George RR Fartin posted:Is there any reason they didn't make it so the crank was used via a ratcheting wheel attached to the engine so the motion of the engine didn't pull the crank along with it? Like, bicycles existed with freewheels at that point, so it would've been a known technology. They did ratchet, so you don't have a spinning handle once it started. The problem was when it swung back the other way. -e- I also think that ethanol was already a known anti-knock agent, but lead was pushed because you could patent it?
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 16:39 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:00 |
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Lurking Haro posted:They did ratchet, so you don't have a spinning handle once it started. The problem was when it swung back the other way. Wh...how?
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 16:44 |
3D Megadoodoo posted:Wh...how? A cylinder firing might make the engine spin backwards if the timing is slightly off and there isn't enough momentum yet. It wouldn't run, but it would buck like a wild horse.
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 17:13 |
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Lurking Haro posted:A cylinder firing might make the engine spin backwards if the timing is slightly off and there isn't enough momentum yet. It wouldn't run, but it would buck like a wild horse. No I mean how would it cause a ratcheting handle to do anything?
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 17:17 |
3D Megadoodoo posted:No I mean how would it cause a ratcheting handle to do anything? It pushes back. If it would disengage, you couldn't crank it. Think of it as arm wrestling except the engine is winning.
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 17:23 |
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3D Megadoodoo posted:No I mean how would it cause a ratcheting handle to do anything? Imagine you are using a socket wrench to tighten a bolt. If it were to violently tighten (the engine starts), the wrench just starts ratcheting. If the bolt were to violently unscrew, it would turn the wrench and your hand.
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 17:25 |
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Cojawfee posted:Imagine you are using a socket wrench to tighten a bolt. If it were to violently tighten (the engine starts), the wrench just starts ratcheting. If the bolt were to violently unscrew, it would turn the wrench and your hand. Reverse everything you just said but yeah. If it started to violently loosen, it would ratchet. If it violently tightened you would go for a ride as the gear is engaged to push that direction.
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 20:50 |
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Trabant posted:Byron Carter was an early car maker, killed by injuries sustained from the crank as he was helping a stranded driver. You know, I had never considered it, but I always thought that an electric starter was a small motor imitating the crank motion, I had no idea it was related to knocking
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 23:04 |
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iwentdoodie posted:Reverse everything you just said but yeah. If it started to violently loosen, it would ratchet. If it violently tightened you would go for a ride as the gear is engaged to push that direction. this is one of those things that's really hard to picture right like an upside down screw but no, the other guy was right... If the wrench is set to tighten then it prevents movement of the bolt counterclockwise
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# ? Jun 10, 2022 23:33 |
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Serperoth posted:You know, I had never considered it, but I always thought that an electric starter was a small motor imitating the crank motion, I had no idea it was related to knocking It's just a small motor which engages the main flywheel, making the engine turn over, drawing fuel into the cylinders and making the distributor turn to provide spark etc. If the first engine to use an electric starter was prone to knocking, it was surely by coincidence, unless that first electric starter was needlessly complicated.
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 00:37 |
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Right, sorry -- I didn't phrase that correctly. It's not that the electric starter caused the knocking, rather that the starter happened to first be offered on a car which sold well but had bad engine knock, which in turn brought Midgley into the picture.
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 01:29 |
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Was about to say the same… I can’t think of any way a starter motor would cause an engine to knock just by existing… but maybe the starter motor only turned so fast and so they incidentally had to increase the the compression to make it work, idk But I’ve heard of same thing happening on old kickstart motorcycles. If you get a kickback it can break your leg. That’s why they say to always keep your leg bent and don’t lock your knee when using your weight to kickstart a bike. I remember pull starting our three wheelers when I was a kid and that thing could rip the cord out of your hand hard. Stung like hell in cold weather
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 01:29 |
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Pham Nuwen posted:It's just a small motor which engages the main flywheel, making the engine turn over, drawing fuel into the cylinders and making the distributor turn to provide spark etc. If the first engine to use an electric starter was prone to knocking, it was surely by coincidence, unless that first electric starter was needlessly complicated. Ah that makes more sense, as well as the coincidence later.
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 06:48 |
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I once bought a 1949 seagrave firetruck at a scrapyard. It had a V12 Pierce arrow block from the 1930s that seagrave boughtthe rights to when PA died and used until the 50s. It had a hole in the grill and sure as poo poo behind the seat there was a crank. No I was not dumb enough to try crank starting it. Most crank start cars/ kick start motorcycles had manual timing adjustment to let you retard the ignition to prevent kickback. Motorcycles were particularly dangerous because a kickback could break your leg or make you faceplant into the ground.
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 07:25 |
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I could see a chain of events going where hand-cranking meant you had to have pretty low compression engines, and with an electric starter you can raise the compression thereby having problems with knocking?
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 11:44 |
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 12:28 |
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Divorced or never married?
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 12:34 |
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Can I come over and touch things with you, in a non sexual way?
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# ? Jun 11, 2022 14:29 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCCXRerqaJI
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# ? Jun 15, 2022 23:42 |
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You say you want a (home working) revolution? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6URa-PTqfA
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# ? Jun 16, 2022 00:05 |
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https://twitter.com/gabsmashh/status/1537130933710626816?s=20&t=jJ39avGP6qdgkfWGUmZETw
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# ? Jun 16, 2022 00:07 |
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Dick Trauma posted:https://twitter.com/gabsmashh/status/1537130933710626816?s=20&t=jJ39avGP6qdgkfWGUmZETw This is happening right now correct? If so HAHAAHHAH, cos I got 9 days off work and theres gonna be some dumbfucks left in the lurch as a lot of our stuff only works on IE.
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 13:05 |
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Did the entire country of South Korea manage to move off requiring IE and a series of broken insecure plugins for literally everything yet?
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 13:56 |
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Japan has some serious problems with the death of IE cause a lot of government stuff only works on IE. Especially the stuff around taxes is supposedly fully dependent on it!
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 14:04 |
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BrainDance posted:Did the entire country of South Korea manage to move off requiring IE and a series of broken insecure plugins for literally everything yet? Reminds me of the OQO UMPC I acquired from the Korean military that still had their artillery calculation software on it.
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 14:18 |
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Humphreys posted:This is happening right now correct? If so HAHAAHHAH, cos I got 9 days off work and theres gonna be some dumbfucks left in the lurch as a lot of our stuff only works on IE. This is irritating because my very specific Monoprice-brand IP cameras work via ActiveX plugin that only loads in IE. They work so well still. My home server doesn't have enough CPU to do the motion detection and capture they're already doing in order to use something like motioneye (especially since each camera is already running motioneye).
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 16:57 |
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Saw this posted on Twitter
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 17:01 |
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Humphreys posted:This is happening right now correct? If so HAHAAHHAH, cos I got 9 days off work and theres gonna be some dumbfucks left in the lurch as a lot of our stuff only works on IE. Our IT department is doing everything in their power to maintain our internal database that can only run on IE... 9, I think? Despite having plenty of other platforms to move things to, including multiple that are already in use, because we "can't afford" the effort to switch over (read: they won't pay enough to have more than one developer). It's gonna get bad for them. It already is bad, but it'll get worse.
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 17:18 |
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Xerox had their repair documentation in IE only and "unencrypted" it with an ActiveX plugin. That was like 10 years ago, but I found a crack video for this recently, so I'm guessing it might still be in use. Some of the smaller-end stuff was issued as a PDF, and we could still issue the bigger stuff as pdf, they just got unwieldy as hell. Flowcharts got too deep making it impossible to read anything. There were a couple task force groups created to get a new solution, but they would all get laid off after forming.
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 17:25 |
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Our newest and hottest in-house built measuring machines have a laser sensor that only works with XP, so we have machines being built at this very moment that will be running XP when they're finished.
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# ? Jun 17, 2022 21:30 |
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Nidhg00670000 posted:Our newest and hottest in-house built measuring machines have a laser sensor that only works with XP, so we have machines being built at this very moment that will be running XP when they're finished. In the Tech Relics thread I was exceedingly happy with myself for getting a HDDVD/Bluray combo in my media server. Then in under 24 hours managed to brick it because the firmware update software compatibility stops at Vista and LOL not even compatibility mode works. Now this software runs and finds the drive fine and knows what firmware it has and what to update to. Not a single red flag, unless you click on a resources popup on LGs website. I have bricked TWO for the exact same thing. Humphreys posted:This is the second model of these drives I have bricked, but after a long night and a day of thinking and researching....
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 06:39 |
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Somewhere there is probably a Commodore 64 still running some important equipment.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 15:59 |
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Groke posted:Somewhere there is probably a Commodore 64 still running some important equipment. A Commodore 64 is a bit doubtful considering it was a consumer platform with limited expansion capabilities. There’s definitely something critical out there still running on an S-100 setup though.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 16:05 |
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Groke posted:Somewhere there is probably a Commodore 64 still running some important equipment. https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/a23139/commodore-64-repair-shop/
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 16:10 |
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Groke posted:Somewhere there is probably a Commodore 64 still running some important equipment. ZX-81 running a nuclear station.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 16:23 |
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Dick Trauma posted:https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/a23139/commodore-64-repair-shop/ Yeah, I probably half-remembered seeing that previously.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 18:11 |
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Is stuff like AS/400 ERP obsolete, or just still useful for its purpose? I see it running on screens still for some hardware/supplies shops.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 20:40 |
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Having the old green screen session doesn't mean it's running on an AS/400. We have those and we're on modern tech. https://www.helpsystems.com/blog/ibm-i-history-and-timeline
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 20:51 |
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Our internal work order system was running on AS/400 emulators up until I want to say 2020 or so.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 21:30 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:00 |
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Ah okay, that makes more sense, probably something like that I've been seeing.
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# ? Jun 18, 2022 21:32 |