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Bob
Bob
00:02
gotta say, though, those buttons look ... pretty messy :P
That's the default, centered aligned with the image to the left. I made everything big for the Surface Pros that some of the Administration Staff have
Otherwise, I'd prefer smaller, and no pictures
Bob
Bob
@CanadianLuke could at least left-align them :P
or left-align the icons
also the bottom left button doesn't look centred
Hmmm
Trying the different options in Visual Studio, none seem to make them look good
Yea, those labels are all at rather awkward positions. :P
If I left-align them, and have the images on the right, that's the closest to semi-normal, but still weird
How's that?
00:18
You guys are smart, what does the DT part of a 4PDT switch mean?
Double-Tap
Cool! Thanks
... I have no idea
I knew you'd know :-D
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat double throw
normally SPST, SPDT, DPST, DPDT... 4P is a bit odd
DT just means you can close separate circuits in either position of the switch
ST means you can only close a circuit in one position; the other position is unpowered always
00:22
@Bob Cool. I think I need a DPDT minimum but Maplin has a cheap 4PDT and all the other options are SP I think
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat you'd only need >SP if you need to keep two circuits independent from each other but both activated by the same switch position
I think more Ps than you need is usually fine but you might want to check the current rating
Basically I have a dumb ammeter that can only measure current across an external shunt in one direction. So I need a switch to switch the polarity of the +/- pins
@Bob It's just a voltage measurement, current flow will be zero (or immeasurably negligible)
Bob
Bob
ah
so you'd need a DT at a minimum, but idk if you really need more than SP... 4P shouldn't hurt
also switch nomenclature has always confused me
dual throw.
@Bob Well there's two lines coming off the shunt so I'd need DP I'd suspect
00:28
@FMLCat when in doubt, and its cheap, the continuity tester is your friend
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek double is more conventional :P
A | A
N | N
B | B
00:31
@FMLCat its worth thinking of it this way - basically you have position A and B. N is common. each 'side' is seperate.
Urgh then there's On-On On-Off On-Off-On On-(Off) (On)-Off crap too
@JourneymanGeek I don't want no commoners!
so assuming N isn't tied together, what you need to do is connect + to A and - to N on one side, and N to + and B to - on the other.
@FMLCat you want (k)nobs?
@JourneymanGeek Now you've lost me
@JourneymanGeek No, just a simple rocker will do
@FMLCat ya see how that switch has 6 pins?
Eh I figured it out
Need a DPDT but 4P won't hurt if I leave the other two P's disconnected. And they're all the same price anyway
Of course having a non-dumb ammeter would negate this problem, despite this one trying to be "smart" and having excessive features I don't need, it can't measure bidirectional current -_-
This is the crap I have
Bob
Bob
00:39
votes pls :D
(also, @allquixotic ^ ... replacement for named pipes? POSIX-y Windows? :D)
@Bob Instructions unclear; reported to mods instead
Bob's outsmarted me
Bob
Bob
o.O
OK, issue with .Net Core - it won't launch the Explorer window for the Printers folder
Bob
Bob
@CanadianLuke Hm?
How are you launching it?
00:50
On a Windows 10 system (brand new), I ran the program... Clicked the button to open the Printers folder, and now I'm getting an error that the library can't be found
The .exe, all by itself, on another system
Bob
Bob
@CanadianLuke Yea, uh... I just remembered Core doesn't support WPF/WinForms.
Bob
Bob
sorry!
completely forgot -_-
actually I'm wondering how you got to a button in the first place
Wait... I remember I didn't get the Core part running... It's targeting .Net 4.0
meta.stackexchange.com/questions/306737/… coming soon if you don't have adblock.
00:52
Gah how hard can it be to find a standalone ammeter that can measure bidirectional current... geez. Just about every multimeter does it by default
"standalone" there's your problem!
@JourneymanGeek It's kinda hard to keep hold of a probe-based multimeter while riding a motorcycle, not to mention most don't support 100A current measurements without an external shunt and manual maths
2 multimeters? ;p
OK, error was my fault... If I hard-code the `C:\Windows` folder, then it works.
I'm going home now
@JourneymanGeek Or two standalone meters, which is excessive but does work... I had considered it...
01:00
hmm
or diodes, leds to show direction (which may also work as diodes - but eh, max voltage) and one multimeter.
Bob
Bob
@PolyGeo Many GIS developers are looking for a soulmate, so by that logic "hot singles in your area" would be on-topic, too. — Federico Poloni Nov 25 '16 at 13:44
@JourneymanGeek Also I thought SU already had ads
@Bob apparently not affiliate ads - like for products, or something.
I donno. I adblock ._.
Maybe I should build some sort of current divider, or something
@JourneymanGeek Problem with diodes is this thing relies on miniscule voltages (75mV at 100A, so microvolts at low current) and AFAIK you can't get diodes to switch on microvolts
Heck now that I think about it all laptop batteries have this sorta circuitry built in
Bob
Bob
01:21
latest xkcd is so true... I still haven't found the perfect bag :P
@JourneymanGeek but they're saying they're expanding it to more sites... I thought trilogy already had them
@Bob Swap laptop and backpack and you've got me
Bob
Bob
> Using a MOSFET in place of a diode provides a resistive channel so that voltage drop is proportional to current and can be much lower than for a diode.
proportional to current, you say..?
> How much this is depends on the FET chosen but 10 milliohms FETs are relatibely common. At 10 mOhm and 1A you get only 10 milli-Volt drop.
@FMLCat Wait are you actually sending 100A over the diodes?
Hm. No. That'd be over the shunt.
*shrug* what's the actual measured current?
@Bob Anywhere from -10 to +100A
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Sorry, I meant ... uh. I have no idea what's going on actually :P
@FMLCat got an example circuit diagram?
@Bob Current going into and out of a motorcycle starter battery
01:32
@Bob This is 100% true for me at the moment...
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat ya, but what's the current going to the ammeter (i.e. not the shunt)?
the current going to the 'movement', I suppose
@Bob Nothing
The ammeter measures current by measuring voltage across the shunt
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat well, wouldn't that depend on the input resistance of your voltmeter then?
@Bob Well it's a standalone device that uses a voltmeter function to display current but for all intents and purposes in the input resistance is/should be infinite
Bob
Bob
lemme just try to remember the math...
@FMLCat IIRC ~10MOhm is common
But yea. The current is probably low enough you could just hook up one of those mosfets
it'd still affect the reading, and the voltage drop depends on current through it, but it's probably negligible compared to the input resistance
01:41
Wonder if it'd be easier to hack the firmware of the measurement device
@Bob It's down to two: the one with the Class 1 range and the one with ANC -- wait, that other one has 40 hours of battery life! Ugh. Do I even want new BT headphones? Maybe I should be looking at wireless non-BT headphones again. OK, starting over.
or wired headphones ;p
This one's dodgy enough anyway since it has no reset/recalibrate button and measures a constant phantom current of 0.33A
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic but... you've got two examples already with class 1 + ANC :P (three, if you count the discarded beats)
@FMLCat what value shunt are you using? and do you have the specs for your voltmeter?
@Bob I own zero pair with class 1 + ANC currently, and only had the Beats for a while because they hurt my ears
Bob
Bob
01:43
@allquixotic thought you ordered the PXC?
That's a general problem with many things I buy. I want features A, B, C, D, E and F, and every product is missing one or more of them
Bob
Bob
(still not-too-subtly suggesting the backbeat pro 2 here :D)
@Bob I did, but they're not here yet! :P
@allquixotic does ANC make sense for normal use? I always felt they were more useful in aircraft.
@Bob 75mV at 100A
01:43
and I wasn't saying I need yet another pair; I was just applying the message of that xkcd to my BT headphones quest
It's one of these things
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek I've used mine for lawn mowing and power tools (hole saws, etc)... it's great
@FMLCat ah. lemme math that
@JourneymanGeek IMO it makes perfect sense... I dislike hearing people talk about stuff while I'm trying to work, and ANC is great at making people shut up (at least from my own perspective)
0_0
maybe its gotten a lot better. I found active noise cancelllation is good for drony noises.
also great when occasionally commuting by train... the engineer often waits until the train is right on top of us to blow the horn announcing his arrival, killing our ears
Bob
Bob
01:45
0.00075 Ohm
standing on the platform is much more comfortable with ANCs on
@Bob Yeah, that
passive noise cancellation and bigass cans almost work better for shutting people up
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek modern ANC is more active than that
ah, its been a while I guess
Bob
Bob
01:46
it's not quite perfect but there's a noticeable drop in noise
and if a saw is going "NYEEEEEEER!!!!" the ANCs almost perfectly cancel it out with a "!!!!REEEEEEEEEYN"
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Do you have one of those with you right now?
1 hour ago, by FML Cat
user image
saws... are a perfect use case.
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat can you measure the input resistance? electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/13047/…
@FMLCat ...imblind
01:48
but .... why are there saws where you work? 0_0
starts suspecting @allquixotic works for the TLA again.
@JourneymanGeek there are saws everywhere
I regularly go to work with a running saw on my car's dashboard
my coworker saws his carrots in half for lunch
clearly you work for the VSA...
"Very Strange/Saw Agency"
!!doge saw,saw,saw,saw,saw,saw,saw,saw
01:50
        wow
                       many saw
such saw
            much saw
                          very saw
so saw
              very saw
                           many saw
so saw
or maybe the National Saw Agency. "Cutting down america's trees to size since 1779"
Hello!
I have a question.
Is downvote abuse on superuser a common thing?
@allquixotic those chaotic times were why the agency was founded
01:51
@Bob Weird. It says 1.3 in 200mOhm mode and out of range in 20mOhm mode
@potatoman not really
Well.
I just had almost all my posts (Some from years ago)
@potatoman that's something to search meta.superuser.com for, really, or ask a question if you honestly think it's not a duplicate
downvoted all in one go
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Assuming it's 10MOhm on the voltmeter, for 75mV you're looking at something like 7.5uA though the voltmeter.
01:51
@potatoman if you get more than 3 downvotes from the same user, they'll automatically be refunded as "serial downvoting"
Bob
Bob
@potatoman Yea that'd be serial downvoting. It'll probably be auto-reversed. If that doesn't happen in a few days, email the SE team.
Want pics?
Bob
Bob
It's rare but it does happen as isolated cases of users acting up.
@potatoman TWSS
we can take a rough look at your account but I think people actually might be DVing your questions case they need some bulking up
Bob
Bob
01:52
@FMLCat You should be able to make a bridge rectifier out of that mosfet that guy posted.
Kinda unlikely
Since they were downvoting posts from years ago
All within MINUTES of each other
So I lost a LOT of points
45 -> 32
@Bob Nice
Indeed, I see your reputation history
Bob
Bob
@potatoman Yea, don't worry about it - it'll be auto-reversed.
If it's serial downvoting, it will be reversed within a day or so
01:53
that's not a lot, to be honest... but if that's from the same user, that's still enough for automatic serial downvoting reversal logic to kick in
So if it doesn't get fixed.
Who should I contact?
Bob
Bob
@allquixotic It's enough to be a deliberate attack.
@potatoman Contact us link down the bottom, SE team.
Wait a couple days first.
Site mods can't do anything about voting.
Thanks everyone for the help
See ya!
@Bob That's what happens when you hire a dog to be your site mod
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat electronics.stackexchange.com/a/38776/34550, taking the 100 mOhm Rdson example, 0.1V per A, 7.5uA = 0.75uV drop. Assuming it works at currents that low, anyway.
01:56
@FMLCat our abilities on that are limited. We can't see who voted on a post or undo those.
@Bob Which would throw the measurement off by 0.001A, which I guess is... acceptable
@JourneymanGeek Maybe if you had opposable thumbs instead of paws?
naw, normal human mods typing with their normal human hands have the same restricictions
How would you know, have you ever tried being one?
naw, but there's no "mod-dog" flag
That's what they want you to think
Bob
Bob
02:01
@FMLCat The hard part is probably finding a mosfet with a low enough threshold voltage
(granted, there's a ton of mods with dog avas, and less with cat avas)
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat what's the lowest current you might measure?
@Bob 0.02A? Practically speaking 0.1A resolution would be enough
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Ouch... that's probably not doable with a mosfet
even 1A is hard
that's only 0.75mV
from what I'm seeing it's hard to find a mosfet with < 10mV Vgs threshold
Sorry, it's me again.
Well.
It's serial downvoting
Thankfully, 3 UTC is coming soon
1 HR
02:08
@Bob Isn't that why we put a PA in the circuit?
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat I mean, you'll get a greater resolution than that, but with a mosfet the measurement would cut out entirely somewhere around... 10A absolute? 5A if you're lucky?
@FMLCat PA?
The amplifier bit
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Wait. Where's the amplifier? o.O
The thing you linked to earlier? I am confuse
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat erm... I don't think I linked to anything with an amplifier.
02:13
Huh... Grammarly is creating a huge amount of blank space between the last message in chat and the message box. o.O
Bob
Bob
hmmmmmm
@FMLCat wait, you're dealing with a 12V (24V?) battery, right?
I think (I know nothing about mosfets apart from today) you can just supply a higher voltage to gate-source and it should let your <75mV pass through gate-drain
s/gate-drain/source-drain/
@FMLCat Ok. hook up gate-source directly to the battery (with protection against voltage spikes). hook up source-drain to the voltmeter.
polarity is iffy
02:35
@Bob That's what I thought you were getting at earlier
Bob
Bob
@FMLCat Wait. Have we had this conversation before? (@JourneymanGeek)
though that's probably way overkill
Oddly enough... no
Bob
Bob
02:53
you should be able to hook up both directions on it
+75mV => meter => drain => source => 0V, and +battery-V => gate => source => 0V
@BenN If you are curious what I needed this for: stackoverflow.com/a/48676531/9248774 :)
Bob
Bob
and -75mV => source => drain => meter (flipped) => 0V, and -battery-V => source => gate => 0V
add some overvoltage protection on the two gate => source connections and I think that should work
@Burgi figured that... :D
Bob
Bob
you should be able to protect the gate with electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/233394/…, I guess?
wait no a zener is a bad idea here
maybe a TVS diode?
@Bob beats me, I'll still know nothing about mosfets tomorrow.
 
2 hours later…
Bob
Bob
05:04
hm
I have a 2700 page 100 MB pdf
halp
05:42
no one can help you now.
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek the saladcase (:D) hurts my eyes: superuser.com/a/1292439/117590
oh, guy's German
Bob
Bob
@Greg It's because any war between Alaska and Siberia would necessarily be a cold war. — tchrist yesterday
I swear the entire question was set up for just that joke :P
06:08
@Bob heh. I just got a lxc container being set up. Might try experimenting with moving some services over to that (wanting to play with bitwarden @allquixotic 's fault, but throwing a third dbms on a physical system feels odd)
Bob
Bob
06:32
@JourneymanGeek you mean lxd, right?
please tell me you're not using raw lxc :P
Your brain needs oxygen to realize anything, including the fact that it's not getting enough oxygen. In short, biology makes it very hard for a person to realize that they need more oxygen. The brain's not equipped with a low-oxygen-sensor, it just stops working. Fairly rapidly, too. — aroth Jul 24 '16 at 0:54
> The brain's not equipped with a low-oxygen-sensor, it just stops working.
lol
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek ?
@Bob guess what my server uses ;p
Oh!
more or less MSSQL won't run on a zfs filesystem
so I need to get an ext4 filesystem for /var/opt/mssql
Bob
Bob
06:53
@JourneymanGeek ...that doesn't sound right
@Bob mostly useless error message and that's literally the suggested fix
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek still sounds wonky as all hell
in a "wtf is mssql doing" way
its mssql on linux
;p
Bob
Bob
@JourneymanGeek and? so? it's still wonky as all hell
Yes it is!
Bob
Bob
06:57
wait. are you using a docker image?
Bob
Bob
ok
just the default ubuntu lxd image
working notes
Bob
Bob
zfs create -s -V 10G -o volblocksize=4k pool/disks/sqlserver

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