And in the unusual posting department
Can anyone offer any guidance on who may have jurisdiction over electrical
equipment installed / used in a sewer?
It appears that the OSHA position is that OSHA would have jurisdiction over
a manhole-accessed sewer, but not over a pipeline as the
One of our software engineers has expressed a concern that EMI might be
causing his/her condition of chronic fatigue. From what I have read,
the only concern might be ergonomic factors rather than radiation. Can
someone suggest any published material (hopefully on the Internet) which
I can use to
Bill,
Are you sure that you talked with the proper people at OSHA? I have
seen some concrete pipes that a whole army could walk through! OSHA
must not know the extensive Paris sewer network or the ones in Vienna
(remember the Orson Welles movie The Third Man?) I
--
差出人 : Mike Gomi g...@a-pex.co.jp
宛先 : EMC-PSTC emc-p...@ieee.org
件名 : Youden two-sample plot
送信日時 : 1997年7月18日 17:26
Does anyone give me as much definite meaning and details of Youden
two-sample plot and simultaneous analysis which are one of statistical
and graphical
Richard Huges wrote:
I am interested in obtaining data on the number, duration and amplitude
of
mains transients at different parts of the mains distribution network.
It
would be great if someone could point me to information published by
the IEE,
IEEE or whoever.
...snip.
Bill,
Yes, it seemed to be an unusual posting, but...
You asked:
It appears that the OSHA position is that OSHA would have jurisdiction
over
a manhole-accessed sewer, but not over a pipeline as the pipeline is
not a
'workplace' potentially visited by humans. A person will not fit in a
pipe,
--- On Mon, 28 Jul 1997 18:33:55 -0700 tania.gr...@octel.com wrote:
Bill,
Are you sure that you talked with the proper people at OSHA? I have
seen some concrete pipes that a whole army could walk through! OSHA
must not know the extensive Paris sewer network or the
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