss over
By
Jim Ford
·
#147381
·
|
Re: Schottky Diode degradation / Replacement in instrument Sram Battery backup circuits ?
Some additional insight from Maxim,? on the Paralled Or'ed subject for Sram Battery backup, using Fets:? -->? Fet-Or'ed? possible improvements. Different from the concerns of either the Schottky
By
gren
·
#147380
·
|
Re: Hughes IMPATT
Hi Ed Thank you for your input I am familiar with the older version that you provided a link to and the more modern version that includes a lineariser to try to straighten out the not linear frequency
By
Paul Bicknell
·
#147379
·
|
Re: Introduction
Hi, I don't use LEDs for overall general or bench lighting, I have overhead Fluorescents for that. I do have a magnifier that has 144 LEDs on it that are variable in intensity. I purchased one with
By
si_emi_01
·
#147378
·
|
Re: Hughes IMPATT
I recall seeing some HP8620 plug-ins over the years, that were labeled as Hughes, but none contained an oscillator as far as I could see. They had connectors on the front for control/drive cables that
By
ed breya
·
#147377
·
|
Re: Introduction
And those that do? Methuselah's Children, Robert A Heinlein. He shows up in a number of books, possibly in cameo roles. Then "To Sail Beyond the Sunset" does more explaining. (Obscure Science Fiction
By
Harvey White
·
#147376
·
|
Re: HP-IB connector screws
Yup, point loads. I see a nice Efratom MFS in there. Are your MBF modules the 5MHz versions modified for 10MHz? -Dave -- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA
By
Dave McGuire
·
#147375
·
|
Re: Probe Cables for 16801A Logic Analyser
I have just bought some earth grabbers from Global via ebay. Very helpful people but I suggest you do go via their website rather than ebay, who will charge a ridiculous transatlantic shipping fee.
By
Adrian Godwin
·
#147374
·
|
Re: Introduction
LOL..Not many people will understand that. DaveD KC0WJN Thanks for all the fish. ============================== All spelling mistakes are the responsibilty of the reader (Rick Renz, STK, ca. 1994)
By
Dave Daniel
·
#147373
·
|
Re: Introduction
Borland Pascal became Borland Windows Pascal, which became Delphi. FreePascal was a different product, which became Lazarus Pascal. The two product lines are almost, but not quite identical. Somewhere
By
Harvey White
·
#147372
·
|
Re: Introduction
Lazarus Pascal, and no idea why they named it like that, their product picture is a cheetah. Maybe one of the designers is a Howard? Harvey
By
Harvey White
·
#147371
·
|
Re: Introduction
Or would that be "wired"? I before E, except after C....weird.
By
Steve Hendrix
·
#147370
·
|
Re: Introduction
Probably worth a good bit now. I've never known anyone to wire-wrap anything as a joke. That's...just weird. -Dave -- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA
By
Dave McGuire
·
#147369
·
|
Re: Introduction
*Which* Pascal became "Windows Pascal"? Languages vs. implementations. -Dave -- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA
By
Dave McGuire
·
#147368
·
|
Re: Introduction
A longer reply is due. BUT ... "Lazarus", as in RAH's "Lazarus Long"? DaveD KC0WJN Thanks for all the fish. ============================== All spelling mistakes are the responsibilty of the reader
By
Dave Daniel
·
#147367
·
|
Re: Introduction
Pascal became windows pascal, which went nowhere, and was paralled by free pascal, which morphed in a kind of parallel development into Lazarus Pascal.? That has pretty much all that visual C has, or
By
Harvey White
·
#147366
·
|
Re: Introduction
Haaa, that's pretty funny. Implemented for every major architecture, dozens of free and commercial versions, tons of commercial applications developed with it. Pascal was HUGE, and is still huge
By
Dave McGuire
·
#147365
·
|
Re: Introduction
Yeah, those were the days when those of us who built stuff at home were always behind the curve. Computers, go-carts, robots. You mention the 6502. For me it was the Z80 and the 68000. I still have
By
Dave Daniel
·
#147364
·
|
Re: Introduction
Yeah, Modula-2 never caught on. Neither did Pascal, actually. I did all my Applied Math programming in FORTRAN (calculating the zeroes of Bessel functions as a homework assignment at ~0600 on a
By
Dave Daniel
·
#147363
·
|