Relay contact ratings.

John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 04:52:02 -0800 (PST), mrstarbom@gmail.com wrote:


www.sa.gov.au/
Never do work on electrical installations or appliances yourself, always use a licensed electrician. Unlicensed work is illegal and extremely dangerous.


I always do my own wiring, and I usually do it hot.

I'm an engineer, and I understand this stuff, which few electricians
do.


Licensed electrical contractors have the equipment and knowledge to safely do electrical work.

When using a tradesperson for any electrical work you should ensure:

they hold an appropriate South Australian license
they issue you an electrical certificate of compliance.

This applies to all electrical work on your property regardless of whether it is your home, rental property, commercial premises, caravan or boat.


Do you have them change the batteries in your flashlight, too?

John


Just more hype for the overly paid, lazy, sloppy work and don't follow
code 50% of the time licensed electricians. They think that license is
the ticket to insure their income and screw every one else that actually
does a better job at it.

Those that come in here preaching like that are generally affiliated
with the licensed trades and is just trying to drum up more business
because they know the score and so don't everyone else that has a brain
on their shoulders.

The majority of unlicensed people I've seen performing those jobs
tend to do a much better job at it, because they go by the book and do
nice looking work.

We know. In the last 2 years, we have fired 3 electrical contractors
in our facility. THe last one made a comment when being confronted about
doing shabby work, about our electricians in house not being licensed.
That was the magic statement that got that contractor fired.

We have a contractor plumber that is starting to use that approach, I
think his days are also numbered.

We only hire in these guys for things that our boys are to busy to
get to or too big of job. However, because these guys are not employees
of our facility, we must bring in licensed people, no matter the trade.

It's fun sorted out the licensed welfare contractors.



Jamie
 
www.sa.gov.au/
Never do work on electrical installations or appliances yourself, always use a licensed electrician.
Unlicensed work is illegal and extremely dangerous.
Whether work is dangerous is not a function of whether it's done by a
licensed electrician, it's a function of whether it's done competently.
I've seen highly questionable work done by licensed tradesmen.

Licensed electrical contractors have the equipment and knowledge to safely do electrical work.
Maybe. Doesn't mean they actually do it safely.

When using a tradesperson for any electrical work you should ensure:

they hold an appropriate South Australian license
Even when not in South Australia?

they issue you an electrical certificate of compliance.

This applies to all electrical work on your property regardless of whether it is your home,
rental property, commercial premises, caravan or boat.
Laws vary. In NSW I can lawfully work on gear as long as it's not
permanently wired up. Other Australian states take a more nannyish view.
In QLD, for example, you can't even attach a plug to a power lead.

Insurance companies may not cover fire or public liability claims caused by do-it-yourself or
unlicensed installations.
Show me a policy that contains such an exclusion. People buy insurance
to cover risks. If a policy contained exclusions such that my
inadvertent breach of some law could render the policy void, then I
wouldn't touch it with a barge pole because it wouldn't be doing the job
I was buying it for.

http://fallonservices.com/_blog/Handy_Hints/post/Is_It_Illegal_For_Me...
The web page of a company that's selling electrical installation
services is hardly likely to be the most authoritative when it comes to
telling people whether they can do something themselves.

It's illegal anywhere in Australia - not that it's stopping anyone...
Unlicensed work on fixed installations is unlawful over most of
Australia (even then, there are some exclusions). The situation for
other work varies.

Sylvia.
 
mrstarbom@gmail.com wrote:

www.sa.gov.au/
Never do work on electrical installations or appliances yourself, always use a licensed electrician. Unlicensed work is illegal and extremely dangerous.
false Hype.

Licensed electrical contractors have the equipment and knowledge to safely do electrical work.
Bull shit, I've seen real shitty equipment being used by overly paid
licensed electricians. You would be surprised at how many licensed
electricians out there that really do not understand the majority of
what they do. They are like number painters, remove the numbers and
they're screwed!

When using a tradesperson for any electrical work you should ensure:

they hold an appropriate South Australian license
they issue you an electrical certificate of compliance.

This only works to push out those that actually do better work..
My how your GOV officials are so easily fooled!

This applies to all electrical work on your property regardless of whether it is your home, rental property, commercial premises, caravan or boat.
we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

Insurance companies may not cover fire or public liability claims caused by do-it-yourself or unlicensed installations.

Insurance companies don't care either way, because the first thing
they do is reject a claim and make you wait hoping that you, the home
owner will foot the bill while winter time is coming, to get your home
repaired.
Insurance companies have many lawyers on their side to deny clams no
matter what if they don't feel like paying for it, also, most electrical
fires are from defective consumer products plugged in and the insurance
company also knows this. So go such an egg.

http://fallonservices.com/_blog/Handy_Hints/post/Is_It_Illegal_For_Me_To_Do_My_Own_Electrical_Work/

It's illegal anywhere in Australia - not that it's stopping anyone...
Ok mister welfare licensed what ever you are, we know your story..


Jamie

"Daily Thought:

SOME PEOPLE ARE LIKE SLINKIES. NOT REALLY GOOD FOR ANYTHING BUT
THEY BRING A SMILE TO YOUR FACE WHEN PUSHED DOWN THE STAIRS.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5"
 
mrstarbom@gmail.com wrote:

Just agreeing with Jim Thompson:


have it done by a certified

technician... otherwise no insurance coverage at all.

I wouldn't call it an urban myth. It's on your state government websites.
Go away! It's idiots like yourself that are a major contributor to the
world's problem.

We already have way to much GOV. in the wrong places.

Jamie
 
Just agreeing with Jim Thompson:

have it done by a certified
technician... otherwise no insurance coverage at all.

I wouldn't call it an urban myth. It's on your state government websites.
 
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 17:49:25 -0500, Jamie
<jamie_ka1lpa_not_valid_after_ka1lpa_@charter.net> wrote:

John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 04:52:02 -0800 (PST), mrstarbom@gmail.com wrote:


www.sa.gov.au/
Never do work on electrical installations or appliances yourself, always use a licensed electrician. Unlicensed work is illegal and extremely dangerous.


I always do my own wiring, and I usually do it hot.

I'm an engineer, and I understand this stuff, which few electricians
do.


Licensed electrical contractors have the equipment and knowledge to safely do electrical work.

When using a tradesperson for any electrical work you should ensure:

they hold an appropriate South Australian license
they issue you an electrical certificate of compliance.

This applies to all electrical work on your property regardless of whether it is your home, rental property, commercial premises, caravan or boat.


Do you have them change the batteries in your flashlight, too?

John


Just more hype for the overly paid, lazy, sloppy work and don't follow
code 50% of the time licensed electricians. They think that license is
the ticket to insure their income and screw every one else that actually
does a better job at it.
Most of them are OK, but I have seen some incredibly sloppy and
dangerous stuff done by licensed electricians.

I actually have a copy of the San Francisco Building Code, and I've
read it. Few electricians have ever seen a copy.

John
 
On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 18:48:09 -0500, Jamie
<jamie_ka1lpa_not_valid_after_ka1lpa_@charter.net> wrote:

mrstarbom@gmail.com wrote:

Just agreeing with Jim Thompson:


have it done by a certified

technician... otherwise no insurance coverage at all.

I wouldn't call it an urban myth. It's on your state government websites.
Go away! It's idiots like yourself that are a major contributor to the
world's problem.

We already have way to much GOV. in the wrong places.

Jamie
If every law on the books were enforced, everybody would be in prison,
including the prison guards.

John
 
Jamie wrote:

<snip>

we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.
In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done. For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility. Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...

Another sometimes ugly factor: some of the work requires a
permit from whatever the governing body is. In my location,
the permit is issued by the town; I've heard that in other
locations it is the county. And for all I know, there may be
places where no permit is needed. In any event, the ugliness
can occur when you want to sell the house, but the work was not
done under a permit. From what I've heard, that can be a *real*
basket of snakes.

I can tell you this:
Anyone who thinks that the rules for electrical wiring are
identical in every locality in the USA is sadly mistaken.

Ed

<snip>
 
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:42:37 -0500, ehsjr <ehsjr@nospamverizon.net> wrote:

Jamie wrote:

snip



we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done. For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility. Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...
Purely a jurisdiction issue. You live in one of our socialist paradises,
obviously. I even got a permit in the People's Republic of NY.

Another sometimes ugly factor: some of the work requires a
permit from whatever the governing body is. In my location,
the permit is issued by the town; I've heard that in other
locations it is the county. And for all I know, there may be
places where no permit is needed. In any event, the ugliness
can occur when you want to sell the house, but the work was not
done under a permit. From what I've heard, that can be a *real*
basket of snakes.
Can be but it's rare.

I can tell you this:
Anyone who thinks that the rules for electrical wiring are
identical in every locality in the USA is sadly mistaken.
Your point?
 
On Dec 20, 7:17 pm, "k...@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz"
<k...@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz> wrote:
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:42:37 -0500, ehsjr <eh...@nospamverizon.net> wrote:
Jamie wrote:

snip

we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done.  For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility.  Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...

Purely a jurisdiction issue.  You live in one of our socialist paradises,
obviously.  I even got a permit in the People's Republic of NY.
I got a gas plumbing permit. While i was at the city hall, i asked if
they have any plans or permits on the house. They said no, they don't
keep those records. So, what the point of getting permits, if nobody
can even check them.
 
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:20:01 -0800 (PST), linnix <me@linnix.info-for.us>
wrote:

On Dec 20, 7:17 pm, "k...@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz"
k...@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz> wrote:
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:42:37 -0500, ehsjr <eh...@nospamverizon.net> wrote:
Jamie wrote:

snip

we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done.  For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility.  Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...

Purely a jurisdiction issue.  You live in one of our socialist paradises,
obviously.  I even got a permit in the People's Republic of NY.


I got a gas plumbing permit. While i was at the city hall, i asked if
they have any plans or permits on the house. They said no, they don't
keep those records. So, what the point of getting permits, if nobody
can even check them.
In Vermont they kept permits but there is about zero enforcement, or paper
trail, evidently. When I sold my house I needed the CO, which there was no
record of ever completed being completed. They "assumed" I was legal because
the house had been standing for 20 years. Unfortunately, the permit was only
for a two bedroom house and mine clearly had three. I had to fork over
another $4000 for the third bedroom. Pissed me off, it did. Vermont sucks.
 
krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:42:37 -0500, ehsjr <ehsjr@nospamverizon.net> wrote:


Jamie wrote:

snip


we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done. For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility. Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...


Purely a jurisdiction issue. You live in one of our socialist paradises,
obviously. I even got a permit in the People's Republic of NY.
It depends on which community in the People's Republic of NY.
For example, some years back Mahopac NY would give you a permit
and allow you to do your own work in your own house, if you
passed a test that they gave you to be "licensed" for that
specific work. That's a number of years back - I don't know
what they do now. I assume other communities are more lenient
(I don't know) and still others are more restrictive (I do know,
mine is, or at least was a few years ago.)

Another sometimes ugly factor: some of the work requires a
permit from whatever the governing body is. In my location,
the permit is issued by the town; I've heard that in other
locations it is the county. And for all I know, there may be
places where no permit is needed. In any event, the ugliness
can occur when you want to sell the house, but the work was not
done under a permit. From what I've heard, that can be a *real*
basket of snakes.


Can be but it's rare.


I can tell you this:
Anyone who thinks that the rules for electrical wiring are
identical in every locality in the USA is sadly mistaken.


Your point?
The point is that some people sling a lot of words around about
what "the code" requires when they have no idea what they are
talking about.

Ed
 
On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 23:01:02 -0500, ehsjr <ehsjr@nospamverizon.net> wrote:

krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 20 Dec 2011 21:42:37 -0500, ehsjr <ehsjr@nospamverizon.net> wrote:


Jamie wrote:

snip


we are allowed to do our own work on our properties.

In SOME communities perhaps, and, depending on what work is
being done. For example, upgrading your service from 100
amps to 200 amps requires a permit here, AND participation
of the power utility. Try getting a permit without a
licensed electrician...


Purely a jurisdiction issue. You live in one of our socialist paradises,
obviously. I even got a permit in the People's Republic of NY.

It depends on which community in the People's Republic of NY.
"Purely a jurisdiction issue."

For example, some years back Mahopac NY would give you a permit
and allow you to do your own work in your own house, if you
passed a test that they gave you to be "licensed" for that
specific work.
My, that's big of them.

That's a number of years back - I don't know
what they do now. I assume other communities are more lenient
(I don't know) and still others are more restrictive (I do know,
mine is, or at least was a few years ago.)
Yes, some made you jump through hoops. Some disallowed homeowners from
breathing in their own homes. The still rational ones allowed homeowners to
do their own work unmolested (still have to pass the same inspection for
permitted work). Of course that was ~25 years ago and NY has gone a lot
further down the left swirling bowl since.

Another sometimes ugly factor: some of the work requires a
permit from whatever the governing body is. In my location,
the permit is issued by the town; I've heard that in other
locations it is the county. And for all I know, there may be
places where no permit is needed. In any event, the ugliness
can occur when you want to sell the house, but the work was not
done under a permit. From what I've heard, that can be a *real*
basket of snakes.


Can be but it's rare.


I can tell you this:
Anyone who thinks that the rules for electrical wiring are
identical in every locality in the USA is sadly mistaken.


Your point?

The point is that some people sling a lot of words around about
what "the code" requires when they have no idea what they are
talking about.
They're generally talking about their specific instance. Much of "the code"
doesn't change that much as it relates to home wiring, though. It's not
rocket surgery.
 
On Dec 18, 8:27 pm, linnix <m...@linnix.info-for.us> wrote:
On Dec 18, 3:58 pm, John Fields <jfie...@austininstruments.com> wrote:









On Sun, 18 Dec 2011 08:04:39 -0800 (PST), linnix

m...@linnix.info-for.us> wrote:
On Dec 17, 5:03 pm, John Fields <jfie...@austininstruments.com> wrote:
On Sat, 17 Dec 2011 12:15:46 -0800 (PST), linnix

m...@linnix.info-for.us> wrote:
Yes, will be there when we are ready to post the result.  We are still
working on tests and evaluations.

---
You're doing nothing of the sort; you're trolling and posting
nonsense.

I always hear that, when people running out of reasoning to argue.

---
Well, when reason fails and all you post is nonsense, like 14 LEDs,
PCBs with connections that go nowhere,

The connections go to the back of the CPU board

http://173.224.223.62/pic32/cpu.jpg

 and a slew of pushbuttons for data entry,

There are additional headers on the PIC32 CPU board for buttons.

Got some rare pinned themisters. Newer one are usualy smd. Cleared
out their inventory; oh well, only 20; wish they had more.

This 10K themister has good response at room temperature. I tie it to
+5V via a 10K resister and took some readings between 60F and 70F
(normal operating range of furnance). Outside ranges are probably not
accurated, but don't care for now. Here is my calibration table.

// maximum value is 1023
int tval[30] = {950, 940, 930, 920, 910, 900, 890, 880, 870, 860, //
50s
850, 840, 828, 812, 805, 790, 775, 760, 750, 740, // 60s
730, 720, 710, 700, 690, 680, 670, 660, 650, 640 // 70s
};

Each room controller (PIC32MX) needs to measure and report it's
temperature and forward commands to hit the fan. Plan A is using USB
WiFi. Got it enumerated and initialized, but don't know what to do
next, i.e. channels, WEP and setups. So, plan B is using USB
Bluetooth. Hopefully, i can setup and pair the USB/BT on another PC
and move it to the PIC. Still waiting for my after chrismas gift to
arrive ...

For the fridge, pobably need a different themisters and/or circuit.
This one does not seem to work too well at low temperature
 

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