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#31
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On May 24, 1:06 pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Sun, 24 May 2009, Marc wrote: snip Tom Anderson wrote: snip Cyclists back then must have been made of cast iron. Nobody had anything more advanced than a Sturmey-Archer three-speed [1], and yet they still tackled open roads, hills, whatever. Makes my 27-speed setup seem a bit wimpish really. Belay that! In part two, they have to get off and push up a hill! tom [1] Some, of course, would deny that any such thing exists. -- Re-enacting the future Unbelay that! Depsite a similarly unnecessary number of gears, I've been reduced to walking a couple of times too. Evidently I'm not made of cast-iron either. snif bookieb. |
#32
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Christopher A. Lee wrote:
Part of the festival was the amusement park at Battersea - with the Emmet Railway. It was the Far Tottering and Oyster Creek Railway designed by Rowland Emett. Emett was so fed up of people mis-spelling his name that he no longer corrected people, nor cared, and many references therefore have it wrong. |
#33
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MatSav wrote:
Indeed they did. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batters...ersea_fun_fair explains. I was there just a week before the collapse of the roller-coaster, and the very thought of that puts me off using one ever again. I was also at Lulworth Cove, Dorset, on a Geology field trip - just a week before a land slip killed a teacher and pupils (also on a field trip). I'm seeing a pattern :-( Would you be kind enough to post a list of your movements for the next ten years please. This is purely to give everyone else the chance to be somewhere different. :-) |
#34
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Tom Anderson wrote
Cyclists back then must have been made of cast iron. Nobody had anything more advanced than a Sturmey-Archer three-speed [1], and yet they still tackled open roads, hills, whatever. Makes my 27-speed setup seem a bit wimpish really. Belay that! In part two, they have to get off and push up a hill! [1] Some, of course, would deny that any such thing exists. Surely even those who incline that way would regard a Sturmey-Archer four-speed as more advanced ? -- Mike D |
#35
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"Michael R N Dolbear" wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote Cyclists back then must have been made of cast iron. Nobody had anything more advanced than a Sturmey-Archer three-speed [1], and yet they still tackled open roads, hills, whatever. Makes my 27-speed setup seem a bit wimpish really. Belay that! In part two, they have to get off and push up a hill! [1] Some, of course, would deny that any such thing exists. Surely even those who incline that way would regard a Sturmey-Archer four-speed as more advanced ? More advanced, yes, but not in keeping with tradition. ;-) |
#36
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![]() "John Rowland" wrote in message ... MatSav wrote: "John Rowland" wrote in message ... the NPL which was, and is, in Teddington. Indeed it is - I work there! Ah! I have an idea for how the NPL could use the spare bits in the MSF signal to improve the service... Do you think they might be up for that, or are they a Not-Invented-Here organisation? (I guess the answer to that should be emailed rather than, er, broadcast.) With apologies for having missed your suggestion - NPL are a Government-Owned, Company-Operated business - so I suspect they'd welcome an opportunity to increase their profit. However, there are constraints on what can be broadcast in particulat parts of the spectrum - and I think the MSF frequency is prescribed by statute, so it can't carry anything else. But I could be wrong, of course. Try e-mailing them directly - contact details available from their web site, http://www.npl.co.uk/time -- MatSav |
#37
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On Mon, 8 Jun 2009 22:52:33 +0100, "MatSav" matthew | dot | savage |
at | dsl | dot | pipex | dot | com wrote: "John Rowland" wrote in message ... MatSav wrote: "John Rowland" wrote in message ... the NPL which was, and is, in Teddington. Indeed it is - I work there! Ah! I have an idea for how the NPL could use the spare bits in the MSF signal to improve the service... Do you think they might be up for that, or are they a Not-Invented-Here organisation? (I guess the answer to that should be emailed rather than, er, broadcast.) With apologies for having missed your suggestion - NPL are a Government-Owned, Company-Operated business - so I suspect they'd welcome an opportunity to increase their profit. However, there are constraints on what can be broadcast in particulat parts of the spectrum - and I think the MSF frequency is prescribed by statute, so it can't carry anything else. But I could be wrong, of course. Try e-mailing them directly - contact details available from their web site, http://www.npl.co.uk/time the coding is described in :- http://www.npl.co.uk/upload/pdf/MSF_Time_Date_Code.pdf If I'm reading various bits of info correctly the standard used by MSF (UK) and DCF (DE) is an AFNOR (Association Française de Normalisation)/ISO standard derived from an IRIG (Inter-Range Instrumentation Group (USA) ) standard originally used for rocket range testing purposes. It looks like there might now also be some ITU involvement :- http://www.itu.int/dms_pub/itu-r/oth...040001MSWE.doc The MSF frequency IMU will be set by international agreement along with other radio frequency allocations. |
#38
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![]() On Jun 8, 11:35*pm, Charles Ellson wrote: On Mon, 8 Jun 2009 22:52:33 +0100, "MatSav" matthew | dot | savage | at | dsl | dot | pipex | dot | com wrote: "John Rowland" wrote: [snip] Ah! I have an idea for how the NPL could use the spare bits in the MSF signal to improve the service... Do you think they might be up for that, or are they a Not-Invented-Here organisation? (I guess the answer to that should be emailed rather than, er, broadcast.) With apologies for having missed your suggestion - NPL are a Government-Owned, Company-Operated business - so I suspect they'd welcome an opportunity to increase their profit. However, there are constraints on what can be broadcast in particulat parts of the spectrum - and I think the MSF frequency is prescribed by statute, so it can't carry anything else. But I could be wrong, of course. Try e-mailing them directly - contact details available from their web site,http://www.npl.co.uk/time the coding is described in :- http://www.npl.co.uk/upload/pdf/MSF_Time_Date_Code.pdf If I'm reading various bits of info correctly the standard used by MSF (UK) and DCF (DE) is an AFNOR (Association Française de Normalisation)/ISO standard derived from an IRIG (Inter-Range Instrumentation Group (USA) ) standard originally used for rocket range testing purposes. It looks like there might now also be some ITU involvement : -http://www.itu.int/dms_pub/itu-r/oth/0A/08/R0A080000040001MSWE.doc After I read the above, the old Motown lyrics raced through my mind... "War, what is it good for..." The MSF frequency IMU will be set by international agreement along with other radio frequency allocations. |
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