On 10.01.19 12:53, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Now its Thursday and, I'm back from the body shop, typeing a little
> slower, and sorer and with a foreign object in my chest. A pacemaker. So
> you haven't gotten rid of me yet. :) Mentally I think I'm OK, but I'm
> under orders to not drive for about a
On Thu, Jan 10, 2019 at 12:56 PM Gene Heskett wrote:
> Now its Thursday and, I'm back from the body shop, typeing a little
> slower, and sorer and with a foreign object in my chest. A pacemaker.
>
I'm glad to hear that it turned out this way, and you got it in time. My
dad also needed it, and he
On Thursday 10 January 2019 23:16:46 Dave Cole wrote:
> >>I don't feel like a Hoosier, does that still count?
>
> Still counts. You have Hoosier wire in you now. Probably made by
> Fort Wayne Metals. I think the only people who feel like Hoosiers,
> were born in their Grandfather's farm house i
I don't feel like a Hoosier, does that still count?
Still counts. You have Hoosier wire in you now. Probably made by Fort Wayne
Metals.
I think the only people who feel like Hoosiers, were born in their
Grandfather's farm house in Indiana. I've lived in Indiana for 22 years and
I'm still
On Thursday 10 January 2019 19:21:01 Dave Cole wrote:
> >> A pacemaker.
>
> That's one way to get some new hardware!
>
> Glad you are back at it.
Not really, yet. The antibiotic they've put me on reads like a
pharmacists worst nightmare, levofloxacin. 7 pills, 80 bucks, and its
truly the last
Here's some info, but the full article is behind a subscribe wall. Might be
available from another source.
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/cardiac-implantable-electronic-device-interactions-with-electromagnetic-fields-in-the-non-hospital-environment
On Thursday, January 10, 2019, 3:42:51
A pacemaker.
That's one way to get some new hardware!
Glad you are back at it.
Pacemakers run in my family.
They are amazingly durable.
Trivia ...Most of the wire used to tie the heart into the pacemakers is made in
Fort Wayne, IN.
That makes you part Hoosier! :-)
Dave
On 1/10/2019 12:5
I suppose that it depends on your work. I am frequently using most of my X/Y
travel so I'd hate to lose even a few square inches.
> -Original Message-
> From: Gene Heskett [mailto:ghesk...@shentel.net]
> Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2019 5:53 PM
> To: emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subje
On Thursday 10 January 2019 17:31:03 Ken Strauss wrote:
> Yes, a cute design. However, unless I missed it, he doesn't address
> determining the varying stickout of the cutter. After every tool
> change you would have to move the spindle to over a height setter and
> then to the cutting position. A
On Thursday 10 January 2019 17:21:12 Greg Bernard wrote:
> So sorry to hear, Gene, but glad you got care in time. Now that you
> have the pacemaker, no playing with induction heaters! Many years ago
> I worked for an optical instrument company that used induction brazing
> to fabricate telescope t
Yes, a cute design. However, unless I missed it, he doesn't address
determining the varying stickout of the cutter. After every tool change you
would have to move the spindle to over a height setter and then to the cutting
position. A lot of time plus table real estate used for the tool changer
On Thursday 10 January 2019 14:18:46 Martin Dobbins wrote:
> https://hackaday.com/2016/06/20/hackaday-prize-entry-diy-automatic-too
>l-changer/
>
> 😉
>
> Martin
>
Now that cute and makes use of the leverage nicely. But I do not see it
actually change from the nut in, all I see is from one tool of
So sorry to hear, Gene, but glad you got care in time. Now that you have
the pacemaker, no playing with induction heaters! Many years ago I worked
for an optical instrument company that used induction brazing to fabricate
telescope tubes. The 80 year old patriarch of the company with a recently
ins
https://hackaday.com/2016/06/20/hackaday-prize-entry-diy-automatic-tool-changer/
😉
Martin
From: Gene Heskett
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2019 12:43 PM
To: emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] tool changer with swiveling arm
On Monday 07 Jan
On Monday 07 January 2019 05:22:53 andy pugh wrote:
> On Mon, 7 Jan 2019 at 05:07, Gregg Eshelman via Emc-users
>
> wrote:
> > I've seen some that have each tool holder coded and read the holders
> > in the chain or carousel as it moves.
>
> In fact the machine in the first post is just such a ma
On Sunday 06 January 2019 12:03:10 Kenneth Lerman wrote:
Back on the list Kenneth, thank you.
> Gene,
>
> You can tell me that it's none of my business, but having your heart
> rate decrease by a factor of two can be a sign of serious cardiac
> problems. (I've been a volunteer EMT in Newtown, CT
16 matches
Mail list logo