precision piezo: difference between boards
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@supraguy said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
If only the "second" weren't so arbitrary, and no longer connected to what it actually measured in the first place, that being 1/86,400 of the rotational period of the earth. As such, anything based on time is be definition arbitrary, and no different than any other arbitrary measure.
I think you missed the update over there in Canada - it now is defined by Caesium-133.
But hey, 1/86,400 of earth's rotation is still precise enough for everything a human would ever need anyway, so you might as well keep it like that. -
@wilriker said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
I think you missed the update over there in Canada - it now is defined by Caesium-133.
But hey, 1/86,400 of earth's rotation is still precise enough for everything a human would ever need anyway, so you might as well keep it like that.Yes, I am aware of the Atomic clock standard, thanks. Because if the need for more and more precise measurements of time, a moving target like the rotation of the earth (Which is slowing, hence the need for leap-seconds, and my comment about it becoming disconnected from what it originally measured) but the original definition was based on a solar day, which because of Babylonian base-60 math ended up with this weird system of 24 hours to the day, 60 minutes to an hour, and 60 seconds to a minute.
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@deckingman said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
However, are we talking the English Foot, the International Foot, the Survey Foot, the Metric Foot (yes there is one) or one of the other "feet"?
A medieval English foot, as used to measure the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow. Don't ask me which type of swallow.
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@deckingman said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
Geography lesson. England is a country - so are Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland. Great Britain consists of the countries England, Wales, and Scotland which are all part of the same mainland but excludes Ireland because that is a separate island. However Great Britain does include the Scottish islands and the Isle of Man and the Isle of Wight. So sometimes it is also known as The British Isles although it excludes the island of Northern and Southern Ireland. Just "Britain" (without the "Great") can refer to either all islands in Great Britain, the largest island, or the political grouping of countries. The UK, or to give it it's full name is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland can also be called just "Britain".
It's quite simple
Reminds me of asking a Dutchman if he lives in the Netherlands or Holland.
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@phaedrux said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
Reminds me of asking a Dutchman if he lives in the Netherlands or Holland.
Ah, now that one's easy. The answer would either be "The Netherlands" or "Both" because Holland (actually North and South Holland) is/are provinces of "The Kingdom of the Netherlands" which consist of 12 provinces in total. Holland is the most prominent so is often used instead but by a non-Hollander from the Netherlands might get upset. A bit like asking you if you live in (say) British Columbia or Canada.
Oh, and for others on these forums, British Columbia isn't part of the British Isles, Great Britain or the UK. Neither is New England. Come to that "New York" isn't in England - we have the original "York".
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@supraguy
i think SI is good enough and almost all earth use it.
those in red do not use it.
water is the most common thing in world.
some equivalations
1L = 1kg = 0,001m³ = 1dm³ = 1000cm³ = 1000000mm³
1000L = 1m³ = 1000kg
Temperature is the Kelvin but i prefer Celsius because the temperature wich water freezes is 0° and when it boil is 100°In any case regardless of the unit of measurement the real thing that i can't understand is why in imperial units you use fractions i think 0.25" is simpler than 1/4" but probably is only a question of habits
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@lakko said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
In any case regardless of the unit of measurement the real thing that i can't understand is why in imperial units you use fractions i think 0.25" is simpler than 1/4" but probably is only a question of habits
Yes it probably stems from historical usage. I'm old enough to remember pre-decimal times where fractions of an inch were often used. So 3/16th or 13/64ths or some such was not uncommon. These would "translate" to 0.1873" and 0.203125" in which case, the fractions were much easier.
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@Lakko I'm well aware. Just having fun.
Yeah, it's a pain that I can't get metric drill bits unless I Internet order and pay about 4 times what they cost locally.
Fractional inches are a pain to deal with. Even more so when I need to remember which drill bits I need for what metric threads. I have a fairly comprehensive drill bit set that goes to 3/8" in 1/64" increments, usually good enough for most thread sizes, but 3mm is always a bit forced, and I often end up putting the thread tap into a drill to force the hole a little larger into aluminum.
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@moriquendi said in precision piezo: difference between boards:
@garyd9 Sorry about that, I try to reply to all the inquiries as quick as I can but occasionally I miss someone.
I don't offer a kit for the piezo20 board however all the parts are available individually, you would probably want the PCB, a drilled or undrilled 20mm piezo disk and an endstop cable.
The Orion works by flexing the PCB through compression of the module as a whole.
Here is a (very) rough mockup of how the new product is designed to be used:
The red part represents the carriage of your printer, the green part is the PCB and your hotend/extruder mounts to the blue part. Force on the nozzle transfers through the blue part and causes the PCB to flex, cutouts at the bottom of the blue part allow for vertical deflection while constraining rotation and movement in other axis.Idris
i Idris, it is the Andromeda board?
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No, this is not the Andromeda board, this board has not yet been released.
Idris
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@moriquendi I got it