| ??? 03/20/10 22:41 Modified: 03/20/10 22:43 Read: times  | 
#174360 - possibly Responding to: ???'s previous message  | 
You can achieve the same effect with short scissors but a sufficiently large opening angle.
 If you watched from the pointy end as they closed you would I suspect see the points close first or something like that, possibly.the problem with very long blades is you end up with the 'closing wave' travelling down the blades at C causing huge stresses.  | 
| Topic | Author | Date | 
| What's inside digital callipers? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Optical gratings? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| A linear encoder | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| You don't really need a dedicated chip | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Thanks for link | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| You can use my quadrature decoder | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Well I have already seen some neat FPGAs | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| it is overkill | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Stiffnes would be a tiny bit of a problem | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| possibly | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| There's a shrimp that does that | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Here is a link | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Can you be more specific | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| http://www.syncmos.sh.cn/SN6600HH.html | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| another linky | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Curiosity ? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
   wikipedia: digital calipers = ...        | 01/01/70 00:00 | 



