Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 04:51AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 56 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 05:02AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 56 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 05:41AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 7,616 |
Quote
This means that the software has some talking with the gen 6 hardware.
Generation 7 Electronics | Teacup Firmware | RepRap DIY |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 11:08AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 19 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 11:27AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 65 |
Quote
I use the drivers that I found here: [www.mendel-parts.com] and also the repsnapper with the settings that can be found on the same page.
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 24, 2010 02:27PM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 56 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 25, 2010 04:56AM |
Admin Registered: 17 years ago Posts: 7,881 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 25, 2010 11:01AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 601 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 25, 2010 11:17AM |
Admin Registered: 17 years ago Posts: 7,881 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 25, 2010 11:43AM |
Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 3,742 |
Quote
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2003/ChrisDAmbrose.shtml
The range of hearing for a healthy young person is 20 to 20,000 hertz. The hearing range of humans gets worse with age. People lose the ability to hear sounds of high frequency as they get older. The highest frequency that a normal middle-aged adult can hear is only 12-14 kilohertz. Also, the hearing range for men worsens more quickly than the hearing range for women. This means that women will have the ability to hear notes of higher pitch than men of the same age do.
Quote
http://www.dspguide.com/ch22/1.htm
The range of human hearing is generally considered to be 20 Hz to 20 kHz, but it is far more sensitive to sounds between 1 kHz and 4 kHz. For example, listeners can detect sounds as low as 0 dB SPL at 3 kHz, but require 40 dB SPL at 100 hertz (an amplitude increase of 100). Listeners can tell that two tones are different if their frequencies differ by more than about 0.3% at 3 kHz. This increases to 3% at 100 hertz. For comparison, adjacent keys on a piano differ by about 6% in frequency.
Quote
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearing_range
Specifically, humans have a maximum aural range that begins as low as 12 Hz under ideal laboratory conditions,[2] to 20,000 Hz in most children and some adults, but the range shrinks during life, usually beginning at around the age of 8 with the higher frequencies fading.
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 October 25, 2010 06:12PM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 1,092 |
Re: Help with initial electronics test: gen 6 November 17, 2010 12:28AM |
Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 56 |