#linuxcnc Logs

Dec 18 2024

#linuxcnc Calendar

01:31 AM Deejay: moin
03:56 AM -!- #linuxcnc mode set to +v by ChanServ
04:22 AM Tom_L: morning
04:29 AM -!- #linuxcnc mode set to +v by ChanServ
04:30 AM JT-Cave: morning
05:58 AM -!- #linuxcnc mode set to +v by ChanServ
07:25 AM Tom_L: JT-Cave, run from line worked too but it took a while to buffer
07:41 AM JT-Cave: cool
07:41 AM Tom_L: i posted videos over there
07:50 AM JT-Cave: where?
07:51 AM Tom_L: flexdev
11:40 AM Unterhaus_ is now known as Unterhausen
04:01 PM rdtsc-w: A young co-worker came up with a good joke... "The Earth is flat." (Wait for their response.) "No, the Earth is flat because the oceans are not carbonated."
04:08 PM roycroft: perhaps the oceans are not carbonated, but lake nyos was, and when it erupted in 1986 it released over 80 million ^3 of co2, which killed over 1700 people and over 3000 livestock
04:08 PM roycroft: 80 million m^3, that ia
04:08 PM roycroft: is
04:09 PM roycroft: and there are limnically active lakes all over the world
04:10 PM bjorkintosh: what? the ocean is a carbon sink.
04:11 PM roycroft: science spoils too many jokes :)
04:11 PM bjorkintosh: https://www.un.org/en/climatechange/science/climate-issues/ocean
04:11 PM bjorkintosh: The ocean generates 50 percent of the oxygen we need, absorbs 25 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions and captures 90 percent of the excess heat generated by these emissions. It is not just ‘the lungs of the planet’ but also its largest ‘carbon sink’ – a vital buffer against the impacts of climate change.
04:13 PM xxcoder: well ratio is still way off, ocean dont taste like carbonated water lol
04:14 PM roycroft: i'm not sure how the oceans store co2, but in limnically active lakes the co2 is held in the very bottom of the lake
04:14 PM roycroft: under almost saturation pressure
04:14 PM xxcoder: so I have to dive down very deep to have a good carbonized drink. got it ;)
04:15 PM roycroft: we're not sure why they erupt, but the most common hypothesis is that seismic activity moves some of the almost-saturated water upwards, where the lower pressure allows the co2 gas to escape
04:21 PM bjorkintosh: https://climatekids.nasa.gov/review/ocean/co2-sink.html
04:23 PM roycroft: i should imagine that much of the co2 that is stored in our oceans is actually stored in algae and seaweed
04:23 PM rdtsc-w: watch, we got "fossil fuels
04:23 PM roycroft: but i'm sure there is a lot of it dissolved in deep ocean waters
04:23 PM rdtsc-w: " wrong and oil is really created in the oceans by pressure and heat lol
04:44 PM bjorkintosh: plankton.
04:45 PM bjorkintosh: that's our source.
05:05 PM bjorkintosh: plankton is where the oil comes from.
05:06 PM bjorkintosh: https://ocean.si.edu/conservation/gulf-oil-spill/what-are-fossil-fuels
05:09 PM JT-Shop: got the two 1/2" conduit runs done today and hope to get the two 3/4" runs done tomorrow and I'll be done for the year
05:10 PM JT-Shop: https://youtu.be/N27K7hD4JKE?t=23
05:10 PM JT-Shop: I've never see that many wheel weights
05:11 PM xxcoder: wow. somethings way off if it need that much weight
05:11 PM Tom_L: so maybe slow but flex doesn't crash on a big file like axis
05:11 PM JT-Shop: awesome
05:12 PM Tom_L: once it gets rollin it's zipping thru the code as fast as possible
05:13 PM JT-Shop: Flex has turned out pretty amazing
05:13 PM Tom_L: takes a bit of patience on the initial load
05:13 PM Tom_L: but if you have a file that size you should know that
05:14 PM Tom_L: put a deb up from this AM's edits
05:14 PM JT-Shop: yup saw that thanks
05:17 PM JT-Shop: I saw that qtmouse had some presets so I thought I'd top that and make some that are user settable for percentage
05:19 PM Tom_L: that guy's got quite the camping setup
05:19 PM JT-Shop: yup, I watch Simon all the time
05:19 PM Tom_L: i know
05:19 PM Tom_L: i've seen posts before
05:19 PM JT-Shop: sometimes it's a pretty minimal camping trip
05:20 PM JT-Shop: one of the cool ones was the trip to a landcaster crash site
05:25 PM JT-Shop: I think that coffee maker is from the 30's
05:39 PM JT-Shop: bending conduit is like riding a bicycle but you might forget the deduct after a decade
05:40 PM JT-Shop: but AI reminds you that it's 5" for 1/2" and 6" for 3/4"
05:46 PM Tom_L: that AI thing in google search is kinda handy sometimes
05:46 PM JT-Shop: yup when it correct :)
05:46 PM Tom_L: the few times i've used it, it was ok
05:47 PM xxcoder: yeah I would always double check
05:47 PM Tom_L: i generally try to use at least 2 or 3 references
05:49 PM Tom_L: you pull the wires too or just install the conduit?
05:50 PM JT-Shop: I do it all :)
05:50 PM Tom_L: did
05:50 PM Tom_L: did you
05:50 PM JT-Shop: the only thing I don't do is provide the internet connection... that's up to them
05:50 PM Tom_L: i've got a 100' snake that comes in handy once in a while
05:51 PM JT-Shop: cables will be here tomorrow but I won't pull them until next year
05:51 PM Tom_L: do you soap them as you pull?
05:53 PM JT-Shop: no, the runs are short but if long I use cramps easy lube lol
05:54 PM JT-Shop: old pvc conduit is the worst to pull wire through
05:54 PM JT-Shop: you have to use lube for that
05:57 PM * JT-Shop calls it a night
06:10 PM roycroft: new pvc conduit is also hard to pull through
06:11 PM roycroft: when i was project managing outside fiber cable plant builds, the contractors would bring along a bunch of 5 gallon lube buckets when doing the pulls
06:11 PM roycroft: and they blew in mule tape when installing the conduits
06:12 PM roycroft: that process requires a large trailer-mounted compressor with a 1" air hose to blow the puck through the conduit
06:45 PM Centurion_Dan1 is now known as Centurion_Dan