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The latest information on Electrical & Electronic Components June 5, 2008


Featured video: Inertial Sensors and Accelerometers for hand-held controls
This featured video discusses what's going on these days with inertial sensors and accelerometers. Examples include a version of the Sony PlayStation Portable handheld game console that replaces the analog 'nub' with a 3-axis accelerometer for tilt and motion control.
Watch the video

Articles

Temperature Sensors Are Hot... In Circuit Design
Here's an overview of thermocouple, RTD, thermistor, and IC temperature sensors from our sister publication Electronic Design. ED's Roger Allan also covers a few tricks of the trade for applying sensor technology properly.
Read the rest here...

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New Way to Use Kirchhoff's Current Law Simplifies Circuit Analysis
You may have thought you knew everything there is to know about the well-known Kirchhoff’s current law. Kirchhoff says that at any point in an electric circuit, the sum of currents flowing toward the point is equal to the sum of currents flowing away from it. Turns out there is a new way of using Kirchhoff’s law to make circuit analysis clearer and simpler.
Read the rest here...

Berke On Safety: How To Mistreat a Hair Dryer
How do you out-smart consumers who are determined to mistreat home appliances? Try assembling a brainstorming team that works through a preliminary hazard analysis. The results of the brainstorming session lead the way for designers to come up with tests regarding probability, seriousness, and possible solutions for these potential problems.
Read more here...

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Keystone Custom Components A Specialty

While our standard, cataloged products meet most requirements, our Application Engineering Group will modify existing products or design & develop specific items to meet special application needs. Skilled engineering, production & custom service teams use extensive tooling, stamping & machining facilities for cost-effective responsive service.



How to Control a 27-km-Long Machine
The Large Hadron Collider, currently the largest machine in the world, recreate the conditions right after the Big Bang on a miniature scale. A network of programmable automation controllers handle the positioning of the LHC collimators which guide high-energy particles around the 27-km-long loop.
Read the rest here...

New Products

EMI/RFI shielding
A 52-page catalog covers standard and custom EMI/RFI shielding products. Products include over 100 BeCu and stainless-steel finger stock shielding profiles, including low -profile gaskets, soft no-snag fingers, Omni contacts, twisted contacts, strip gaskets, reverse bend, and cylindrical and spherical contacts.
Mounting options include track, clip-on, snap-on, stick-on, hook & stick-on, and special mounting. Also offered are contact rings, "D" connector gaskets, board-level shielding, knitted mesh shielding (with or without optional elastomer core or environmental seal), various elastomer gasket materials, fan vents, filters, and honeycomb vents, as well as Twinseal and Trimshield gaskets.
More Information:
Tech-Etch Inc.

Incremental encoder
The R22i full-featured optical incremental encoder provides position feedback with optional commutation signals for brushless motors. Optional three-phase (U, V, W) commutation outputs are available for 4, 6, 8 and 10-pole brushless motors. Incremental encoder resolutions of 100 to 1,024 line counts are available with A, B and Z (reference) channels. The factory-set R22i requires no alignment for incremental outputs. The encoder is centered by the motor bearing pilot, and the gap is preset. The unit operates at –30 to 110°C. Several optional bolt patterns are available and motor shaft sizes up to 4 mm can be accommodated.
More Information:
Renco Encoders Inc.

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Now you can get a quick dose of literature, product, and digital information resources right in your copy of Machine Design Magazine. Look for your edition of Literature Express in the second issue of May of Machine Design. There you can request product information, catalogs, CD’s and more from hundreds of manufacturers.


Rev up your interdisciplinary design skills

What happens when a microcontroller turns on a power FET, sending a current pulse to a motor coil that develops a magnetic field which turns the rotor shaft, advancing a timing belt that drives a pair of nip rolls suspended on bearings in a web-processing operation on a form, fill, and seal machine installed on a potato chip line at a Frito Lay plant in central California? And how can you be sure that the encoders, prox sensors, and other feedback devices you plan to use will accurately see and report every relevant motion, machine state, and process condition? And will the signals get through the networks fast enough, without being corrupted, giving the controllers time to execute their algorithms as intended? It's a lot to think about, and it only scratches the surface of what many engineers grapple with today. If you happen to be one of them, then the place for you — where you can find answers and meet others with similar concerns — is www.Mechatronic-Design.com.

Backed by some of engineering's top information sources including Machine Design, Electronic Design, Motion System Design, and Power Electronics, Mechatronic-Design.com is the interdisciplinary engineer's desktop, toolbox, library, and lifeline in one easily accessible place.

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Experience National Instruments Technologies From the Comfort of Your Own Computer!
With more than 200 on-demand webcasts, videos, interactive tutorials and demos available for users of any experience level, it is easier than ever to learn about the newest products and features available from National Instruments.
Begin your search here with a collection of webcasts specifically chosen for design and automation engineers.

CAD Library offers advanced CAD Resources
The Machine Design CAD Library, includes millions of configurable 2D and 3D CAD models of components and assemblies downloadable for easy use in new and existing designs. Our models are in native CAD formats. No translation required!

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UPCOMING IN-PERSON EVENTS
Design-2-Part Shows are America's longest running and most trusted events for sourcing custom parts and services. Ten shows covering the country offer OEMs, engineers and purchasing personnel the opportunity to meet job shops and contract manufacturers face-to-face.

UPCOMING WEBCASTS


Architecture Options in Motion Control Design: Chips, Boards, or Drives
Sponsored by PMD
DATE: June 11th, 2008
TIME: 2:00pm ET/11am PT

Levels of motion component integration often require serious design consideration during machine and equipment development. A lack of integration can impact equipment size, assembly costs, and reliability. Yet expanded integration often affects the costs of components, manufacturing, and maintenance. It also raises design questions regarding the selection of motion system components. Obviously, what the design tries to achieve determines the compromises made. This presentation investigates and compares the differences between motion control systems based on chips, boards, or drives; evaluates how each fits into desired design parameters; and provides a quick understanding of the factors used to select a level of motion system integration.

Click here to register!





Best Practices in Reducing Production Scrap and Rework
Sponsored by PTC
DATE: June 19th, 2008
TIME: 2:00pm ET/11am PT

Analysts agree that raw materials and labor are the two largest cost centers for most manufacturers. Production inefficiency can come from just about anywhere - parts from a supplier that don’t fit into your finished assembly, a physical prototype you’ve used and then discarded, or even a delivered product that doesn't meet customer requirements. In each case, the scrap – along with the rework – costs you time, money, and reputation. Today's highly compressed cycles mean manufacturing errors and product-development inefficiencies can become greatly magnified. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Join this informative presentation to learn how successful companies are implementing new product-development initiatives to significantly reduce production scrap and design rework, and their associated costs.

Click here to learn more and register!




Supercharging Products with Embedded RFID
Sponsored by SkyeTek
DATE: June 26th, 2008
TIME: 2:00pm ET/11am PT

The power of RFID as a stand-alone application to increase accuracy and efficiency in supply chain management has garnered much attention in recent years. The story now is how RFID can be added as a feature to an almost unending list of products -- adding new functionality, increasing reliability and enhancing the user experience. They may still look the same on the outside, but embedding RFID readers and software into existing and yet-to-be released products can transform them on the inside offering manufacturers, OEMs and product designers new opportunities for competitive advantage through increased efficiency, accuracy and product differentiation.

Click here to learn more and register!




ARCHIVED WEBCASTS AVAILABLE FOR FREE VIEWING


Click Here for a list of archived Machine Design webcasts.

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