Popular Post p_toad Posted August 14, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 14, 2019 Found this and thought of you. The paper cover was already damaged as found. Fred W. Hargis Jr, Gunny, Artie and 8 others 11 Quote
Popular Post John Morris Posted August 15, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 15, 2019 @Artie been doing electrical so long I bet he has one in his pouch! Cool find! steven newman, Cal, Artie and 4 others 4 3 Quote
Artie Posted August 15, 2019 Report Posted August 15, 2019 Nope.kinda amazing how much we don’t figure voltage drop into our calculations. Unless you are talking LONG distances or lower than 120 volts, doesn’t really affect normal wiring much. Kinda like you get two 50 foot, 16 gauge extension cords, and then run the circular saw off them all day. Maybe it heats up more than normal, maybe the cords get warm, but mostly everything keeps on chugging. FlGatorwood, Gunny, Cal and 1 other 4 Quote
Popular Post Larry Buskirk Posted August 15, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 15, 2019 16 gauge I've got tools that won't even start with that light of cord. I've probably warmed up house wiring using my 12 gauge cords. FlGatorwood, HARO50, Artie and 2 others 5 Quote
Popular Post John Morris Posted August 15, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 15, 2019 My Shopsmith used to dim our lights, hows that for power! FlGatorwood, Larry Buskirk, Al B and 3 others 1 1 4 Quote
Popular Post Gene Howe Posted August 15, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 15, 2019 Wow, a slide rule for electricians. Artie probably doesn't need one. He's got it all memorized. Cal, FlGatorwood, Al B and 2 others 5 Quote
Popular Post Gene Howe Posted August 15, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 15, 2019 1 minute ago, John Morris said: My Shopsmith used to dim our lights, hows that for power! As long as it didn't dim your enthusiasm..... Gunny, Larry Buskirk, Al B and 5 others 1 7 Quote
Artie Posted August 16, 2019 Report Posted August 16, 2019 5 hours ago, Gene Howe said: Wow, a slide rule for electricians. Artie probably doesn't need one. He's got it all memorized. Harmonized, memorized, whatever it takes. Al B, FlGatorwood, Cal and 1 other 4 Quote
Popular Post Gunny Posted August 16, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 16, 2019 36 minutes ago, Artie said: whatever it takes. tattoos on his arm and legs, which have become unreadable over the years as they have blurred. Al B, Artie, HARO50 and 4 others 7 Quote
Larry Buskirk Posted August 16, 2019 Report Posted August 16, 2019 @Artie, Kind of like the one for reading resistor color codes. You know the one that starts with "Bad boys..." Gunny, Cal, HARO50 and 1 other 1 3 Quote
Popular Post PeteM Posted August 16, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 16, 2019 (edited) Text says 1946 NEC. Since code is updated every three years (altho not sure when the interval was back then), slide rule itself dates to the late 40's? There is a museum devoted to slide rules, and I noticed they have electrical ones. If you want history, https://www.sliderulemuseum.com/MiscUSA.htm Edited August 16, 2019 by PeteM Gunny, Cal, FlGatorwood and 2 others 3 2 Quote
Popular Post steven newman Posted August 16, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 16, 2019 Geo. Worthington was a Hardware Store wholesale supplier....based up in Cleveland, OH...something like 16,000 different items in their catalogs... That little red block plane also came from Cleveland... FlGatorwood, Cal, Gunny and 2 others 5 Quote
Artie Posted August 17, 2019 Report Posted August 17, 2019 23 hours ago, Woodbutcherbynight said: tattoos on his arm and legs, which have become unreadable over the years as they have blurred. Gotta be honest here, only got 1 tattoo. Shamrock on my upper left arm. Hasn’t really changed too much in shape Color has definitely faded a bit. Got it in Rantoul Illinois 1979, right outside the gates of Chanute AFB. Cal, FlGatorwood and steven newman 2 1 Quote
Popular Post Artie Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 14 hours ago, Larry Buskirk said: @Artie, Kind of like the one for reading resistor color codes. You know the one that starts with "Bad boys..." Never learned the resistor code. Wasn’t needed till the last two years. Now that I work with security systems, gotta put end of line resistors in, for supervisory circuits. I got a box of resistors and just match the others out of the same panel. (This part of the job just ain’t that hard). Gunny, FlGatorwood, steven newman and 2 others 2 3 Quote
Popular Post Artie Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 I have never even held a slide rule, never mind use one. Cal, HARO50, Gunny and 2 others 1 4 Quote
Popular Post Gunny Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 58 minutes ago, Artie said: I have never even held a slide rule, never mind use one. I have some interesting applications of use for them, on certain engineers that designed the crap I have to fix. FlGatorwood, Larry Buskirk, Artie and 4 others 7 Quote
Popular Post Larry Buskirk Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 Gunny must have a little electronics background...seems he knows about the "Bad boys..." Gunny, Cal, Artie and 3 others 1 5 Quote
Popular Post PeteM Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 9 hours ago, Woodbutcherbynight said: I have some interesting applications of use for them, on certain engineers that designed the crap I have to fix. Sneer not we at Engineers. There is a whole industry (including me) employed in fixing their errors . Credit where credit is due: they break things faster than we can fix. It's called "job security". Gunny, Gene Howe, Artie and 5 others 1 7 Quote
Popular Post steven newman Posted August 17, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 17, 2019 Might remember back when... You would wire a resistor and a capacitor together....to make a "filter" You could take a suspect "tube" to the store, use the Tester they had, and if the tube was bad, buy a replacement... When some tubes had a "shield" over them...and others had an "anode" in the top of the glass envelope... When, for laughs, you'd "charge up" a capacitor with the leads bent just so....toss the bundle over to someone,,,and tell them to "Catch it!" Sitting in the car...waiting for the car's radio to warm up...then tune in CKLW-AM, and listen in to Wolfman Jack...or the King Biscuit Flour Hour...... HARO50, Larry Buskirk, FlGatorwood and 2 others 3 2 Quote
Popular Post Artie Posted August 18, 2019 Popular Post Report Posted August 18, 2019 12 hours ago, steven newman said: Might remember back when... You would wire a resistor and a capacitor together....to make a "filter" You could take a suspect "tube" to the store, use the Tester they had, and if the tube was bad, buy a replacement... When some tubes had a "shield" over them...and others had an "anode" in the top of the glass envelope... When, for laughs, you'd "charge up" a capacitor with the leads bent just so....toss the bundle over to someone,,,and tell them to "Catch it!" Sitting in the car...waiting for the car's radio to warm up...then tune in CKLW-AM, and listen in to Wolfman Jack...or the King Biscuit Flour Hour...... I’m turning 60 in March, I remember taking the tubes out of the tv and bringing them to an electronics store, and testing them to se which one/ones needed to be replaced. Remember the ones that had the wire that attached to the top. Never made a filter, or played with capacitors, but did hear the stories about tossing a charged one to others. Wolf man was just a little before my time, but the King Biscuit Flower hour I remember, or at least references to it. HARO50, FlGatorwood, Gunny and 2 others 5 Quote
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