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Tag selected: pole.
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Saved by uncleflo on February 13th, 2022.
Question: What is your preference regarding the best place to mount a radar antenna? As far as we can tell from the pictures of Morgan’s Cloud you have mounted yours on a pole aft. Our previous experience with radars tells us that the antenna should be as high and free as possible. Wouldn’t a radar antenna mounted on the mast just above the first spreaders give better range and a more detailed radar picture than if it were mounted lower? It also appears from the pictures that your antenna isn’t mounted in a way that makes it able to tilt so that it can compensate for heel of the boat when sailing. Answer: First off, we should say that we view radar as the most important piece of electronic equipment on Morgan’s Cloud—yes, more important than GPS, since we can find our way with a compass and sextant but we can’t see unlit objects at night or through fog—so we have given a lot of thought to the position and installation of our radar scanner. We prefer a pole mounted aft for the scanner over mast mounting.
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Saved by uncleflo on November 28th, 2018.
In this installment of our blog series on Basic Audio Techniques for Video, we’ll explain how to use a boompole. If you missed the previous installment exploring the basics of using a boom mic, you can read it here. Since the earliest days of filmmaking, film crews have relied on mounting a microphone onto a boompole in order to properly position the microphone out of frame. In this post, we’ll be sharing some insider tips from professional boom operators.
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Saved by uncleflo on June 5th, 2012.
Rapid’s extensive range of multipole connectors and multipole sockets are sourced from leading manufacturers around the world, such as Bulgin, Molex and TruConnect. We can supply high volume quantities of multipole connectors for customers on short lead times, in all the industry standard configurations, such as D connectors, IDC, HDMI, IEEE-488, PCB interconnect and USB. Multipole sockets also include DIL sockets, PLCC sockets and SIL sockets.
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Saved by uncleflo on January 22nd, 2009.
This file contains a simulation of the cart and pole dynamic system and a procedure for learning to balance the pole that uses multilayer connectionist networks. Both are described in Anderson, "Strategy Learning with Multilayer Connectionist Representations," GTE Laboratories TR87-509.3, 1988. This is a corrected version of the report published in the Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Machine Learning, Irvine, CA, 1987.
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