• Patently obvious

    I was doing some searching on the internet for images of microwave oven parts when good old Google offered up this patent in amongst the search results. It was a patent for a method of wiring up microwave ovens filed in 1998 by Samsung Electronics.

    It is for something that is, well, patently obvious.  Take a look at these images from the patent:

    Yeah, I agree.  They want to patent that?  A really simple wiring change? It is like patenting a paper clip. Ah…  I see that it has a patent.  From way back in 1897. Come to think of it didn’t I hear about some sort of simple clicking on a web page that is covered by a patent?

    The good news about the microwave wiring patent is that in 2000 someone had the good sense to throw the patent application out.  I now know that I can sleep soundly after rewiring microwave ovens safe in the knowledge that I did not illegally flout someones patent.


  • I’ve done a lot of screwing

    I’ll probably get in trouble with everyone about the title of this post but at least it got your attention.

    Anyway, as a technician I do a lot of screwing (we are only talking about screwdrivers here ok) so having good screwdrivers is a good thing.  Have a look at this CK HD Classic range screwdriver that I bought way back in the mid 1990s.

    IMG_2433 CK Screwdriver
    It is a Number 2 Philips head screwdriver so it has done a lot of work.  Look at the tip.  Apart from the anti-cam out coating being worn off it is still in good condition.  The rough patches on the shaft is where I had a toolmaker mate of mine try and put some knurling on it.  The steel is so well tempered and of such a good quality that even the tough knurling tool had trouble with biting into it.  I reckon having knurling on a long shaft screwdriver like this one is a good idea.  It would be way of getting screws out quickly.

    What prompted me to talk about screwdrivers is that I decided I needed a set for Torx  headed screws.  I am seeing more and more products that use them.  The sole Torx screwdriver that I had (a security Torx brand Number 20 specifically for the now old school IBM 8512 computer monitors) and the good old screwdriver bit sets are now not really cutting it.

    So I got hold of Ron Enright Tools in Auckland, which is where I got all of my CK screwdrivers, to see if I can get some for Torx screws.  I was recommended the PB Swiss range of screwdrivers by David.  He reckons they are the bees knees.  Maybe even the PBs knees (sorry, that was lame).  He gave me a good deal on the colour coded set you can see in the picture.  They turned up yesterday and they look beautiful!  Mmmmm…. Nice handles (although I think square is my preference), good looking (but functionality is more important of course), and all with individual serial numbers, something I have not seen on other screwdrivers.  It looks like I will get a lifetimes worth of use out of these things.

    That is enough talk about screwdrivers.  Time to do some screwing.


  • Dodgy diodes

    Here is a story for all you electronics techs.  And anyone making assumptions.  Most of us in other words.

    This is about a caddy type welder that came in for repair, a 180 amp inverter model. Can’t remember the make or model.   I checked for weld voltage and there was a healthy 80 odd volts coming out but there was a really pathetic spark from the electrode which meant there was next to no current.

    So I took it apart to do some fault tracing. Using a light bulb as a load I was getting 20 volts out on the weld terminals, down from the no load voltage of 80 volts.  Ok,  so is there a lot of resistance in the output, or maybe the inverter control circuit is doing something funny. Like a lot of these small caddy welders they have a centre tapped transformer and a full wave bridge rectifier arrangement.

    The full wave rectifier circuit is pretty basic.
    Image: Wikimedia Commons

    Even with the load in place I measured 80 volts AC on both sides of the transformer secondary.  All the connections were tight with no sign of heating due to contact resistance.  So was it a dodgy diode pack? It was a SOT227 package, which looks like the one pictured here.
    sot227-150x150
    I could measure the diode voltage drop in circuit of about 0.3 volts, which is what is expected for these Schottky diodes. Now normally semiconductors go short or blow apart and sometimes go leaky but if this diode pack is faulty it is as if it acting like a one way resistor!  Odd.

    Getting the diode pack off the heatsink was no mean feat with a mains filter capacitor, output current sense resistor, and output current bus bars all in the way.  With it out on the bench both diodes measured ok. We didn’t have one in stock and Tony suggested doing a DC check on it.  Putting about 30 volts up the anode and a 100 ohm resistor strung off the cathode I got nothing coming out of it!  I then remeasured the junction and it was now open circuit!  Definitely a dodgy diode (diodes actually).  When I remeasuring the junction voltage a bit later it measured ok.  Probably heat sensitive.

    So the moral of the story is that we cannot make any assumptions about how components fail.  Testing at all stages worked in this case in getting to the bottom of the fault pretty quickly.  When fault tracing I am sure we are all guilty of sometimes making assumptions and taking longer than it should to fix something.


  • Plastics and change

    Times have changed
    Thanks to Lawrey and Lole, creators of The Little Things, for the use of this cartoon. Visit littlethings.co.nz for more information about their cartoons

    And boy, just how things have changed!

    Like a lot of good cartoons this one speaks volumes.  It highlights societal change over generations.  It shows the increasing environmental awareness amongst the younger generation.  It shows the cycle from new product to the discovery of a problematic issue with it and then the need to address that issue. This is a cycle that is all too commonly seen by environmentalists.

     


  • Second hand can be more reliable than new

    Ecotech Services sells a range of second hand equipment that has been repaired or refurbished.  We can offer a warranty on the equipment without fear of incurring high costs (resulting from warranty repair or for refunds) to us for a number of reasons, including our experience on failure modes and the typical faults that are expected, and because of our judgement on where it lies on the bathtub curve.

    The bathtub curve is a concept in engineering that describes the reliability of a product during its lifetime.  It shows that a product is more likely to fail when it is very new or very old.

    Graph of the bathtub curve
    The bathtub curve is a concept that describes statistical chance of when a product fails at different points over its useful lifetime.
    Image: Wikimedia Commons

    In our experience the bathtub curve does appear to be applicable for a wide range of commercial, industrial, and consumer products.  However, since we don’t often have reliable data on total product sales versus number of product failures our evidence on the veracity of the bathtub curve is merely anecdotal.

    If the bathtub curve is valid for a particular product and we sell it during the constant failure rate section of the curve, then we can quite rightly make the claim that they are statistically more reliable than new ones.  This is assuming that we correctly assess that the product is not in the increasing failure rate of the curve, and that the manufacturer has sold the product with a minimal burn in.  These are both reasonable assumptions.


  • Health and Safety Reform Bill

    Ecotech Services welcomes the news that the Health and Safety Reform Bill has been amended by removing the requirement for a health and safety committee for organisations with less than 20 people.  This is a positive move for small businesses who are encumbered with high compliance costs.

    Statistical data shows that since 1992 there has been no real change in the number of workplace deaths.  Given that there has been a major shift towards having a strong culture of workplace safety, it appears that no amount of government or company policy is reducing the current number of workplace deaths.  The law of diminishing returns can possibly be applied to health and safety measures, and if so we would be in the long tail of having vanishingly small returns for any new policy that is put in place.

    figure 3
    From Gunby, P., How Bad is the State of Occupational Fatalities in New Zealand? New Zealand Journal of Employment Relations 36(1): 35-51

    The case is almost exactly the same for electricity related safety.  There has been no statistical change in the number of notifiable electrical accidents causing death over the past 20 years but there has been a slight decrease in the number of injuries.

    Over this period, there has been a number of policy changes relating to electrical safety; the Electrical Workers Registration Board was formed in 1992,  a raft of prescriptive standards have been introduced, electrical regulations have been updated, and in 2015 the practising licences for electrical workers are now required to have photo identification.

    Notifiable electrical accidents
    From 2008 Summary of Reported Electrical and Gas Accidents (Published 19 May 2009)

    We realise that statistics are of no use to those who have been injured or are grieving over the death of a loved one, but they are essential for the formulation of sound policy.

    [Edited – 11 August 2015]


  • Exposure of pregnant women

    The title will probably raise another “what on earth has this got to do with Ecotech Services” question so let me explain.

    I was doing a bit of research on manganese dioxide, one of the materials in alkaline batteries, when I came across this datasheet from that most august of organisations, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    And look at what they are suggesting we do with pregnant women:

    Screenshot from 2015-07-30 18:47:40I have absolutely no intention of exposing pregnant women.  It is up to them as to how much they show of themselves! And besides, I don’t have any pregnant women that I can expose.

    Yeah, I know.  It is just a bit of bad grammar.  But it made me laugh.


  • E-waste and volcanoes

    Here is another cartoon from Alex Hallatt’s Arctic Circle that is related to the work we do.

    Hallatt 17-07-2015


  • Electrical safety and appliance refurbishment

    Any new or used appliance that is sold or supplied in New Zealand must conform to the relevant legislation, which in this case is the Electrical (Safety) Regulations 2010.  Ecotech Services carries out refurbishment of appliances that have been discarded but we have difficulty obtaining these due to the way these regulations are interpreted by some individuals and organisations.

    Section 80(3) of the regulations states:

    A used appliance is, for the purpose of this regulation, deemed to be electrically safe if, at the time it is sold or offered for sale,—
        (a) it is tested, inspected, and tagged in accordance with AS/NZS 5761; or
        (b) it has been disabled and marked in accordance with AS/NZS 4701; or
        (c) in the case of a used electrical medical device, it is tested and marked in accordance with AS/NZ 3551.

    In  practice, for discarded appliances, this usually means the power cord is cut off as per the AS/NZS 4701 standard, regardless of whether the appliance is electrically safe or not.  This makes the refurbishment process carried out by Ecotech Services uneconomic for many appliances due to the time involved in installing a new power cord to the relevant standards.

    As a means by which Ecotech Services can obtain intact, discarded appliances, an adviser at WorkSafe New Zealand suggested that testing to AS/NZS 5761 be done prior to the sale or supply in order to remain within the bounds of the regulation.  There is possibly a grey area in what is defined as supply, at what point in the transportation of the items for example, but this level of detail is, according to the advice given, not something that is likely to be questioned in a court of law.  It is also not something that is seen as an issue by WorkSafe New Zealand.  This is because a distinction can be made between possession and ownership of an item.

    Based on the advice given Ecotech Services can assure clients that they are able to supply untested appliances to us.  We have the appropriate staff and testing equipment to ensure legislative requirements are met.

     


  • Isn’t the internet wonderful

    With all of this electronics and computer technology we have got things really good. My toaster pops up when the toast is done just right.  I can video Skype my mates on the other side of the world for free. I can see how little money I have in my bank account at any time of the day or night.  I can take really good pictures with my little camera (and sometimes bad ones with my big camera).  I can find and play all sorts of music that I have a sudden urge to listen to.  I can watch all sorts of films and tv programmes whenever I want.  I can watch all sorts of rubbish that I like to laugh at.

    But I think the best thing about technology is that I can lie here on the couch in our lounge and do most of the administration of my little business empire.

    This picture has nothing to do with this blog post except that it has a couch in it. Our old one at that.
    This picture has nothing to do with this blog post except that it has a couch in it. Our old one at that.  This is Tom playing cat and mouse on our couch back in 2004.  Tom was the neighbours cat.  RIP Tom.  You were a good cat.  You had a personality.  Anyway, this is the internet. We got to get all of our cat photos uploaded on to it don’t we?