Given a cube with inscribe circles on each of the faces, prove the isocircle function of AutoCAD produces a true presentation if the cube is viewed an isometric view.
I tried to prove this by rotating a square with a inscribe circle along a hinge (segment bc) which would be the right vertical...
I did not understand connecting a hot to a neutral. I thought a hot had to be connected to a hot and a neutral to a neutral. But I did not get that from the user manual or this forum. It took me calling miller several times after my original post but the rep was very clear and I just wanted to...
I understand connecting the four wires for three phase and leaving the red isolated for single phase
but a nema 5-10r receptacle has a hot, a neutral, and a ground and the machine did not have a neutral wire but miller tells me isolate the red and to hook up the green to the ground. And then...
The manufacture also has another page which helps explain but this page refers to it as auto-technology. Auto-Line keeps the out put voltage constant while auto link allows the changing between input voltages.
See link: http://www.millerwelds.com/swf/swf.php?swf=Auto_Link_Web.swf...
The manufacture calls it auto-line technology. It uses a boost converter. The machine is made and designed for this type of conversion. It is designed to run from various voltages and single or three phase as long as it is wired properly according to the supply input used.
See link at...
I am only changing the plug on the welder to plug into a 120v NEMA 5-20R (see attached file) elsewhere.
I am not trying to reconfigure any power sources. The wiring question is for rewiring a new plug not for rewiring the power source.
also see photo in my previous reply...
From my understanding I isolate the L3 Red wire to make it single phase, run the L1 black to the Netrual of the NEMA 5-20P run the L2 to the hot wire of the 5-20P and the G is run to the ground of the 5-20P...
I have a welding machine which runs off of 460 volt 3 phase power and has a cord with a NEMA L16-30P. The machine has a constant voltage concerter so I was told I could automatically plug into a different voltage as long as it was the same phase power and to change phase I just would isolate the...
According to the following definitions, bar stock and forgings are the same:
Drawing - A forging operation in which the cross section of a forging stock is reduced and the stock lengthened between flat or simple contour dies
and
Forging — The process of working metal to a desired shape by...
Forging — The process of working metal to a desired shape by impact or pressure in hammers, forging
machines (upsetters), presses, rolls, and related forming equipment
Is bar stock made from the above definition?
Is the concern in machining or in using bar stock?
If bar stock is the concern what is allowed. Isn't bar stock forged stock that has been turned.
Isn't all stock other than cast forged in some way?
What is the concern?