R
Robert Macy
Guest
On Jan 28, 8:42 pm, josephkk <joseph_barr...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
too many proprietary processes and algorithms from another project and
is approx 2MB and relies on four libraries to be installed.
Try a search first, there are many prepackaged programs that you can
use.
If you still want your own, get software that exercises your soundcard
and start modifying that.
I'm open to discussion once you're set up.
My code has the WORST users interface ever made! Source Code containsOn Wed, 25 Jan 2012 09:27:46 -0800 (PST), Robert Macy
robert.a.m...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jan 25, 9:48 am, John Larkin
jjlar...@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:
On Wed, 25 Jan 2012 16:53:17 +1100, "Phil Allison" <phi...@tpg.com.au
wrote:
"John Larkin"
"Phil Allison"
"Tim Williams is so full of shit "
Yes, suffice it to say, even though (dry slug) tantalums tend to
have
ESR
comparable to (higher grade) electrolytics, they are far, far
simpler:
** Their failure modes are many and failures far more common too.
If you keep dV/dT down, they are very reliable.
** Absolute crap.
As fucking usual, Larkin has no idea of what he speaks and does not
give
a shit either.
I've used well over 100,000 tantalum caps in the last 6 years or so.
53,000 of 2.2u 20v alone. The only ones that failed were loaded
backwards or were on power rails that had high dV/dT available.
** So you have NOT seen the general failure rates with all brands of
tants
and across all types of equipment.
You know no-one who has and do not give a shit either.
Fuck off to hell - you rabid, septic psychopath.
I see very low failure rates in the equipmennt I design. I'm sure
there is badly designed gear that blows tantalum caps.
I'm not a repair tech, so I don't deal with a lot of equipment
designed by somebody else.
** SO SHUT THE FUCK UP
- YOU BLOODY IMBECILE !!!!!!!
.... Phil
I think your ESR tester doesn't work very well with low-uF parts.
John
Use your SoundCard and a little fussing and you can get down to
milliohms between the ranges of 1000Hz to 90kHz. Actually, 89kHz, but
can't get to 100kHz.
A little software and your Soundcard 24bit? running at 192kS/s dual
channel
I don't suppose that you have the source code for that do you? If so i
would like to have a copy.
?-)
too many proprietary processes and algorithms from another project and
is approx 2MB and relies on four libraries to be installed.
Try a search first, there are many prepackaged programs that you can
use.
If you still want your own, get software that exercises your soundcard
and start modifying that.
I'm open to discussion once you're set up.