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Re: [Phys-L] weird elevator touch button switches



Obvious if, and only if? you have heard the diminutive answer.

Brian W

On 6/10/2013 6:19 PM, Marty Weiss wrote:
way off topic....
An elevator riddle: A man lives on the 20th floor of a high rise condo building. Every morning he goes to work and the elevator takes him to the lobby where he walks to the train. In the evening, on returning to work he gets into the elevator and presses the button for floor 12, gets out and proceeds to walk up the rest of the way to his condo on the 20th floor. What's going on? (no, it's not to get the exercise)


On Jun 10, 2013, at 6:02 PM, brian whatcott wrote:

On 6/10/2013 12:50 AM, Bernard Cleyet wrote:
Curious old technology:


I obtained surplus from somewhere (likely Naval Postgrad. School) an old circuit board (phenolic fiber composite --thick) with two 6H6 sized octal VTs and Rs and Cs. The tubes are labeled OTIS 2040. I googled and found they are Ne filled diodes, which evidently conduct from the capacitance of ones finger near the top of the envelope. One of the elements is a wire, insulated by a glass tube from the base whose end is near the envelope top. The other element is an inverted metal cup about the middle of the tube. One of the pages wrote the two tubes are selected for equal sensitivity and the EMF is labeled. ** One of the tubes is labeled (pasted paper) TD 73 and the writer wrote the TD 73 tubes are operated at 73V. One writer mistakenly? called them thyratrons.

** Obviously for a two floor building.

bc can wait to apply 73 V.
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These may be a form of neon regulator which strikes at a voltage somewhat higher than 70 and given sufficient current to maintain ionization, holds that regulated voltage until the anode voltage is spiked lower than the maintaining voltage. These could easily provide a self-illuminated flip flop arrangement. The regulated voltage was controlled by the gas mixture used for the fill. It is vital to provide them with a limiting resistor, without which they are likely to self-destruct.

Brian Whatcott Altus OK

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