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On Thu Aug 29 11:50:12 2024 John B. wrote:Are you being purposefully obtuse? Every AFB has a machine shop, as do Navy ships. Some are bare bones, some are world class machining facilities, Tinker AFB for example:On Wed, 28 Aug 2024 16:17:48 -0700, Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com>Proving that John never set foot in a military library. That must be how he got his diaphonous A&P. For the brightest apprintice that is two years and John is hardly bright or they wouldn't have made him crew chief which was nothing more than paperwork.
wrote:
>On Wed, 28 Aug 2024 23:02:03 GMT, cyclintom <cyclintom@yahoo.com>>
wrote:
>Then perhaps you missed the part where he thought it funny that I could learn science by reading out three entire non-fiction sections of Oakland libraries?>
I think your claim is hilarious:
06/07/2022
<https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/QNPNSofg064/m/Xaamy15iBQAJ>
"I would warrant that I've read more than 20 times more books than you
have. I read out three public libraries, the military library and all
of the books I used to gain the knowledge to become an engineer."
>
How did the "three public libraries" magically morph into "three
entire non-fiction sections of Oakland libraries"? Also, what
happened to the military library you claim to have "read out" whatever
that means? Tom, you really should write down your lies so that you
don't screw up this badly trying to remember them.
>... from a point of NEVER working in the Telephone industry he denies that "light line" means fiber optics to installers.>
12/23/2021
<https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/_1eEehgsDD0/m/cgRIn7ofDQAJ>
"Do you think that you're impressing people using the term "fiber
optics" when the common term is light lines and even AT&T is using
it?"
>
Show me where AT&T is using the term "light lines" to refer to fiber
optical cable used for communications (not for decorative
illumination).
>he has plainly never used a good oscilloscope so he doesn't know why you would use pulse width modulation to measure wire length.>
You've been asked to explain how to use PWM to "test cables" many
times. Nobody asked about measuring wire length.
12/23/2021
<https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/_1eEehgsDD0/m/t0uJbEMbDQAJ>
"I'm not explaining anything to someone so stupid that they don't know
why you use pulse width modulation to measure loses due to line shorts
which is the failure mode of coax."
<https://groups.google.com/g/rec.bicycles.tech/c/_1eEehgsDD0/m/bIkgkvkKDQAJ>
"Using PWM to test extremely long cables is common practice."
Re Tommy's "military library". The air force has several types of
Libraries. (1) The public library for readers just like your home town
has. (2) A library of regulations that covers every thing on how to
confirm how many eat supper in the Mess hall to when may a dentist
insist in pulling a tooth. and then there is (3) the vast technical
library that tells you every thing you need to know about any
technical (airplane, truck, whatever, even airport runways) device
that you need fir help in repairing installing removing) any device in
the inventory - I once found a reference for the size bolts to use in
a missile retaining device on a B-52 :-)
>
So Tommy's claim to have read the military library is akin to saying
that the moon really, truly, IS blue cheese
-- Cheers,
>
John B.
>
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