Chip with simple program for Toy

在 2001年4月8日星期日 UTC+8下午9:33:28,Scott Aleckson写道:
What is the green protective coating on PCBs? Is it something that
can be successfully applied in a home workshop without elaborate
setups? Can it be purchased in small quantities for the hobbyist,
and if so, does anyone have suggestions on a good source?

TIA,
Scott

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material Co.,LTD was estimated in the year of 2006.

specialized in the production of high-end photoimageable PCB ink.

We passed the ISO9001 quality standard identification.and ISO14001.



Our Main products:

PISM white colour RS-2000 (W series)for LED ( patent products ),

PISM white colour matt for automative (we have TS16949 certificate , in Europe our RS-2000 WDM already be appointed to use in Automative industry,so there are a lot of PCB factory from china ,from korea ,from Thailand are buying RS-2000 WDM for their Europe automotive order).



Electronica spray ink RS-2000 SP(our electronica spray ink is sucessful in Korea market already)

PISM green colour RS-2000GL

PISM other colours RS-2000 BL,K,Y,R ,and others.

$UV cured solder mask UV-1000 G green colour

UV cured solder mask UV-1000 W white colour

Etching ink RS-1200,RS-1280,RS-8580

UV etching ink UV-680,UV 690.

Conduction current carbon ink RF-1860

Low pressure coating ink:RS-2000 BDHF

Marking ink.



All of our products are approved by UL ,(UL filenumber :E-310593).



Main customers in china :Founder technology ,Tiger builder ,Red board ,KB

,mankun and so on.



Due to we are setting up a new factory ,the total produce capacity will

reach 800tons per month.



In order to meet the new capacity we must develop oversea market largely

with very competitive price.



Our oversea market is developing very fast on the basis of our competitive

price ,stable quality ,excellent service.

Now our oversea market is :korea ,russia ,india ,parkistan,saudi,brazil

,usa,vietnam,turkey,Iran,malaysia and so on.



Consindering the cost ,now more and more PCB manufacturers choose china

mainland PCB ink supplier.



Now we are developing your market,so if we can get cooperation chance from

you then we will be very much appreciated.



Looking forward to hearing from you and best regards.



Mrs. Wang


****************************************************************

Export Manager

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material CO.,LTD

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abq.pcb.ink

Video: https://youtu.be/iZEE5h3H6Dg

Web: http://www.jmbq.com.cn

E-MAIL: abqink@hotmail.com | abqink@gmail.com

export@jmbq.com.cn

SKYPE: abqink@hotmail.com

MP: 0086-18501626226

(Whatsapp,Viber,Line,Kakao,Wechat)
 
在 1998年6月2日星期二 UTC+8下午3:00:00,ken写道:
What is Etch Resist ink pens and why we need it in PCB? Thanks in
Advance!

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material Co.,LTD was estimated in the year of 2006.

specialized in the production of high-end photoimageable PCB ink.

We passed the ISO9001 quality standard identification.and ISO14001.



Our Main products:

PISM white colour RS-2000 (W series)for LED ( patent products ),

PISM white colour matt for automative (we have TS16949 certificate , in Europe our RS-2000 WDM already be appointed to use in Automative industry,so there are a lot of PCB factory from china ,from korea ,from Thailand are buying RS-2000 WDM for their Europe automotive order).



Electronica spray ink RS-2000 SP(our electronica spray ink is sucessful in Korea market already)

PISM green colour RS-2000GL

PISM other colours RS-2000 BL,K,Y,R ,and others.

$UV cured solder mask UV-1000 G green colour

UV cured solder mask UV-1000 W white colour

Etching ink RS-1200,RS-1280,RS-8580

UV etching ink UV-680,UV 690.

Conduction current carbon ink RF-1860

Low pressure coating ink:RS-2000 BDHF

Marking ink.



All of our products are approved by UL ,(UL filenumber :E-310593).



Main customers in china :Founder technology ,Tiger builder ,Red board ,KB

,mankun and so on.



Due to we are setting up a new factory ,the total produce capacity will

reach 800tons per month.



In order to meet the new capacity we must develop oversea market largely

with very competitive price.



Our oversea market is developing very fast on the basis of our competitive

price ,stable quality ,excellent service.

Now our oversea market is :korea ,russia ,india ,parkistan,saudi,brazil

,usa,vietnam,turkey,Iran,malaysia and so on.



Consindering the cost ,now more and more PCB manufacturers choose china

mainland PCB ink supplier.



Now we are developing your market,so if we can get cooperation chance from

you then we will be very much appreciated.



Looking forward to hearing from you and best regards.



Mrs. Wang


****************************************************************

Export Manager

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material CO.,LTD

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abq.pcb.ink

Video: https://youtu.be/iZEE5h3H6Dg

Web: http://www.jmbq.com.cn

E-MAIL: abqink@hotmail.com | abqink@gmail.com

export@jmbq.com.cn

SKYPE: abqink@hotmail.com

MP: 0086-18501626226

(Whatsapp,Viber,Line,Kakao,Wechat)
 
I don't know if any fucking spammers ever check for responses but in case you do - READ UP :

Spam is so unappreciated here that it actually works as negative advertising, meaning we WILL NOT do business with your company BECAUSE you spammed Usenet.

What's more, people from the design group often read here and those are the exact people you do not want to piss off. Better off you get a real fucking advertising budget and do it the right way.

In fact, one SHORT and tactful original top post per month with appropriate apologies for the "spam" might get you somewhere. But replying to decades old posts and bringing them to the top of the list just aggravates everyone.

And if you spam Usenet like this and don't come back looking for replies then you are truly fucking ignorant.
 
On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com (roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black
BL = BLue
R = RED
OR = Orange
YL = Yellow
VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown
GR = Green
GY = Grey
Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see
a mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-and-abbreviations
 
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.

--

Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com
 
On Tue, 2 Feb 2016, Tim Wescott wrote:

On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.

Here, or anywhere?

I'm sure I've seen replies to earlier posts elsewhere.

Michael
 
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 16:03:15 -0500, Michael Black wrote:

On Tue, 2 Feb 2016, Tim Wescott wrote:

On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.

Here, or anywhere?

I'm sure I've seen replies to earlier posts elsewhere.

Michael

Here. I'm sure there's older out there.

--

Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com
 
On 2/2/2016 3:01 PM, Tim Wescott wrote:
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.

Most likely, a defective flux capacitor caused that.

Ed
 
On 2/2/2016 11:25 PM, ehsjr wrote:
On 2/2/2016 3:01 PM, Tim Wescott wrote:
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.


Most likely, a defective flux capacitor caused that.

Ed
More likely defective Google groups.
 
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 23:25:31 -0500, ehsjr wrote:

On 2/2/2016 3:01 PM, Tim Wescott wrote:
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 01:31:33 -0800, marc.verwillegen wrote:

On Tuesday, October 1, 1996 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, gre...@concentric.net
wrote:
In <3246aef5.171888389@nntp.ix.netcom.com>, rheffley@ix.netcom.com
(roger) writes:

Lets see, I believe:
BK = Black BL = BLue R = RED OR = Orange YL = Yellow VI = Viloet ??
BR = Brown GR = Green GY = Grey Wh = White

These may not be 100% correct So somone correct me if they see a
mistake.

http://industries.ul.com/plastics-and-components/plastics/color-codes-
and-abbreviations

OK, it's a reply to a post that's nearly 20 years old -- is anyone
keeping track? I'm pretty sure this is the current winner.


Most likely, a defective flux capacitor caused that.

Ed

Or it's a perfectly good flux capacitor that got misused because someone
misread the color code.



--
www.wescottdesign.com
 
On 2016-02-03, boB <boB@theresnoplacelikehome.com> wrote:
On Wed, 03 Feb 2016 09:19:48 -0800, John Larkin
jjlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote:

On Wed, 3 Feb 2016 10:56:37 -0600, amdx <nojunk@knology.net> wrote:

I saw this on a forum today. I'm not sure it's as true as it was at one
time, but it should be.


"I read recently that when voting and making public policy, people tend
to look at the whole spectrum of wealth. In the UK we look at the
poorest and say "That might be me one day" and vote accordingly. In
America they look at the richest and say "That might be me one day" and
vote accordingly."

Mikek

I don't think most people here look at things that way. Most people
wonder if they, and their kids, will be somewhat better off or
somewhat worse off.


I do like the saying as it is kind of profound and I thhink it is true
in ways...

In my case, I would like to retire some day. All I really have is my
business which might be sold at some time. I had to look up what the
"one percent" consisted of since, in the USA at least, one
presidential candidate (Bernie Sanders) would like to tax that one
percent at 92%.... From what information I could find, the one
percent makes about $8.5 million and greater. If my company were to
sell and I got say, $9 million, then I would have about $720,000 to
retire on.

it seems to me that you could claim the business as a $9 million loss
on the same form and come out even and pay no tax on that transaction.
I mean, after selling it you haven't still got it...


--
\_(ツ)_
 
On Fri, 29 Jan 2016 15:13:38 -0600, amdx wrote:

But if you ever need a variac, you might spend a little more now and
get both.

Yeah, then you can run them in series. Just plug your IT into the wall
socket, then the variac into the IT's output. Then just leave the variac
at 100% except for those times you specifically need its lower Vout
capabilities. And always power the faulty equipment from this setup,
never the test equipment you're using to troubleshoot it.
 
On Fri, 29 Jan 2016 23:23:42 -0800 (PST) jurb6006@gmail.com wrote in
Message id: <ffff8e02-8a61-43cd-a50b-c19c9a5c322d@googlegroups.com>:

>So, they DID make a series of scopes that can do that, and the cases were 100 % insulated. I don't remember the models numbers but I do remember it. You could float it and just use it like a DVM. That's what they said as far as I could tell.

Tek made a series of scopes that were completely isolated. The TPS2000
series.
http://www.tek.com/search/apachesolr_search/TPS2000

Yuck. Check out that new logo!
 
On Fri, 29 Jan 2016 12:28:48 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary
<ivanvegvary@gmail.com> wrote:

Thank you for the advice. Just thought I could save money by buying Variac only. Will go ahead and purchase an isolation transformer.
Ivan Vegvary
I have two "Variacs", neither one is actually branded Variac. One is
not isolated and the other one is. So maybe you can look for one that
is isolated and avoid the isolation xmfr.
Eric
 
et...@whidbey.com wrote:
I have two "Variacs", neither one is actually branded Variac. One is
not isolated and the other one is. So maybe you can look for one that
is isolated and avoid the isolation xmfr.

** Variacs with isolated output are scarcer than hen's teeth.



.... Phil
 
Phil Hobbs <pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:
The ones they use in public toilet stalls come to mind--a slot
screwdriver can drive them in one direction but not in the other.

You can get a socket that fits over that kind of screw to remove it.

http://www.mcmaster.com/#one-way-screw-remover-screwdriver-bits/=10zkrns

Matt Roberds
 
Social security will be solvent, however with a few changes.

You will pay alot more off the top, instead of splitting 16 % with your employer it will be more like 28. And then when you retire you only get like $300 a month, and a loaf of bread will be ten bucks.

There are only a scant more than 100 million actual taxpayers in this country if that. EVERYONE else lives off them.
 
On Saturday, January 30, 2016 at 12:18:19 AM UTC-5, Phil Allison wrote:
Bob Engelhardt wrote:



Uh oh. Years ago I smoked a scope* because of voltage conflict between
it and the DUT. Since then I've isolated the scope.

So, why is that a bad idea?



** Cos the chassis and BNC connectors etc on the scope can then acquire a hazardous voltage - and I mean *electrocution* hazard.

Leave the scope alone and use an iso tranny to float the AC power to the item you are working on. Then you can ground any part of it you need to make scope measurements.

Ahhh, you know I never understood about iso-transfomers. I figured they
where to used the float the 'scope and not the piece of kit.
(Which didn't seem to do anything for me.)

I still have times where I need the piece of kit grounded to test
something...(usually some ground loop AC pickup or something)
and I have an AC power cord with the ground pin
snipped.. I put a piece of green tape wrapped around the
universal three prong input that goes into the back of the 'scope.
Most of the time that lives in a drawer... doesn't get out much.

George H.
It is also a bad idea to use the iso all the time, it creates a false sense of security when working with dangerous voltages and will hide the existence of leakage to chassis in the equipment being tested.


... Phil
 
On 2/5/2016 8:32 AM, jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:
Social security will be solvent, however with a few changes.

You will pay a lot more off the top, instead of splitting 16 % with your employer it will be more like 28.

And then when you retire you only get like $300 a month, and a loaf of
bread will be ten bucks.
There are only a scant more than 100 million actual taxpayers in this country if that. EVERYONE else lives off them.

But, I think that will take twenty years, I'll be half way through
collecting by then.
I hope they don't means test, I've been a saver, I'd get burned because
I saved, vs those that spent all their money.

Mikek
 
On Sat, 06 Feb 2016 15:09:53 -0700, Jim Thompson
<To-Email-Use-The-Envelope-Icon@On-My-Web-Site.com> wrote:

Any clever ideas on how to silence a neighbor's barking dog?
Ultrasound?

...Jim Thompson

You may be testing your own tolerance. I actually tried that, a
couple of 555's to sweep the frequency because I didn't know what
would work. I had a driver transistor coupled to a tweeter.

It made the barking much worse... But the neighbor did get rid of the
dog; but he may have been planning on that anyway and I wasn't going
to tell him about my sweeper experiment.

Interesting thing was I had some squirrels that were raising a family
in my attic (chewed through an eave vent) and after the dog was gone I
put the sonic sweeper in the attic and the squirrels found other
lodgings.
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top