Big Discount TU-1C06 thermal wax actuator for thermostatic automatic water drain valve Wholesale to Paraguay
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Big Discount TU-1C06 thermal wax actuator for thermostatic automatic water drain valve Wholesale to Paraguay Detail:
1. Operation Principle
The Thermostatic Wax that has been sealed in shell body induces expansion by a given temperature, and inner rubber seal part drives its handspike to move under expansion pressure to realize a transition from thermal energy into mechanical energy. The Thermostatic Wax brings an upward movement to its handspike, and automatic control of various function are realized by use of upward movement of handspike. The return of handspike is accomplished by negative load in a given returned temperature.
2. Characteristic
(1)Small body size, occupied limited space, and its size and structure may be designed in according to the location where needs to work.
(2)Temperature control is reliable and nicety
(3)No shaking and tranquilization in working condition.
(4)The element doesn’t need special maintenance.
(5)Working life is long.
3.Main Technical Parameters
(1)Handspike’s height may be confirmed by drawing and technical parameters
(2)Handspike movement is relatives to the temperature range of the element, and the effective distance range is from 1.5mm to 20 mm.
(3)Temperature control range of thermal wax actuator is between –20 ~ 230℃.
(4)Lag phenomenon is generally 1 ~ 2℃. Friction of each component part and lag of the component part temperature cause a lag phenomenon. Because there is a difference between up and down curve of traveling distance.
(5)Loading force of thermal wax actuator is difference, it depends on its’ shell size.
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New voices, old technology: bringing wax cylinders back
The NFSA and the Stiff Gins break new ground by recording contemporary music on 19th century wax cylinder technology.
Two women sing into a large brass horn
The Stiff Gins: Kaleena Briggs and Nardi Simpson record on the Edison Standard D model phonograph
In early 2013 the Indigenous musical duo Stiff Gins (Nardi Simpson and Kaleena Briggs) approached the NFSA’s Senior Curator of Indigenous Collections, Peter White, asking about the possibility of recording a wax cylinder. Nardi Simpson and Kaleena Briggs had come across the cylinder recordings made by Tasmanian Aboriginal woman Fanny Cochrane Smith in the early years of last century and they were intrigued by the idea of making such a recording as part of the developmental work for a new show.
Now, all NFSA technicians had to do was learn how to make it all work. There is no handbook for this 19th century technology. The NFSA archives equipment as well as recordings, and after some research it was decided that we could use one of our Edison Standard D model phonographs as a recording machine. This machine dates from around 1908, has a clockwork spring-powered motor and was fitted with a reproducer head that could play back both 2- and 4-minute cylinders. However, a recorder head instead of the reproducer was required and there were none in the collection. Luckily, a 2-minute version was found from a supplier in the US and blank cylinders were sourced from Paul Morris in the UK.
Audio technician Gerry O’Neill with Edison Standard D model phonograph
Then the equipment was set up in the recording studio for some testing. Recording on such equipment is a purely mechanical process, with no electricity involved. The performer sings or plays down a metal horn and the energy of that sound is concentrated onto a thin circular mica disc in the recorder head. The vibrations of the disc move a thin glass rod which cuts the spiral groove in the cylinder.
We tried out two different conical horns and decided that the longer (120cm) produced better sounding recording that the shorter (100cm) one. The distance of the performer from the horn is also critical and we found that the performer has to be able to hear a reverberant echo coming back out of the horn for there to be enough mechanical energy to cut the groove.
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