Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

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mnementh
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

tggzzz wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:44 pm ...The NHS is the closest the British public have to a religion. That was clearly demonstrated during the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics. I've occasionally wondered whether foreigners had the slightest clue why hospital and medical sequences were included.
One could certainly do a lot worse for a state religion; case in point, capitalism and the evils done in the name of Christianity in all its flavors.

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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

MED6753 wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:53 pm
Specmaster wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:21 pm

I suppose the real solution is to ensure that all first responders are sufficiently trained to be able to make that decision earlier rather than later. I live just a mile away from the major ambulance station and I can hear the two-tone sirens wailing all day long as they are constantly in demand, and it is impossible to scramble a helicopter to them all in case they are required.
They are, here at least. The EMT's on scene make the call. They notify 911 dispatch to either put the chopper on stand by until determined if actually required or dispatch immediately. 911 dispatch notifies medevac and they respond with an example of "10 minutes plus lift" (if required) or that time if immediate dispatch. Then 911 dispatch puts out additional calls for other personnel, usually fire, to set up an LZ as close as possible. But it isn't a given. Sometimes the chopper can't fly due to weather. Snow, fog, etc. It's unfortunate but it happens.

Ambulance services in my area are a combination of all volunteer, paid, or private ambulance service depending upon which town you reside in. But regardless they all have the same training and certifications as required by state law.
First Responder is literally that: first emergency people/person on the scene. They are not necessarily EMS. There are times when the decision to mobilize air evac has to be made before EMS can get on scene.

There is also First Responder course/training; that has two tracks: Medical and Fire Safety/Rescue. I was in queue for the latter in my dept when I blew out my back the first time and had to resign.

Heirarchy is a wee bit different in an all-volunteer dept; paid depts tend to have special roles and titles for a lot more stuff. ;)

mnem
And too, I'm sure a lot of things have changed in the decades since I served... so :man_shrugging:
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mansaxel »

Cropico milliohmmeter any good?
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by 25 CPS »

bitseeker wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 3:31 am 25 CPS, that's quite the smorgasbord of nostalgic places, items, and activities to compensate for crummy weather.
It was all over the map and an enjoyable way to spend the weekend.

Today I had a nice breakfast and did a bit of reading, then one of my friends from college who also had a midweek day off and I went for a coffee and walk on the beach so both of us could get outside for a bit. I was going to head downstairs and return to the second HP 427A that's been waiting and check out the DC ranges on that. When I got back, this was waiting hidden behind the side door's screen door:

Image

Looks like that GPSDO has arrived. I'm going to unpack that and take a look at that after dinner. If everything checks out with that, I can do the 10 MHz standardization project I've been wanting to do. I'm thinking dinner, unpack the GPSDO and get that set up and see what it does and start checking over that other 427A while it runs.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

mnementh wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 9:27 pm More often than not, a first-responder is not proper medical personnel; they are just emergency rescue with first eyes on the scene, and they relay what they see to dispatch or their CO who makes the decision whether the scene is likely desperate enough to need air evac. We are all trained to observe and report as accurately as possible; but that ultimate decision to launch has to be made by those further up the chain.
You're being a bit parochial there as that's nothing like the situation here. All UK ambulance crews are "proper medical personnel".

Someone calls 999. The emergency operator asks "Which service do you require, fire police or ambulance?" For completeness you can also ask the emergency operator for the coastguard or mountain rescue if you're in a bit of the country where that makes sense but the operator doesn't normally cue you for them. You say which services you require, and if you've enough nouse what order you need connecting to them in. The operator will then connect you in turn to each service, take the call back at the end, and pass you onto the next.

When talking to the ambulance service they will conduct an initial triage and if it sounds like it merits it dispatch an ambulance with paramedics onboard and/or a paramedic in a car, or on a motorcycle or bicycle (don't laugh, it's the fastest response in a dense city centre). Target response time will depend on the telephone triage, which follows a surprisingly rigid yes/no protocol. There are certain questions which if you give the right response result in an immediate Cat I blue light callout with a target time of 7 minutes. In very exceptional circumstances, if the caller is an actual medic they might scramble an air ambulance, but the normal protocol is to wait for the paramedics to arrive and triage the scene.

Basic UK paramedics are all well trained and, national health service remember, consistently well trained. The minimum standard is ALS trained, where ALS is "Advanced Life Saving" which means full resuscitation trained including the full panoply of intravenous drugs, running exactly the same protocols as you would in "resus" in the emergency room. They carry those drugs and a range of other drugs that are used in urgent care with them, some of which they need a doctor's approval over the radio to administer, many they are competent to prescribe themselves. There are advanced paramedics with more training who can carry out a range of field surgery, these are the boys and girls who are likely to be single crewed in/on a car/motorbike/bicycle.

The entry route to paramedic in the UK used to be more apprentice like, but currently new paramedics will either come onto the job with a degree in Paramedical Science, or will join as a student paramedic, get initial training and then work with a fully qualified paramedic while studying for a degree on day release/evenings.

All of the grades of paramedic have the same protocol to follow to triage a scene and it's at this point that if they deem it necessary they will talk to the nearest hospital with a specialist trauma team who will get an air ambulance scrambled (which will have a trauma medic onboard) and get a full trauma team on stand by at the hospital. There are three reasons a chopper may get scrambled and then stood down: (1) the paramedics stabilised the patient quickly and sufficiently to move them, and the nearest treatment centre is acceptably close, (2) a trauma medic is on scene and assesses that they won't be needed, (3) the patient died.

Whatever order you spoke to them if you ask for all three emergency services you will almost always get the Fire Brigade, Ambulance Service and Police arrive in that order. I've made the callout often enough to make that prediction with some confidence. At every shout I've instigated the London Fire Brigade have been there within 5 minutes. Situations that justify a Cat I response from the Ambulance Service and they will be there within 10 minutes.

You're lucky if you see a copper within 15-20 minutes (if they bother to turn up at all) and that includes, from experience, a semi-major crash on the A13/A4020 junction (busy, busy, roundabout on the main route east from London), a "suspects on premises" burglary I watched happening (they did at least turn up mob handed when they arrived, including a dog and handler), a call to a very violent disturbance at the house opposite mine that I later discovered they had "red flagged" because it was the residence of a victim of repeated abuse by an ex, a suspected arson at a school, and a mini riot.

The only emergency services in the UK who aren't fully professional are the police and mountain rescue. The police have "special constables" aka "Hobby Bobbies" who are volunteers. Mountain rescue are all volunteers, even the dogs.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by MED6753 »

mnementh wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 11:14 pm
MED6753 wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:53 pm
Specmaster wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:21 pm

I suppose the real solution is to ensure that all first responders are sufficiently trained to be able to make that decision earlier rather than later. I live just a mile away from the major ambulance station and I can hear the two-tone sirens wailing all day long as they are constantly in demand, and it is impossible to scramble a helicopter to them all in case they are required.
They are, here at least. The EMT's on scene make the call. They notify 911 dispatch to either put the chopper on stand by until determined if actually required or dispatch immediately. 911 dispatch notifies medevac and they respond with an example of "10 minutes plus lift" (if required) or that time if immediate dispatch. Then 911 dispatch puts out additional calls for other personnel, usually fire, to set up an LZ as close as possible. But it isn't a given. Sometimes the chopper can't fly due to weather. Snow, fog, etc. It's unfortunate but it happens.

Ambulance services in my area are a combination of all volunteer, paid, or private ambulance service depending upon which town you reside in. But regardless they all have the same training and certifications as required by state law.
First Responder is literally that: first emergency people/person on the scene. They are not necessarily EMS. There are times when the decision to mobilize air evac has to be made before EMS can get on scene.

There is also First Responder course/training; that has two tracks: Medical and Fire Safety/Rescue. I was in queue for the latter in my dept when I blew out my back the first time and had to resign.

Heirarchy is a wee bit different in an all-volunteer dept; paid depts tend to have special roles and titles for a lot more stuff. ;)

mnem
And too, I'm sure a lot of things have changed in the decades since I served... so :man_shrugging:
Yes, in very rare occasions if police arrive on scene before medical I have heard them advise 911 dispatch that it would be advisable to put a medevac on standby and 911 dispatch will comply. Then medical will make the final determination.

My daughter is a certified EMT and worked for an ambulance service for many years before she continued her education and is now a fully licensed physician's assistant. So I do have some inside knowledge of current training requirements.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by MED6753 »

25 CPS wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 11:45 pm
bitseeker wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 3:31 am 25 CPS, that's quite the smorgasbord of nostalgic places, items, and activities to compensate for crummy weather.
It was all over the map and an enjoyable way to spend the weekend.

Today I had a nice breakfast and did a bit of reading, then one of my friends from college who also had a midweek day off and I went for a coffee and walk on the beach so both of us could get outside for a bit. I was going to head downstairs and return to the second HP 427A that's been waiting and check out the DC ranges on that. When I got back, this was waiting hidden behind the side door's screen door:

Image

Looks like that GPSDO has arrived. I'm going to unpack that and take a look at that after dinner. If everything checks out with that, I can do the 10 MHz standardization project I've been wanting to do. I'm thinking dinner, unpack the GPSDO and get that set up and see what it does and start checking over that other 427A while it runs.
Must have pictures. :D
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

mansaxel wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 11:26 pm Cropico milliohmmeter any good?
I can't speak specifically to the milliohmeter but Cropico stuff is usually first class, if a little old fashioned.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

tggzzz wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:41 pm
Cerebus wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 7:43 pm We have a National Health Service (the National as in "nationalised"), publicly owned and operated. If you walk into a hospital you walk into a state owned hospital. There are private hospitals and private doctors, for the wealthy who want to pay directly for them and for purely elective things such as cosmetic surgery, but 99% of the population go to state run hospitals and see state employed doctors.
One very interesting practice is the ability to "dip in and out" of private and NHS care. Thus in the past I have
...
To be fair, I was simplifying as the actual structure is rather odd for historical reasons. Prior to the formation of the NHS all medical treatment in the UK was either privately owned or run by charities. So family doctors/general practitioners were self employed and billed their patients. Pharmacists were also privately owned and operated.

When the NHS started doctors remained self employed and provided services to the NHS billing them at set rates instead of billing their NHS patients. Many continued to provide services privately too. Although the exact details of remuneration have changed that situation persists for most GPs to this day - they are self employed and contract to the NHS to provide services. There has been a gradual shift over the years from doctors in individual practice or with perhaps a partner or two, towards more and more group practices, where some of the doctors may be partners, some of them salaried staff, but still the basic arrangement is one where the NHS contracts work out to doctors working on their own account.

Pharmacy services followed pretty much the same route. Retail pharmacists run their own businesses and contract to the NHS to provide services to them.

Charitably run hospitals just sort of got merged into the NHS (think of all the old London Hospitals), most privately owned ones also effectively got nationalised bit by bit until they became NHS hospitals, and of course lots of purpose built NHS hospitals have sprung up since.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:04 am
mnementh wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 9:27 pm More often than not, a first-responder is not proper medical personnel; they are just emergency rescue with first eyes on the scene, and they relay what they see to dispatch or their CO who makes the decision whether the scene is likely desperate enough to need air evac. We are all trained to observe and report as accurately as possible; but that ultimate decision to launch has to be made by those further up the chain.
You're being a bit parochial there as that's nothing like the situation here. All UK ambulance crews are "proper medical personnel"...
Yup; I freely admit my scope of knowledge is narrow and probably outdated. But I have served. I know what I've done and seen firsthand; no more and no less.

My point was that you don't always have medical people as your first responders onsite; particularly with a MVA, you may have to mobilize air evac before EMS can get there. Nothing more.

All that considered, I'd still bet there are rural areas of the UK where things still operate much more like when I served than the well-supported & well-funded machine you describe in such detail; and I'm pretty sure they still get air evac services too.

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Last edited by mnementh on Tue Nov 29, 2022 1:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:04 am The only emergency services in the UK who aren't fully professional are the police and mountain rescue. The police have "special constables" aka "Hobby Bobbies" who are volunteers. Mountain rescue are all volunteers, even the dogs.
Don't forget that other remarkable organisation!...

The RNLI are 95% volunteers. They started in 1824. Itis principally funded by legacies (65%) and donations (28%), with the remainder from merchandising and investment.

The (London) Metropolitan police started in 1829, while the rest of England and Wales had to wait to 1856.

Being a "plastic policeman" is seen by both the individuals and the forces as a "try before you buy" mechanism.

https://rnli.org/support-us/volunteer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_o ... dom#London
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:19 am
mansaxel wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 11:26 pm Cropico milliohmmeter any good?
I can't speak specifically to the milliohmeter but Cropico stuff is usually first class, if a little old fashioned.
Seconded.

Consider me a fan of Cropico, as with Cambridge Instrument, Tinsley, Julie Research Labs, HW Sullivan.
Last edited by tggzzz on Tue Nov 29, 2022 9:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:49 am
tggzzz wrote: Mon Nov 28, 2022 10:41 pm One very interesting practice is the ability to "dip in and out" of private and NHS care. Thus in the past I have
...
To be fair, I was simplifying as the actual structure is rather odd for historical reasons. ...
So was I, of course.

My reason was to show that we don't have "socialised medicine" and "death panels", two phrases popular with the ignorant hard right wing libertarians that are thankfully absent in this forum.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

tggzzz wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 8:33 am
Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:04 am The only emergency services in the UK who aren't fully professional are the police and mountain rescue. The police have "special constables" aka "Hobby Bobbies" who are volunteers. Mountain rescue are all volunteers, even the dogs.
Don't forget that other remarkable organisation!...

The RNLI are 95% volunteers. They started in 1824. Itis principally funded by legacies (65%) and donations (28%), with the remainder from merchandising and investment.

The (London) Metropolitan police started in 1829, while the rest of England and Wales had to wait to 1856.

Being a "plastic policeman" is seen by both the individuals and the forces as a "try before you buy" mechanism.

https://rnli.org/support-us/volunteer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_o ... dom#London
Ah yes and no. A "Plastic Policeman" is usually reserved for PCSOs (Police and Community Support Officers for those who don't know the jargon) who are paid police employees without full police powers (not "sworn" as the jargon goes.). Their powers are highly limited and exclude a power of arrest beyond the PACE section 24A "Any person may arrest..." power that we all possess. Specials/Hobby Bobbies are unpaid (except for expenses) but are fully fledged sworn police constables with full police powers. PCSOs are policing on the cheap and indeed most PCSOs do join with the intention of progressing to fully sworn.

Specials usually don't have plans to progress to a full time police career. The view within the force of specials is that they're useful for jobs that require extra bodies for jobs that aren't "proper" jobs - crowd control at events, standing in front of tape cordons and so on. The internal force view of PCSOs is even less complimentary, generally regarded as a way of putting a high-vis jacket walking itself around the streets and little else. A surprisingly small proportion of PCSOs end up graduating to fully sworn and a lot of forces are heavily cutting back on the number of PCSOs they employ.

I've known a few specials and none of them were aiming for a full time career. One of them was sales manager somewhere I used to work, gave me a "funny handshake" the first time I met him and is now the chief executive of an important local authority having worked his way up from the same job in a small city. Go figure...
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Specmaster »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 1:31 pm
Specials usually don't have plans to progress to a full time police career. The view within the force of specials is that they're useful for jobs that require extra bodies for jobs that aren't "proper" jobs - crowd control at events, standing in front of tape cordons and so on. The internal force view of PCSOs is even less complimentary, generally regarded as a way of putting a high-vis jacket walking itself around the streets and little else. A surprisingly small proportion of PCSOs end up graduating to fully sworn and a lot of forces are heavily cutting back on the number of PCSOs they employ.

I've known a few specials and none of them were aiming for a full time career. One of them was sales manager somewhere I used to work, gave me a "funny handshake" the first time I met him and is now the chief executive of an important local authority having worked his way up from the same job in a small city. Go figure...
Yes, I too have worked with some specials, and they said is their way of giving back to the community. None of them had any intention of progressing to full time status.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by tggzzz »

Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 1:31 pm
tggzzz wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 8:33 am
Cerebus wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 12:04 am The only emergency services in the UK who aren't fully professional are the police and mountain rescue. The police have "special constables" aka "Hobby Bobbies" who are volunteers. Mountain rescue are all volunteers, even the dogs.
Don't forget that other remarkable organisation!...

The RNLI are 95% volunteers. They started in 1824. Itis principally funded by legacies (65%) and donations (28%), with the remainder from merchandising and investment.

The (London) Metropolitan police started in 1829, while the rest of England and Wales had to wait to 1856.

Being a "plastic policeman" is seen by both the individuals and the forces as a "try before you buy" mechanism.

https://rnli.org/support-us/volunteer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_o ... dom#London
Ah yes and no. A "Plastic Policeman" is usually reserved for PCSOs (Police and Community Support Officers for those who don't know the jargon) who are paid police employees without full police powers (not "sworn" as the jargon goes.). Their powers are highly limited and exclude a power of arrest beyond the PACE section 24A "Any person may arrest..." power that we all possess. Specials/Hobby Bobbies are unpaid (except for expenses) but are fully fledged sworn police constables with full police powers. PCSOs are policing on the cheap and indeed most PCSOs do join with the intention of progressing to fully sworn.

Specials usually don't have plans to progress to a full time police career. The view within the force of specials is that they're useful for jobs that require extra bodies for jobs that aren't "proper" jobs - crowd control at events, standing in front of tape cordons and so on. The internal force view of PCSOs is even less complimentary, generally regarded as a way of putting a high-vis jacket walking itself around the streets and little else. A surprisingly small proportion of PCSOs end up graduating to fully sworn and a lot of forces are heavily cutting back on the number of PCSOs they employ.

I've known a few specials and none of them were aiming for a full time career. One of them was sales manager somewhere I used to work, gave me a "funny handshake" the first time I met him and is now the chief executive of an important local authority having worked his way up from the same job in a small city. Go figure...
I bow to your better knowledge of that subject; I was indeed confusing PCSOs with specials. My reason is that interact with them extremely infrequently, and then it is usually in a meeting :)

Funny handshakes are indeed a stain, as bad as racism and "classism".
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

Huh... "Plastic Policeman" was their own term for the "designated idiot" crowd control role whose job it was to watch for intercept the press on a fireground or accident scene and keep them from becoming a statistic or getting actual Firefighters/Rescue members hurt by being underfoot. :thinking: It does take a special mix of situational awareness and gift of gab to put on that plastic mannequin smile and direct their attention away from the dangerous stuff without making it obvious to the reporters and camera crew that's where the action is.

Not to be confused with "Cardboard Cops"... the ones who are really good at standing around in "Superman pose" with hands on hips and looking officious (like a cardboard cutout) as opposed to doing something actually useful like setting up and managing traffic control around a accident scene. :roll:

Lots of those where I lived in Tejas...

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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Zucca »

Plot twist on the thin client PC.
I found a spotless Dell mini tower XPS 8910 in the dump, sticker says i7... :D
It does not boot because there is no RAM in it. I just ordered 4x16GB DDR4 just to give it a try.
Then MEMTEST86 it and see what happens.
I tend to say 4x8GB is plenty for my bench PC to use it with a Picoscope, but you know me I can't resist to max out the RAM.

Any further particular stress tests you guys suggest to check a dump PC?
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Specmaster »

Has anyone seen or heard from Saskia recently?
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Zucca »

I miss the TEA queen as well....
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

She stops in the Discord several times a week. Her new home and ever-changing roles at work are running her pretty ragged.

I suspect the way we've sprawled out in the new digs makes keeping track of current conversations a bit of a hassle when your personal resources are spread that thin...

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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by mnementh »

Zucca wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 2:47 pm Plot twist on the thin client PC.
I found a spotless Dell mini tower XPS 8910 in the dump, sticker says i7... :D
It does not boot because there is no RAM in it. I just ordered 4x16GB DDR4 just to give it a try.
Then MEMTEST86 it and see what happens.
I tend to say 4x8GB is plenty for my bench PC to use it with a Picoscope, but you know me I can't resist to max out the RAM.

Any further particular stress tests you guys suggest to check a dump PC?
It's a Dell fleet box... first thing I'd check is the PSU with some real load on it, and see if it can be replaced by something made to some industry standard.

mnem
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Zenith »

Yes, Dell PCs have a reputation for PSUs which are spec'ed right on the limit and their own non-standard form factors. You might open it up and check it for bulging caps.

There are a few PSUs for Dell XPS 8910 on ebay new for £65 on up. They look llke standard ATX PSUs.

Dump finds are very often fully working but a bit old. I was at the dump a few years back and looked in the container containing TVs and monitors. One of the blokes on the site said that almost all of the ones dumped work.

This might have some fault but may have been dumped because it isn't compatible with Win 11. A quick look on ebay UK suggests that these are not cheap. It could be an excellent find.
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

Specmaster wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 2:47 pm Has anyone seen or heard from Saskia recently?
She's around intermittently on Discord. She's been pulling long hours and stuck her head around the corner on Saturday evening to basically say "Hello. I'm going to bed."
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Re: Test Equipment Anonymous (TEA) : Discussion and Group Therapy Thread

Post by Cerebus »

Zucca wrote: Tue Nov 29, 2022 2:47 pm Plot twist on the thin client PC.
I found a spotless Dell mini tower XPS 8910 in the dump, sticker says i7... :D
It does not boot because there is no RAM in it. I just ordered 4x16GB DDR4 just to give it a try.
Then MEMTEST86 it and see what happens.
I tend to say 4x8GB is plenty for my bench PC to use it with a Picoscope, but you know me I can't resist to max out the RAM.

Any further particular stress tests you guys suggest to check a dump PC?
You can never have too many woodworking clamps or too much memory.
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