Electronics Forum | Tue Apr 13 23:41:15 EDT 1999 | Jeff Sanchez
| | | Hello. | | | | | | I'm now investigating the current technological issues | | | on surface mount devices. | | | For example, I want to know the limitation of | | | the surface mount machine. | | | | | | Where can I get the materials for thi
Electronics Forum | Mon Apr 19 08:56:22 EDT 1999 | Andreas Foehrenbach
| Hello. | | I'm now investigating the current technological issues | on surface mount devices. | For example, I want to know the limitation of | the surface mount machine. | | Where can I get the materials for this purpose? | | Thank you | Hy
Electronics Forum | Mon May 18 10:41:46 EDT 2015 | leeg
Over Current is normally when something is jammed.
Electronics Forum | Thu Sep 15 16:02:20 EDT 2005 | jdengler
Over Current means the motor is drawling too much current. Check for a jam on that axis, bad wire, bad motor, bad servo amp (yes the amp can go bad and make it appear that the motor is drawling too much current). Jerry
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 22 10:47:28 EDT 2000 | Dr. Ning-Cheng Lee
The European WEEE has issued a new (5th) version of its recommendations. In it they say that , on January 1st, 2004, they will review the status of the Pb-Free issue. There is currently NO DEADLINE for implementation. As far as a direct replacemen
Electronics Forum | Wed Sep 29 11:42:24 EDT 2021 | stephendo
"A shunt is an electrical device that creates a low-resistance route for a current to flow through. This allows the current to flow to a different part of the circuit." From that page. It sounds like you are using the resistor in a current limiting
Electronics Forum | Mon Sep 30 09:47:37 EDT 2002 | Zoran
Hi, I was wondering whether anyone could explain to me, point me in the right direction or send me a schematic on how to build Current Amplifiers. I am building a automated temperature controlled cooling unit and I need to build a current amplifier
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 06 16:08:57 EDT 2001 | seand
Hello Again John, Are you injecting a like material currently? How are you doing this with your current process? Is this material being used specifically because the customer identified it as such? If this is not a current process for you, how do
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 27 09:56:09 EST 2003 | sp1
A light emitting diode or "LED" doesn't care about voltage, it will light with approx. 10 to 20 milliamps of current. In a 12V system (such as an auto), a resistor of 1K ohms is ideal. At 12V, this allows about 12 mA of current, at 13.8V (approxima