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Please help - Elektor magazine

  • Thread starter Trevor Campbell Davis
  • Start date
T

Trevor Campbell Davis

Jan 1, 1970
0
In case anyone can help, I need a copy of the March 2004 issue of Elektor
Electronics magazine (Nr 330), to complete a break in a library sequence.

I will of course pay for the copy plus postage.

Please help if you can.

73

Trevor Campbell Davis
G3YMM

[email protected]
_____________________
 
L

Linker3000

Jan 1, 1970
0
Trevor said:
In case anyone can help, I need a copy of the March 2004 issue of Elektor
Electronics magazine (Nr 330), to complete a break in a library sequence.

I will of course pay for the copy plus postage.

Please help if you can.

73

Trevor Campbell Davis
G3YMM

[email protected]
_____________________
Sorry I can't help - just replied to say 'my god, it that still going!'

Elektor used to be my favourite as a 'yoot' doing electronics as a hobby
in the 1980s when I got fed up with Hobby Electronics and ETI.

I have some of their 30x circuits books somewhere - they always came up
with a circuit idea when I needed something.
 
M

Mark (UK)

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi!

To add to your anguish, I just looked at the only two copies of Elektor
I have.

They are Febuary and April 2004 :-(

Yours, Mark.
 
I

ivan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Linker3000 said:
Sorry I can't help - just replied to say 'my god, it that still going!'

Elektor used to be my favourite as a 'yoot' doing electronics as a hobby
in the 1980s when I got fed up with Hobby Electronics and ETI.

I have some of their 30x circuits books somewhere - they always came up
with a circuit idea when I needed something.
Amazing, I also didn't realise that they're still going, even though I have
a loft creaking under the weight of ancient copies.

However I actually found a use for one of them a few weeks ago, when the
starter in the fluorescent lamp in my garage failed and I didn't have a
replacement.

I remembered that there was a small circuit for an starter using a thyristor
(which I have dozens of) so after a long search the appropriate magazine was
found and the circuit hastily constructed on a piece of Veroboard, worked a
treat and the tube now springs into life instantly!
 
L

Lurch

Jan 1, 1970
0
I remembered that there was a small circuit for an starter using a thyristor
(which I have dozens of) so after a long search the appropriate magazine was
found and the circuit hastily constructed on a piece of Veroboard, worked a
treat and the tube now springs into life instantly!
Going slightly OT now but you really should replace the tube as well
as the starter as a worn out tube will put additional strain on the
starter. It is also recommended that flourescent lamps be replaced
every 12-18 months as they lose a lot of their light output and
electrical efficiency by that time and will gradually do so till they
fail, unlike standard incandescants which either come on 100% or don't
come on at all.
 
B

Bob Wilson

Jan 1, 1970
0
Amazing, I also didn't realise that they're still going, even though I have
a loft creaking under the weight of ancient copies.

However I actually found a use for one of them a few weeks ago, when the
starter in the fluorescent lamp in my garage failed and I didn't have a
replacement.

I remembered that there was a small circuit for an starter using a thyristor
(which I have dozens of) so after a long search the appropriate magazine was
found and the circuit hastily constructed on a piece of Veroboard, worked a
treat and the tube now springs into life instantly!

Sure Elektor is still going! Just bought a copy recently when I was in
Germany. It is every bit as good as it always was.

Bob.
 
B

Ban

Jan 1, 1970
0
Bob said:
Sure Elektor is still going! Just bought a copy recently when I was in
Germany. It is every bit as good as it always was.

Bob.

Actually I resuscribed again this year, I still have the first issues from
1972 or so, but I never opened them again, they are stored somewhere in the
basement. If some offspring continues my way, he could one day find these
mags and reread them. Well, my eldest son(29) is just doing his PhD in EE.
You are right, lots of interesting things inside, much better than Circuit
Cellar, which is defined to PICs and alike.
 
N

Nick

Jan 1, 1970
0
Trevor said:
In case anyone can help, I need a copy of the March 2004 issue of
Elektor Electronics magazine (Nr 330), to complete a break in a
library sequence.

I will of course pay for the copy plus postage.

Please help if you can.

73

Trevor Campbell Davis
G3YMM

[email protected]
_____________________



Hello,
I know the guys who distribute this magazine, you can contact them on:

World Wide Subscriptions Services Limited
Tel: 01580 200657


Hope this helped!
 
M

Mike GW8IJT

Jan 1, 1970
0
Lurch said:
Going slightly OT now but you really should replace the tube as well
as the starter as a worn out tube will put additional strain on the
starter. It is also recommended that flourescent lamps be replaced
every 12-18 months as they lose a lot of their light output and
electrical efficiency by that time and will gradually do so till they
fail, unlike standard incandescants which either come on 100% or don't
come on at all.

In practice, everyone, including all places where I've worked, waits
till the tube completely dies.
Regards Mike.
 
D

Dave Plowman (News)

Jan 1, 1970
0
In practice, everyone, including all places where I've worked, waits
till the tube completely dies.

It will obviously depend on its use. If you're using them for an important
application, then it certainly makes sense to replace them regularly -
although how often will depend on the amount of use, the type of tube and
the type of ballast. Modern high frequency types are far kinder to the
tube than switchstart ones, as well as more efficient.

If all it's doing is lighting the stationary cupboard, then as you say
most wait until it fails. Which can be a very long time.
 
L

Lurch

Jan 1, 1970
0
In practice, everyone, including all places where I've worked, waits
till the tube completely dies.

Well yes, I did say recommended! ;-)
 
W

Watson A.Name - \Watt Sun, the Dark Remover\

Jan 1, 1970
0
Mike GW8IJT said:
In practice, everyone, including all places where I've worked, waits
till the tube completely dies.
Regards Mike.

Back in the '70s I managed apts for a guy who worked at
McDonnell-Douglas, in Long Beach, CA. He would go to the surplus sales
and buy a whole carton of 4' or 8' fluo tubes. The maintenance guys
would sweep thru the bldgs with ladders or cherry pickers and replace
every tube in every fixture, because since they were union and labor
cost so much, it was cheaper to just replace everything at one time, and
of course it also gave brighter light.

He would bring a carton of used tubes to the apts and most of them would
be just fine, since they had been installed just a year earlier as
replacements.
I don't know if they still do this, but it makes sound economic sense,
obviously.
 
I

ivan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun said:
Back in the '70s I managed apts for a guy who worked at
McDonnell-Douglas, in Long Beach, CA. He would go to the surplus sales
and buy a whole carton of 4' or 8' fluo tubes. The maintenance guys
would sweep thru the bldgs with ladders or cherry pickers and replace
every tube in every fixture, because since they were union and labor
cost so much, it was cheaper to just replace everything at one time, and
of course it also gave brighter light.

He would bring a carton of used tubes to the apts and most of them would
be just fine, since they had been installed just a year earlier as
replacements.
I don't know if they still do this, but it makes sound economic sense,
obviously.

That must be a universal practice, as several years ago an electrician
friend gave me about a dozen perfectly good 4' tubes which he had acquired
for the same reason, i.e. companies blanket replacing them at set intervals,
irrespective of whether it was needed or not.
 
G

Geoff Pearson

Jan 1, 1970
0
ivan said:
in message news:[email protected]...

That must be a universal practice, as several years ago an electrician
friend gave me about a dozen perfectly good 4' tubes which he had acquired
for the same reason, i.e. companies blanket replacing them at set intervals,
irrespective of whether it was needed or not.

My government office has stopped doing sweep replacement - someone did
the sums and they didn't add up.
 
L

Lurch

Jan 1, 1970
0
My government office has stopped doing sweep replacement - someone did
the sums and they didn't add up.
If we all did some sums then it probably wouldn't be worth any of us
actually going to work so we'd all be at home on the rock n roll so
there wouldn't be any lighting used in offices, and if there were
there'd be no-one to come in and refit them.
 
P

petrus bitbyter

Jan 1, 1970
0
Lurch said:
If we all did some sums then it probably wouldn't be worth any of us
actually going to work so we'd all be at home on the rock n roll so
there wouldn't be any lighting used in offices, and if there were
there'd be no-one to come in and refit them.

I ever worked in an airforce hangar. Changing a tube was a hell of a job
that interfered with the ongoing maintenance tasks. So if the percentage of
failing lamps raised above 2% (if I remember well) they planned a day to
replace all tubes at once.

BTW, where can I find the starting circuit mentioned in the original post?

petrus bitbyter
 
J

Jan-Erik Söderholm

Jan 1, 1970
0
Was it out-of-stock from the Elektor "back issues" service ?`
Jan-Erik.
 
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