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Tag: currents
SMD Fuse offers 14 rated currents from 500 mA to 10 A.
2013-07-05 14:30:55| Industrial Newsroom - All News for Today
Suitable for voltages up to 250 Vac and 125 Vdc, quick-acting Model UMF 250 provides over current and short circuit protection in primary and secondary circuits. Unit features breaking capacity up to 200 A at rated voltage. Measuring 3 x 10.1 mm, surface mount fuse offers alternative to traditional 5 x 20 mm cartridge fuses. Halogen-free device is RoHS-compliant and suited for power supplies, medical and lighting equipment as well as electronic devices in home and industry. This story is related to the following:Surface Mount Fuses |
Dangerous Rip Currents Along Boca Beaches
2013-04-29 21:14:07| Railroads - Topix.net
The weather - at least for now - is great, with a balmy breeze and temps in the low 80s.
Tags: dangerous
rip
beaches
boca
Circuit Breakers interrupt full load currents in microseconds.
2013-04-29 14:30:23| Industrial Newsroom - All News for Today
Intended for commercial micro-grids and military DC power distribution systems, PowerMod™ Solid-State MVDC Circuit Breakers open in less than 700 ns, providing load protection in event of fault. Modules offer more than 99.7% efficiency and can switch power around fault for high uptime applications. At 10 kV, 50 Adc module measures 12 x 5 x 3 in. and is stackable for switching up to 100 kV. Modules operate fully on or fully off and provide >1 million hours predicted reliability per MIL-HDBK-217F. This story is related to the following:Circuit Breakers |
Tags: full
load
circuit
currents
Digital Temperature Controller Loads Currents Up to 10A
2013-04-16 06:00:00| Chemical Processing
Oven Industries Inc. introduces the 5R6-900 thermoelectric module benchtop temperature controller. Contained all in one enclosure, the device can be plugged into the wall as a self-contained temperature control system, which has its own power supply.
Tags: digital
temperature
controller
loads
New Source Found For Cold, Deep Antarctic Currents
2013-02-24 11:12:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
LiveScience: With help from seals, scientists have discovered a new source for the coldest, deepest water in the ocean. Instruments glued to seals' heads tracked Antarctic Bottom Water flowing down deep canyons off Cape Darnley in East Antarctica. The spot was an unexpected font of the bottom water -- cold, dense, salty water -- because it lacks the broad underwater shelf of the unique current's three known sources. These shallow shelves stick out from the continent's edge. Cold water flows over the edge to...