Reply by Allen Shieh September 16, 20222022-09-16
&#22312; 2022&#24180;7&#26376;4&#26085;&#26143;&#26399;&#19968; UTC+8 06:27:22&#65292;<Don Y> &#20889;&#36947;&#65306;
> On 7/3/2022 2:25 PM, Rich S wrote: > > Thank you Don for the elaborate details. I expected little or none, > > you provided a wealth of ideas. > I don't think many people actually *think* about what is required to > "recycle" something. It's as if it magically goes from a dropoff location > to "X% recycled content". > > Sadly, electronic items are hard to truly recycle because the technology > is so quickly outdated. We can better recycle (refurbish) a peristaltic > pump than a computer -- mechanisms tend not to go obsolete as quickly. > > Have you put these thoughts > > and experiences into a blog? SED is not quite the right place. > > I expect you have more to say ;-) > No. It is actually very depressing when you see truckloads (semi's) > full of stuff pull in and know you'll only be able to "recover" a > small percentage of their contents. > > When I've taken friends through for "tours", they are impressed > by the quantity of goods. Instead, they should be APPALLED! > > And, you feel like an "enabler" -- the firm donating the items likely > thinks they are doing their part... if they truly knew how inefficient > their efforts were, you wonder if they would: > - stop trying > - try harder (including reconsidering their purchases)! > > At the same time, when Ma&Pa Kettle drive in with some 20 year > old PC that they want to donate -- thinking some needy kid will > benefit from their donation... you can't tell them that it's just > so much *scrap*! :< > > Look around your area. I'm sure there are some folks doing this sort > of thing (I've managed to find groups in various parts of the country). > A tour can be enlightening (depressing).
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Reply by Don Y July 3, 20222022-07-03
On 7/3/2022 2:25 PM, Rich S wrote:
> Thank you Don for the elaborate details. I expected little or none, > you provided a wealth of ideas.
I don't think many people actually *think* about what is required to "recycle" something. It's as if it magically goes from a dropoff location to "X% recycled content". Sadly, electronic items are hard to truly recycle because the technology is so quickly outdated. We can better recycle (refurbish) a peristaltic pump than a computer -- mechanisms tend not to go obsolete as quickly.
> Have you put these thoughts > and experiences into a blog? SED is not quite the right place. > I expect you have more to say ;-)
No. It is actually very depressing when you see truckloads (semi's) full of stuff pull in and know you'll only be able to "recover" a small percentage of their contents. When I've taken friends through for "tours", they are impressed by the quantity of goods. Instead, they should be APPALLED! And, you feel like an "enabler" -- the firm donating the items likely thinks they are doing their part... if they truly knew how inefficient their efforts were, you wonder if they would: - stop trying - try harder (including reconsidering their purchases)! At the same time, when Ma&Pa Kettle drive in with some 20 year old PC that they want to donate -- thinking some needy kid will benefit from their donation... you can't tell them that it's just so much *scrap*! :< Look around your area. I'm sure there are some folks doing this sort of thing (I've managed to find groups in various parts of the country). A tour can be enlightening (depressing).
Reply by Rich S July 3, 20222022-07-03
On Sunday, July 3, 2022 at 2:24:26 AM UTC, Don Y wrote:
> On 7/2/2022 4:17 PM, Rich S wrote: > >> [If you truly understood the magnitude of the throw-away problem, you'd > >> approach design entirely differently!] > > > > We drifted off original topic but this one > > is still very relevant to me. > > I would like to know, how should consumer > > product -- such as those you mentioned > > -- and its manufacturer -- be evaluated for their > > positive aspects towards sustainability and > > minimizing negative ecological impact. It is a > > whole area of study unto itself. > I think it is the nature of businesses to want for consumption. > They need a constant revenue stream to survive. Building a "forever" > product is one way to limit your success -- once everyone has > purchased one, the market is exhausted! > > So, the first line of defense is to adjust customer expectations > soas not to think they NEED a shiney new <whatever>. If you are > a business -- and a stakeholder in said business -- then you > can make an impact with policy. Do you really need to update > all of your PC seats every time MS decides it needs a fresh > injection of revenue? Or, apple? Is there something that > application X can't do that you really REALLY need to do? > Do you need it enough to warrant the OS (and hardware) upgrade > that it might require?? > > Is there some reason that 65 inch HD TV (i.e., the one that > I rescued for our living room) is no longer "appropriate" > for your conference room needs? If you are letting IT people > make your equipment buying decisions/recommendations, perhaps > lump IT equipment purchases into the budget *with* salaries so > they get the message that money spent on "new toys" comes at > a cost of "fewer raises"! It's really easy to recommend spending > someone else's money -- esp if it gives you additional job > security (more stuff to install/decommission/maintain!) > > Yes, my organization does > > happen to employ these people. But the devil > > is in the details -- what specifically about > > product "X" can make the most difference? > There are lots of first-level recycling agencies. Their > mission statements vary (ours is to divert materials > from landfills through reuse, refurbishment or repurposing; > resorting to "recycling" as a last resort). > > Recycling is incredibly labor intensive. If you had to > pay folks to disassemble each bit of kit into: > - sheet metal > - plastics (discard) > - valuable metals (clean aluminum, copper and gold) > - circuit boards (from which metals could be reclaimed) > - memory (which can often be reused, as is) > - CPUs (for the gold on their pins) > - fans (can be refurbished) > - hardware (screws, etc. for their metal content) > - disk drives (for the metal in their housings) > etc. you find that it costs more for the labor than you can > recover from the goods! > > [A consumer PC is "worth" about $5 if headed for the tip, > regardless of whether there's an i7 inside or a 386; servers > a fair bit more but largely because of the quantity and quality > of the components] > > We rely on volunteer labor for this disassembly work. These > are typically developmentally disabled "kids" (though they > actually may be adults) under "adult" supervision. Their > cognitive skills and manual dexterity are often compromised. > > So, it is easy for a mechanism (assembly structure) to be > too complex for them to sort out. Simple, mainstream > fasteners (phillips) of significant size and placement are > easiest. Slotted screwdrivers are often harder to position > in the fastener. And, often used as prybars -- which can slip > and find their way into the flesh of a palm! > > If they have to resort to several different tools to > disassemble something, you end up with mangled tools > and frustrated workers (they were using a #0 phillips to > remove a small screw and then continued to use it in an > attempt to loosen a #2 screw! or, an 1/8" cabinet tip > slotted screwdriver to loosen something considerably meatier!) > > Things that snap or slide together without special tools are > best. All they have to do is be shown the proper motion > to separate the items. Then, told which bin to place each. > (someone has to sort through the bins after each "shift" > to be sure stuff didn't get mixed where not intended). > > The downstream recyclers will get annoyed -- and significantly > lower the price per pound they will pay us -- if things aren't > properly sorted. A large copper heatsink with bits of mounting > bracket still attached loses its value as it has to be further > processed. Even as a nonprofit with only a couple of bodies > "on staff", someone still has to pay the rent, lights, > insurance, truck/forklift maintenance, etc. > > And, as prices are for BATCHES of stuff, if there are too many > (no idea who makes that determination, nor how!) items that > aren't "clean", then the entire batch (which is likely a > Gaylord) is repriced at the lower rate. I.e., the value of the > *good* work is lost in a stroke of the pen due to a few bad apples! > > The old 68K Macs were ideal in this sense; one screw and everything > slid/snapped apart. But, there was a lot of plastic involved so > that's a downside (there is NO recycle value to plastic; sheet metal > is like $0.01/pound!) > > There's a perverse economy, here. Durable kit is likely harder > to disassemble -- and, thus, recycle -- owing to the use > of more plentiful fasteners and components. E.g., my workstations > would have been recycled as "complete units" (at the much lower > rate) simply because they require too much effort and "skill" > to "decompose". So, don't buy durable kit unless you plan on giving > it extra life! Or, rather, DO buy durable kit and PLAN on giving it > extra life! > > Don't buy "toy" UPSs -- because you *won't* replace the batteries! > Or, you will defer that activity until the batteries are hopelessly > swollen inside the unit. A UPS is worth (recycle value) as much as > a PC -- simply because of the weight associated with the transformer! > > [Pull the batteries and recycle them separately; you can expect about > $0.20/pound for a battery whereas the UPS might be worth $0.10/pound] > > [[I've rescued large (2200VA) UPSs NIB! Complete with the shipping > labels intact! Gotta wonder if anyone had to answer for that "needless" > purchase <frown> ]] > > Finally, THINK about what you're going to do when an item has reached > the end of its useful life FOR YOU. I tell people to think about how > they are going to dispose of items BEFORE they purchase them. PCs tend to > have extendable markets -- there is always some underprivileged kid or > school district that could make use of 500 "used" PCs -- *if* someone > has refurbished them and reinstalled OS/apps. But, the sheer number of > such recycled items means even that "market" will quickly be saturated. > > Then, what do you do? > > We've sent entire dentist offices to Guatemala, SEMs to universities in > MX, etc. They will likely extract every last bit of useful life out > of those items. Much more aggressively than their donor corporations > did!
Thank you Don for the elaborate details. I expected little or none, you provided a wealth of ideas. Have you put these thoughts and experiences into a blog? SED is not quite the right place. I expect you have more to say ;-) Cheers, Rich S.
Reply by Don Y July 2, 20222022-07-02
On 7/2/2022 4:17 PM, Rich S wrote:
>> [If you truly understood the magnitude of the throw-away problem, you'd >> approach design entirely differently!] > > We drifted off original topic but this one > is still very relevant to me. > I would like to know, how should consumer > product -- such as those you mentioned > -- and its manufacturer -- be evaluated for their > positive aspects towards sustainability and > minimizing negative ecological impact. It is a > whole area of study unto itself.
I think it is the nature of businesses to want for consumption. They need a constant revenue stream to survive. Building a "forever" product is one way to limit your success -- once everyone has purchased one, the market is exhausted! So, the first line of defense is to adjust customer expectations soas not to think they NEED a shiney new <whatever>. If you are a business -- and a stakeholder in said business -- then you can make an impact with policy. Do you really need to update all of your PC seats every time MS decides it needs a fresh injection of revenue? Or, apple? Is there something that application X can't do that you really REALLY need to do? Do you need it enough to warrant the OS (and hardware) upgrade that it might require?? Is there some reason that 65 inch HD TV (i.e., the one that I rescued for our living room) is no longer "appropriate" for your conference room needs? If you are letting IT people make your equipment buying decisions/recommendations, perhaps lump IT equipment purchases into the budget *with* salaries so they get the message that money spent on "new toys" comes at a cost of "fewer raises"! It's really easy to recommend spending someone else's money -- esp if it gives you additional job security (more stuff to install/decommission/maintain!)
> Yes, my organization does > happen to employ these people. But the devil > is in the details -- what specifically about > product "X" can make the most difference?
There are lots of first-level recycling agencies. Their mission statements vary (ours is to divert materials from landfills through reuse, refurbishment or repurposing; resorting to "recycling" as a last resort). Recycling is incredibly labor intensive. If you had to pay folks to disassemble each bit of kit into: - sheet metal - plastics (discard) - valuable metals (clean aluminum, copper and gold) - circuit boards (from which metals could be reclaimed) - memory (which can often be reused, as is) - CPUs (for the gold on their pins) - fans (can be refurbished) - hardware (screws, etc. for their metal content) - disk drives (for the metal in their housings) etc. you find that it costs more for the labor than you can recover from the goods! [A consumer PC is "worth" about $5 if headed for the tip, regardless of whether there's an i7 inside or a 386; servers a fair bit more but largely because of the quantity and quality of the components] We rely on volunteer labor for this disassembly work. These are typically developmentally disabled "kids" (though they actually may be adults) under "adult" supervision. Their cognitive skills and manual dexterity are often compromised. So, it is easy for a mechanism (assembly structure) to be too complex for them to sort out. Simple, mainstream fasteners (phillips) of significant size and placement are easiest. Slotted screwdrivers are often harder to position in the fastener. And, often used as prybars -- which can slip and find their way into the flesh of a palm! If they have to resort to several different tools to disassemble something, you end up with mangled tools and frustrated workers (they were using a #0 phillips to remove a small screw and then continued to use it in an attempt to loosen a #2 screw! or, an 1/8" cabinet tip slotted screwdriver to loosen something considerably meatier!) Things that snap or slide together without special tools are best. All they have to do is be shown the proper motion to separate the items. Then, told which bin to place each. (someone has to sort through the bins after each "shift" to be sure stuff didn't get mixed where not intended). The downstream recyclers will get annoyed -- and significantly lower the price per pound they will pay us -- if things aren't properly sorted. A large copper heatsink with bits of mounting bracket still attached loses its value as it has to be further processed. Even as a nonprofit with only a couple of bodies "on staff", someone still has to pay the rent, lights, insurance, truck/forklift maintenance, etc. And, as prices are for BATCHES of stuff, if there are too many (no idea who makes that determination, nor how!) items that aren't "clean", then the entire batch (which is likely a Gaylord) is repriced at the lower rate. I.e., the value of the *good* work is lost in a stroke of the pen due to a few bad apples! The old 68K Macs were ideal in this sense; one screw and everything slid/snapped apart. But, there was a lot of plastic involved so that's a downside (there is NO recycle value to plastic; sheet metal is like $0.01/pound!) There's a perverse economy, here. Durable kit is likely harder to disassemble -- and, thus, recycle -- owing to the use of more plentiful fasteners and components. E.g., my workstations would have been recycled as "complete units" (at the much lower rate) simply because they require too much effort and "skill" to "decompose". So, don't buy durable kit unless you plan on giving it extra life! Or, rather, DO buy durable kit and PLAN on giving it extra life! Don't buy "toy" UPSs -- because you *won't* replace the batteries! Or, you will defer that activity until the batteries are hopelessly swollen inside the unit. A UPS is worth (recycle value) as much as a PC -- simply because of the weight associated with the transformer! [Pull the batteries and recycle them separately; you can expect about $0.20/pound for a battery whereas the UPS might be worth $0.10/pound] [[I've rescued large (2200VA) UPSs NIB! Complete with the shipping labels intact! Gotta wonder if anyone had to answer for that "needless" purchase <frown> ]] Finally, THINK about what you're going to do when an item has reached the end of its useful life FOR YOU. I tell people to think about how they are going to dispose of items BEFORE they purchase them. PCs tend to have extendable markets -- there is always some underprivileged kid or school district that could make use of 500 "used" PCs -- *if* someone has refurbished them and reinstalled OS/apps. But, the sheer number of such recycled items means even that "market" will quickly be saturated. Then, what do you do? We've sent entire dentist offices to Guatemala, SEMs to universities in MX, etc. They will likely extract every last bit of useful life out of those items. Much more aggressively than their donor corporations did!
Reply by Ricky July 2, 20222022-07-02
On Sunday, June 26, 2022 at 2:11:41 PM UTC-4, Don Y wrote:
> I usually build a document that describes the hardware, > nominal voltages, waveforms, timing relationships, etc. > Plus, captured waveforms under different operating conditions > (along with those expected during specific diagnostics) > > I'm getting some pushback to move these onto the schematics, > directly, instead of in a supplementary document. > > I'm not keen on this as it means schematics have to make room > to accommodate these annotations. And, I can't see how to > maintain such a document if light of potential changes to > diagnostics (which may be numerous for a given circuit). > > Any folks preparing comparable documentation have suggestions?
I'm preparing a debugging guide. I was thinking of making it part of the test program, to pull up all the info needed, at the time of failure, but changed my mind. Better to separate those matters and let test proceed uninterrupted. In the end, I prepared an HTML document with the schematics showing the probe points (added to the PDF page) and PCB layout images showing the same along with tables of the voltages expected. Also included is text guiding through the process. I can't imagine this being on a schematic. While basic voltages might be useful, it's far more useful in the sort of document I provided. -- Rick C. - Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging - Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
Reply by Rich S July 2, 20222022-07-02
On Wednesday, June 29, 2022 at 5:42:59 AM UTC, Don Y wrote:
> On 6/28/2022 9:21 PM, Three Jeeps wrote: > > > Design and mfg for repairability for most consumer products went away > > decades ago. > Simple matter of labor costs. As product *price* falls, there's less > and less room to accommodate repair/refurbishing. > > Sadly, "consumer" isn't the only market suffering from that affliction; > businesses (here) routinely replace ALL of their workstations on short > update cycles (18-36 months). Even KEYBOARDS have longer useful lives > than that (and they experience the most wear). > > I see a lot of medical equipment (and DME), medicines, bicycles, > scooters, wheelchairs, phones, copiers, etc. headed to the tip. > > Throw away society and if you believe they work, electronic > > recycling facilities. > IME, all this does is get yesterday's kit into the hands of > The Less Fortunate. E.g., a group I'm affiliated with refurbishes > hundreds of PCs each month, distributing them for low/no cost > ($20) to folks who are more needy. > > So, on the one hand, the item has been (temporarily) diverted > from the land fill; on the other, we've effectively just created > another *user* (and, there's likely no one "beneath" him when > *he* discards the refurbished unit) > > The DME is perhaps the most disheartening because you know it > represents a "real" need -- for someone. (yet, you often can't > give the stuff away because what the recipient needs more than > anything is the support that comes with a commercial sale!) > > Have relatives in the Boston area. Extended visits > > usually resulted in taking refuse to the local 'dump'...The dump had a > > sizable building with tables where ppl would put their (mostly electronic) > > stuff for recycling. Back in the day, retrieved a Apple power station > > (dead supply-easily fixed), 32" color tv ( short in HV section), Marantz > > 60watts am/fm receiver ( blown output transistors). One mans ceiling is > > another mans floor. > I have 30 monitors (12 in use) that I've recapped or replaced blown FETs. > > Two laser printers (including several NIB toner cartridges). Discarded > the color phasers, LaserJet 4M+ (w/duplexor), etc. cuz it was silly to > maintain them given how little color printing I do (I can color print at > the library -- from home! -- for $0.10/page). > > Two B-size ("Tabloid") flat bed scanners. A 40" wide format scanner. > A couple of sheet-fed scanners. > > Half a dozen motion controllers. Box of mice and keyboards. A couple of > digitizing tablets (discarded the D-size unit as it took up too much floor > space). Discarded the pen plotters for similar reasons. > > Countless bits of test equipment -- usually just needing a recal cycle > or trivial repair. > > Six laptops -- each in a carrying bag. Several servers. Six identical > workstations. A dozen 1500VA sine-wave, networked UPSs. (plus several > 2200-5000VA units). > > Each item "bought" for the scrap price that the "material recycler" > would pay for them NOT broken down into their component parts (normally, > items are disassembled so fans can be sold to one recycler, PCBs to > another, tin/metal to a third, etc.). This because there are no > users eager to inherit an 80 pound workstation or an oversized scanner, > or a monitor with broken backlight PS, etc. > > [If you truly understood the magnitude of the throw-away problem, you'd > approach design entirely differently!]
Hi Don Y, We drifted off original topic but this one is still very relevant to me. I would like to know, how should consumer product -- such as those you mentioned -- and its manufacturer -- be evaluated for their positive aspects towards sustainability and minimizing negative ecological impact. It is a whole area of study unto itself. Yes, my organization does happen to employ these people. But the devil is in the details -- what specifically about product "X" can make the most difference? Thanks, Rich S.
Reply by Joe Gwinn June 29, 20222022-06-29
On Wed, 29 Jun 2022 10:39:57 -0400, Phil Hobbs
<pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:

>Joe Gwinn wrote: >> On Tue, 28 Jun 2022 07:16:13 -0700, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com >> wrote: >> >>> On Tue, 28 Jun 2022 16:19:23 +1000, Chris Jones >>> <lugnut808@spam.yahoo.com> wrote: >>> >>>> On 28/06/2022 13:28, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote: >>>>> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 20:49:18 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid >>>>> <martin_riddle@verison.net> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> John Larkin <jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com> Wrote in message:r >>>>>>> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 14:27:07 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid<martin_riddle@verison.net> wrote:>Don Y <blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> Wrote in message:r>> I usually build a document that describes the hardware,nominal voltages, waveforms, timing relationships, etc.Plus, captured waveforms under different operating conditions(along with those expected during specific diagnostics)I'm getting some pushback to move these onto the schematics,directly, instead of in a supplementary document.I'm not keen on this as it means schematics have to make roomto accommodate these annotations. And, I can't see how tomaintain such a document if light of potential changes todiagnostics (which may be numerous for a given circuit).Any folks preparing comparable documentation have suggestions?>>I would imagine a separate service manual would apply.>>CheersDoes anyone still do that?-- If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end with doubts, but if he will be content to begin with doubts he shall end >in >>>>>> certainties.Francis Bacon >>>>>> >>>>>> Medical equipment. >>>>>> >>>>>> Cheers >>>>> >>>>> Yikes. It scares me to imagine anyone doing field repairs to medical >>>>> equipment. >>>> >>>> It is also a bit scary to imagine being treated in a hospital during an >>>> emergency, full of equipment that when it fails, cannot be repaired in >>>> the field, but must instead be sent to the same overseas facility that >>>> every other hospital in the world is trying to send their dead units to, >>>> (especially bearing in mind that whatever emergency may well put all the >>>> freight aircraft or their pilots out of action). >>>> >>>> There is an argument for only procuring medical equipment with proper >>>> service manuals, resistors big enough to have values marked on them, and >>>> a stock of spares of any programmable devices, or spares of any boards >>>> with massive BGAs, and no parts locked to each other by serial number. >>>> Those countries with nationalised healthcare do have sufficient buying >>>> power to dictate those terms if they want to, (much like the US military >>>> to test equipment manufacturers in the past). >>>> >>> >>> No surface-mount? >>> >>> Our FDA is absolutely fascist about quality. They pulled a pop >>> inspection on one nearby outfit that made cancer-treatment gear. They >>> discovered some new pcb's on the same bench as some repair units, >>> which is against the rules. They shut down the facility for a year of >>> re-training and re-qualification, and some of the engineers quit from >>> boredom. >> >> Yes. Here's why: >> >> .<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therac-25> >> >> I read the what-happened reports from the day. What a bunch of hacks, >> even by the standards of that day. >> >> Joe Gwinn >> > >Another Crown Corporation success story. :(
I had not heard of them before. I gather that they have an interesting history, maybe too interesting. The thing that caught my eye back then was the part where they removed the mechanical interlock. I've had bosses like that. Joe Gwinn
Reply by Phil Hobbs June 29, 20222022-06-29
Joe Gwinn wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Jun 2022 07:16:13 -0700, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com > wrote: > >> On Tue, 28 Jun 2022 16:19:23 +1000, Chris Jones >> <lugnut808@spam.yahoo.com> wrote: >> >>> On 28/06/2022 13:28, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote: >>>> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 20:49:18 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid >>>> <martin_riddle@verison.net> wrote: >>>> >>>>> John Larkin <jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com> Wrote in message:r >>>>>> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 14:27:07 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid<martin_riddle@verison.net> wrote:>Don Y <blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> Wrote in message:r>> I usually build a document that describes the hardware,nominal voltages, waveforms, timing relationships, etc.Plus, captured waveforms under different operating conditions(along with those expected during specific diagnostics)I'm getting some pushback to move these onto the schematics,directly, instead of in a supplementary document.I'm not keen on this as it means schematics have to make roomto accommodate these annotations. And, I can't see how tomaintain such a document if light of potential changes todiagnostics (which may be numerous for a given circuit).Any folks preparing comparable documentation have suggestions?>>I would imagine a separate service manual would apply.>>CheersDoes anyone still do that?-- If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end with doubts, but if he will be content to begin with doubts he shall end in >>>>> certainties.Francis Bacon >>>>> >>>>> Medical equipment. >>>>> >>>>> Cheers >>>> >>>> Yikes. It scares me to imagine anyone doing field repairs to medical >>>> equipment. >>> >>> It is also a bit scary to imagine being treated in a hospital during an >>> emergency, full of equipment that when it fails, cannot be repaired in >>> the field, but must instead be sent to the same overseas facility that >>> every other hospital in the world is trying to send their dead units to, >>> (especially bearing in mind that whatever emergency may well put all the >>> freight aircraft or their pilots out of action). >>> >>> There is an argument for only procuring medical equipment with proper >>> service manuals, resistors big enough to have values marked on them, and >>> a stock of spares of any programmable devices, or spares of any boards >>> with massive BGAs, and no parts locked to each other by serial number. >>> Those countries with nationalised healthcare do have sufficient buying >>> power to dictate those terms if they want to, (much like the US military >>> to test equipment manufacturers in the past). >>> >> >> No surface-mount? >> >> Our FDA is absolutely fascist about quality. They pulled a pop >> inspection on one nearby outfit that made cancer-treatment gear. They >> discovered some new pcb's on the same bench as some repair units, >> which is against the rules. They shut down the facility for a year of >> re-training and re-qualification, and some of the engineers quit from >> boredom. > > Yes. Here's why: > > .<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therac-25> > > I read the what-happened reports from the day. What a bunch of hacks, > even by the standards of that day. > > Joe Gwinn >
Another Crown Corporation success story. :( Cheers Phil Hobbs -- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal Consultant ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 http://electrooptical.net http://hobbs-eo.com
Reply by Don Y June 29, 20222022-06-29
On 6/28/2022 9:21 PM, Three Jeeps wrote:

> Design and mfg for repairability for most consumer products went away > decades ago.
Simple matter of labor costs. As product *price* falls, there's less and less room to accommodate repair/refurbishing. Sadly, "consumer" isn't the only market suffering from that affliction; businesses (here) routinely replace ALL of their workstations on short update cycles (18-36 months). Even KEYBOARDS have longer useful lives than that (and they experience the most wear). I see a lot of medical equipment (and DME), medicines, bicycles, scooters, wheelchairs, phones, copiers, etc. headed to the tip.
> Throw away society and if you believe they work, electronic > recycling facilities.
IME, all this does is get yesterday's kit into the hands of The Less Fortunate. E.g., a group I'm affiliated with refurbishes hundreds of PCs each month, distributing them for low/no cost ($20) to folks who are more needy. So, on the one hand, the item has been (temporarily) diverted from the land fill; on the other, we've effectively just created another *user* (and, there's likely no one "beneath" him when *he* discards the refurbished unit) The DME is perhaps the most disheartening because you know it represents a "real" need -- for someone. (yet, you often can't give the stuff away because what the recipient needs more than anything is the support that comes with a commercial sale!)
> Have relatives in the Boston area. Extended visits > usually resulted in taking refuse to the local 'dump'...The dump had a > sizable building with tables where ppl would put their (mostly electronic) > stuff for recycling. Back in the day, retrieved a Apple power station > (dead supply-easily fixed), 32" color tv ( short in HV section), Marantz > 60watts am/fm receiver ( blown output transistors). One mans ceiling is > another mans floor.
I have 30 monitors (12 in use) that I've recapped or replaced blown FETs. Two laser printers (including several NIB toner cartridges). Discarded the color phasers, LaserJet 4M+ (w/duplexor), etc. cuz it was silly to maintain them given how little color printing I do (I can color print at the library -- from home! -- for $0.10/page). Two B-size ("Tabloid") flat bed scanners. A 40" wide format scanner. A couple of sheet-fed scanners. Half a dozen motion controllers. Box of mice and keyboards. A couple of digitizing tablets (discarded the D-size unit as it took up too much floor space). Discarded the pen plotters for similar reasons. Countless bits of test equipment -- usually just needing a recal cycle or trivial repair. Six laptops -- each in a carrying bag. Several servers. Six identical workstations. A dozen 1500VA sine-wave, networked UPSs. (plus several 2200-5000VA units). Each item "bought" for the scrap price that the "material recycler" would pay for them NOT broken down into their component parts (normally, items are disassembled so fans can be sold to one recycler, PCBs to another, tin/metal to a third, etc.). This because there are no users eager to inherit an 80 pound workstation or an oversized scanner, or a monitor with broken backlight PS, etc. [If you truly understood the magnitude of the throw-away problem, you'd approach design entirely differently!]
Reply by Three Jeeps June 29, 20222022-06-29
On Tuesday, June 28, 2022 at 7:52:48 PM UTC-4, John Larkin wrote:
> On Tue, 28 Jun 2022 14:19:58 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid > <martin...@verison.net> wrote: > > >jla...@highlandsniptechnology.com Wrote in message:r > >> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 20:49:18 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid<martin...@verison.net> wrote:>John Larkin <jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com> Wrote in message:r>> On Mon, 27 Jun 2022 14:27:07 -0400 (EDT), Martin Rid<martin...@verison.net> wrote:>Don Y <blocked...@foo.invalid> Wrote in message:r>> I usually build a document that describes the hardware,nominal voltages, waveforms, timing relationships, etc.Plus, captured waveforms under different operating conditions(along with those expected during specific diagnostics)I'm getting some pushback to move these onto the schematics,directly, instead of in a supplementary document.I'm not keen on this as it means schematics have to make roomto accommodate these annotations. And, I can't see how tomaintain such a document if light of potential changes todiagnostics (which may be numerous for a given circuit).Any folks preparing comparable documentation have suggestions?>>I would imagine a separate service manual would > >apply.>>CheersDoes anyone still do that?-- If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end with doubts, but if he will be content to begin with doubts he shall end in>certainties.Francis Bacon>>Medical equipment. >>CheersYikes. It scares me to imagine anyone doing field repairs to medicalequipment.Our gear is always returned to the factory for repairs. We can replaceany bad parts with the correct part, QC the work, then run the fullautomated test and cal and archive a test report.And we learn about failure rates and mechanisms. > > > >Ok, how about automotive service manuals. > >Feel better? > >;) > >Cheers > A lot of stuff on my car can't be fixed by owners. > -- > > If a man will begin with certainties, he shall end with doubts, > but if he will be content to begin with doubts he shall end in certainties. > Francis Bacon
Design and mfg for repairability for most consumer products went away decades ago. Throw away society and if you believe they work, electronic recycling facilities. Have relatives in the Boston area. Extended visits usually resulted in taking refuse to the local 'dump'...The dump had a sizable building with tables where ppl would put their (mostly electronic) stuff for recycling. Back in the day, retrieved a Apple power station (dead supply-easily fixed), 32" color tv ( short in HV section), Marantz 60watts am/fm receiver ( blown output transistors). One mans ceiling is another mans floor. J J