Sweat Forum Our Sweat female fitness community forum is designed to support you throughout your journey, from weight loss to workouts, healthy eating to habit building!
Sweat Sweat is a community-driven platform offering fitness programs, discussions, and support to help individuals achieve their health and wellness goals
How to bond PCB and metal for high power RF boards Sweat Soldering is the optimum way to bond the board and the metal clad Just solder paste is required Going with adhesive will increase the cost of fabrication and also the cure temperature requirement for the adhesive will make the fabrication more complex Thank you all
Tomato replacement - Sweat Forum Hi ladies, I have just started this week and am finding this program app amazing! I was wondering what would be a suitable replacement for fresh tomato? I have been leaving it out of the meals but realised I’m also missing out on nutrients by doing this I was thinking capsicum as they’re both high in vitamin C but any other suggestions would be helpful Many thanks, Erin
specifications - Humidity design requirements - Electrical Engineering . . . Normally where people get burned is that their boards get put in a "condensing" environment even though everything is specified as "non-condensing" But that's not a design problem so much as a specifications issue tl;dr Don't sweat it and just do your design Good luck
How much voltage current is dangerous? Then, depending on the actual skin resistance, due to air humidity, sweat etc, a certain voltage may result in a current that is or is not lethal You may change the values in the above to your own estimates and compute the current value through the heart as a simple exercise in basic network theory, or run spice
Heatsink on underside of PCB - Electrical Engineering Stack Exchange I suggest that you experiment before you finalize on a solution, that you run the numbers, and that you do all of this in consultation with your manufacturing engineering department I lean toward suggesting that you retain the solder mask and use a thin thermally conductive adhesive -- but you need to experiment to find an interface that meets your thermal needs and is manufacturable
Should there be any PCB ground plane under a 16 MHz oscillator? At the frequencies involved, for the line lengths shown, it all works, don't sweat it, just follow the data sheet The 'to minimise parasitics' statement confirms that it's the excess capacitance that they are concerned about