Thursday, October 16, 2008
Ceramic Remote Control
You know how frustrating it is to lose your remote control. I know I do it at least once a day, always when I need it most. Designer Yuta Watanabe has found a "form over function" solution to this annoying problem. Watanabe has designed a ceramic remote based on the thinking that when something is delicate we place a higher value upon it. You'll obviously be a little bit more careful about where you place this remote as to not end up finding it in a million pieces on your next remote search. The "form over function" design has another benefit in that the remote actually looks good sitting on top of the coffee table when not in use.
How LEDS work
Basically, LEDs are just tiny light bulbs that fit easily into an electrical circuit. But unlike ordinary incandescent bulbs, they don't have a filament that will burn out, and they don't get especially hot. They are illuminated solely by the movement of electrons in a semiconductor material, and they last just as long as a standard transistor.
Monday, September 22, 2008
LED info
At first glance, the primary drawback to LED lighting is the price, which is substantially higher than traditional incandescent or mini-fluorescent lighting. According to Jode Himann, CEO of Calgary LED manufacturer Nemalux LED Lighting, when comparing costs, it's important to consider what you are comparing.When it comes to cost in residential applications, it depends on the individual application, but it also depends on what you are comparing it to. Mr. Himann noted "You could compare it to a Home Depot solution and it's not going to be cost competitive. If you go to a lighting designer or someplace locally that just sells lights, then you are getting closer."
Mr. Himann gave the example of a recessed light that Nemalux sells for about $200. It has a brightness of about a 60-watt incandescent. Replacing a recessed light in your kitchen wouldn't be cost competitive since you could just replace the bulb for far less than $10.
The cost becomes more competitive in new home building because you include the fixture and the light, the maintenance over time and lower electricity costs. "If you hire a contractor to build a new home for you, they are going to charge between $100 and $150 for each light, and then you add in the beauty plate, and for a recessed light the beauty plate can be up to $90. In my opinion the benefit you get out of LEDs versus the initial cost makes it a worthwhile decision." said Mr. Himann.
In addition to the appeal of low energy usage and longevity, LEDs have the benefit of providing a "warm" light versus "cool" light, along with the availability of using different colour temperatures in different settings. There are also health benefits to be enjoyed, as LEDs are beneficial in the treatment of seasonal affective disorder by helping to balance the production of serotonin and melatonin within the body.
Besides, there is also the benefit to the environment, not only through reduced energy usage, but also because LEDs do not contain Mercury.
"There are many other things you can do with LEDs both inside the house and out. You can have a single LED that provides enough illumination to really light up an area, or you can focus the light and do a bunch of different architectural things to really bring out the character of the house. They are also very popular in home theatres and entertainment rooms." said Mr. Himann
As with any new technology, there are problems the consumer needs to be aware of. Mr Himann indicated that some LED fixture manufacturers currently on the market have built an Edison bulb with LEDs that doesn't function as expected. If you have a home wine cellar, using LEDs will ensure there is no UV damage to your collection.
"As soon as you plug it in, it's very, very bright, but then 1,000 hours later it dims significantly," said Mr. Himann. "Others, when you turn them on will dim after thirty seconds and you can lose up to 25 per cent of the brightness. The lifetime of the LED is adversely affected as well. Those products, in my opinion, taint the market negatively because the consumer will spend $100 to $200 on a bulb and not get what they expected."
Mr. Himann, and many others in the industry, is confident that LEDs are a technology that will only become more popular. As demand increases, prices will continue to drop, meaning that the future of LED lighting in the home will be bright indeed.
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Moritz Waldemeyer
Monday, September 15, 2008
PIezo Ceramics
A Piezoelectric translator (linear actuator) is a solid-state ceramic actuator which converts electrical energy directly into linear motion (mechanical energy) with virtually unlimited resolution.
PI piezo actuators are designed to combine ultra-high performance with long lifetime in industrial and scientific applications. PI's piezo ceramic design and manufacturing division-PI Ceramic-provides the capability and flexibility to offer highly engineered custom sub-assemblies.
New ceramic technology contributes to advances in medical implants
Ceramic material, with its biocompatibility and resistance to wear, is ideally suited for a wide variety of medical implant applications, from artificial joints to implantable electronic sensors, stimulators and drug delivery devices. For well over a decade, alumina, zirconia and other ceramics have successfully proven their ability to withstand the harsh environment of the human body.
Now, driven by the industry's need for longer-lasting and ever smaller--yet more complex--components, materials scientists are extending the benefits of ceramics for new medical implant applications with innovative techniques, including injection molding, engineered coatings and ceramic-metal assemblies. This article discusses how these developments in ceramic material and processing are contributing to the evolution of medical implant applications.
Ceramics for artificial joints
Advances in the use of ceramics for artificial joints have received a great deal of attention, especially since golf legend Jack Nicklaus received a ceramic-on-ceramic total hip replacement in 1999 in an experimental procedure at New England Baptist Hospital. Ceramic-on-ceramic hip joints received FDA approval in 2003.
Ceramic materials have been used for artificial joints since the 1970s when the first generation of alumina products demonstrated superior resistance to wear, compared to the traditional metal and polyethylene materials. Advances in material quality and processing techniques and a better understanding of ceramic design led to the introduction of second generation alumina components in the 1980s that offered even better wear performance.
Traditional metal-polyethylene hip system wear generates polyethylene particulate debris, inducing osteolysis, weakening of surrounding bone and results in loosening of the implant, a primary cause of costly revision operations. Ceramic materials generate significantly less polyethylene debris when used in conjunction with polyethylene acetabular components in bearing couples. Indeed, state-of-the-art ceramic-on-ceramic technology, where an alumina femoral head is mated with an alumina acetabular cup, totally eliminates polyethylene debris and reduces wear significantly. A study from Morgan Technical Ceramics (MTC), comprised of Morgan Advanced Ceramics (MAC) and Morgan Electro Ceramics (MEC) of MAC's HIP Vitox[R] ceramic -on-ceramic hip joints demonstrated a wear rate of just 0.032[mm.sup.3]/million cycles. In addition to resolving the problems caused by polyethylene debris, the use of ceramic-on -ceramic hip systems alleviates any concerns over metal ion release into the body if a metal on metal hip system were used.
This superior wear performance extends the life of artificial joints, giving ceramic-on-ceramic joints a predicted life of well over 20 years. Serving the needs of the increasing numbers of younger patients for whom such surgery is now a viable operation, these ceramic-on-ceramic joints allow them to continue leading active lifestyles.
Ceramics for implantable electronic devices
New developments in ceramic technology are playing an equally important role in the evolution of implantable electronic devices. In the forty-five years since the first cardiac pacemaker was successfully implanted in the U.S., researchers and doctors have created a wide array of implantable electronic devices, including pacemakers, defibrillators, cochlear implants, hearing devices, drag delivery and neurostimulators.
For example, medical device companies are testing neurostimulators that pulse various nerves to treat particular medical conditions: the hypoglossal nerve [in the neck] to treat sleep apnea; the sacral nerve to treat bowel disorders; the stomach to treat obesity, the thalamus to treat epilepsy, the vagus-nerve to treat chronic depression, and other regions of the deep brain to treat migraines and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
These devices increasingly rely on ceramic components, such as the feed-thrus that provide the functional interface between the device and body tissue. A feed-thru is a ceramic to metal seal assembly that contains metal pins or small tubes that pass through a ceramic component.
These pins allow electricity to pass in or out of the implanted device in order to sense what is going on in the body and/or to administer an electrical charge when needed. A feed-thru can also be used to administer drugs to the patient. The ceramic substrate of the feed-thru acts as an electrical insulator, isolating the pins from each other. MTC can also make ceramic housing assemblies to enclose the electronics for the device, which can attach to a feed-thru.
Feed-thrus for implanted devices must be hermetic, with a leak tight seal around each pin. This ensures' that bodily fluids do not work their way into the device and destroy the internal electronics and that chemicals do not inadvertently escape from drug delivery devices. A braze material, typically 99.99% gold, is used to join each metal pin to the ceramic insulator. Developers of new and improved implantable medical devices continually demand smaller and more complex components. For example, MTC has created a one-inch diameter ceramic feed-thru for drug delivery applications that houses 104 separate pins. Voltage passes through each pin activating different combinations of switches allowing a greater number, or more complex combinations, of drugs administered at any given time.
The application of powder injection molding (PIM) has furthered the pursuit of component miniaturization. This method enables the production of intricate features and unusual geometries, most notably for hearing-assist devices, bone screws and implantable heart pumps. Testing of ceramic injection molded objects has shown that net-shape as-molded parts exhibit significantly less variation in flexural strength than green machined parts of the same formulation. MAC also offers Metal Injection Molding (MIM) technology, which provides a low-cost alternative to machining, investment casting, and stamping. A MIM machine can typically mold parts in about 10 seconds compared to minutes or even hours through conventional techniques. MIM applications are ideally suited for high-volume production of intricate components, ranging from laparoscopic instruments to biopsy jaws and dental brackets.
An additional area of ceramic technical development important to medical implant applications is ceramic-based coatings, such as diamond-like carbon (DLC), that provide a biocompatible, sterilization-compatible, non-leaching, and wear resistant surface for key pivot points and wear surfaces. Such coatings are used to reduce friction, increase surface hardness and prevent ion transfer from metal implant components.
Driven by the rapidly expanding and evolving market for medical implants, material scientists and ceramic component manufacturers continue to develop new materials and new processes for the smaller, more sophisticated, and longer-lasting implant applications of the future.
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Ceramic Blades
This extremely lightweight ceramic knife has a liner lock and stainless steel frame. Great gentlemens ceramic pocket knife. The black ceramic 1 1/2” blade is ground to an extremely sharp edge that will last ten times that of a stainless steel edge. With a neck lanyard this would make a great utility ceramic knife for fishing. Super sharp and completely rustproof. Boker or Kyocera are the only other sources that I have found for ceramic pocket knifes and I feel that my designs for folding ceramic knives offer an affordable alternative.
Cat litter has another use??
In ancient times potters did not have clay suppliers to provide them with raw materials for their glazes and clay bodies. They had to find, collect and process all the materials that they needed to produce their pottery from their local environment. This may have meant digging clay from the river bank, grinding up feldspar from an outcropping or collecting ashes from the fire pit. The result was that potters in one area had distinctly different clay and glazes from potters only a hundred miles away.
Today, because of private property laws, it is more difficult to run out and start mining local clay from your neighbor’s yard. But there are other sources of ceramic raw materials available to the modern potters that are both locally available and already processed. They are in the products we use everyday, which are sold in hardware, grocery or discount super stores.
These materials are similar to the ones that our ancestors used for their clay and glazes but they are processed for other uses that are more relevant to our daily societal needs, like antacids, cat litter, sunscreen, toothpaste, etc. The trade off is that, although we may not be getting the same regionally unique materials our ancestors did, we do have a readily available source of uniformly processed raw materials with little or no effort. We just have to have our credit cards available. Using products intended for other uses to create glazes, a potter can still come up with a unique and interesting palate of colors and surfaces and at the same time learn about material properties and their interactions in glazes.
It seems there is no limit to the use of ceramics in technology, be it for peaceful purposes or otherwise. Ultrahard ceramic layers are built into the steel in tank bodies. When a projectile penetrates a layer, it pulverizes the ceramic, breaking the bonds that bind the molecules together. This chemical change causes the ceramic fragments to expand. In expanding, they grind up the softer material of the projectile, making it inoperative.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Make your own bottle design
http://designacoke.coca-cola.com.au/
Monday, August 18, 2008
All though this concept of self watering plants isn’t too new, the Grobal Plants deserves a place here on Ecofriend. This self watering plant pot is ideal for those who love greenery but not the responsibility of feeding them with water daily. Invented by Treg Bradley and designed with the high-gloss biomorphism of superstar Karim Rashid, Grobal is ideal for cultivating house plants, flowers, herbs, orchids, and succulents. Each Grobal egg-shaped vessel is made from a durable high-gloss plastic, available in a range of colors. The easily accessible “grow chamber” draws water and nutrients from the reservoir below into the soil in the top chamber. However there is no mechanism to indicate that you need to refill the reservoir. You will need to check and refill that at least. Its simple, a small window allows you to monitor the water levels and a small opening in the top allows for easy refilling.
A Pepsi Can Stove Pot-Stand
The “stand” is simply a bit of the mesh wire cut out. It is 6 squares high and 22 squares wide. When rolled into a circle it fits inside the center reservoir of the pepsi can stove. Here you can see the stove lit and in use:My titanium pan balances on the mesh fairly well. If I was in a wind-storm I might have to hold it to be safe, but for the most part it seemed fairly effective with a full pan of water (1 pint). I wondered if the mesh would get too hot and give way, so took of the pan and let it heat up for a while:It glowed nice and red, but the heat did not appear to affect it’s structural integrity.The one downside of having this compact stand inside the reservoir is that it appeared to affect startup-time where the stove transitions to burning out of the jets. I solve this by not dropping the stand into the reservoir until the stove is fully primed. Seems to work great in my home-tests.The weight of the stove + stand? A whopping 0.4 oz! Can’t wait to get out on the trail and use this thing.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Friday, August 8, 2008
Brella
I've been researching camping items that might appeal to Golden Backpackers, and have come across some amusing tools. This face shield umbrella thing claims to be ultra-light, but I'm thinking ultra-stylish maybe?
Useful for making sure your lipstick won't get smudged on the trail, goes well with heels
:p
http://www.backpackinglight.com/cgi-bin/backpackinglight/gear_guide_index.html
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0sOgvJO4_cg
http://www.skillsone.com.au/Industry/5/Manufacturing/Video/379/0/Vert-Design/
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Backpacking on Creaky Knees
Backpacking on Creaky Knees
Follow this sound advice, and you may never be too old to pick up your pack and hit the trail.
By Greg Breining
Last year I got it into my head to tackle the Superior Hiking Trail.
Why I did isn't important. What is important is that I hadn't backpacked in ages. And I had just turned 50.
Over the years I'd stayed in pretty good shape. But my knees hadn't. When I squatted, they sounded like a bowl of Rice Krispies. Years ago I had had an operation for a cartilage tear in my left knee.
Then, two years ago, when I had walked a long downhill grade, my right knee had been so inflamed and legs so wobbly from fatigue and pain that I had given my pack to someone else and had thought briefly of begging him to carry me piggyback down the mountain. A year ago, I had a second arthroscopic surgery to trim cartilage in that knee.
And now I wanted to backpack again. Was I nuts? How should an aging boomer go about backpacking again? I talked to doctors, fitness experts, and old backpackers. Here's what they told me.
Jump Off the Couch.
Dr. Eric Alan Weiss, associate director for trauma at Stanford University Medical Center and author of Wilderness 911, says preparing to backpack isn't "anything different from anything you would do for any other athletic activity." But how you prepare differs from what you might have done in your 20s. "Young people can jump off the couch and do something without stretching, but older people need to stretch," he says.
Weiss advises would-be backpackers to spend most time on the obvious-the legs. Bike riding provides a good aerobic workout with low impact. Training with light weights also helps.
Even so, an over-the-hill backpacker can expect blistered feet, aching knees, sore shoulders, and perhaps even tender hips.
"Things that are much different from what you normally do are going to cause discomfort," Weiss says. "That's why it's good to put a pack on and make that a part of your training regime."
Go Easy.
What happens to our bodies as we age to make them more vulnerable to aches, pains, and injuries?
"The collagen fibers in our muscles and tendons become less supple," says Robert LaPrade, knee and shoulder specialist at the Sports Medicine Institute at the University of Minnesota. "This means we need to warm up before exercising or run an increased risk of muscle sprains or ligament or tendon tears." In addition, the cartilage on the ends of bones-the same spongy material that breaks down to cause arthritis-doesn't heal once it's injured, he says. It continues to wear. High-impact activities such as running and jumping wear it out more quickly than low-impact activities such as swimming or cycling. Few joints are as vital and vulnerable as the knee. Menisci, crescent-shaped pieces of cartilage that absorb shock between your tibia and femur, become more brittle and fragile with age. Sudden jolts can damage them, LaPrade says. Deep squats and heavy lifting can also tear them.
Menisci are also subject to minor tears from longtime use and abuse. The tears irritate the surrounding tissue and can cause burning pain, especially on long downhill treks. A torn meniscus might be a candidate for surgery.
Your back may also be vulnerable, especially if you've had a history of back pain from degenerative or herniating discs. Bending under a load puts pressure on the front of the vertebrae. Herniated or bulging discs can push against the spinal canal and nerves, LaPrade says. Heavy lifting or bending can cause muscle spasms and pain.
How to avoid problems out on the trail? "Avoid a lot of bending, squatting, or twisting," LaPrade says. "If you start to feel sore, take a rest. Enjoy the view."
Practice With Pack.
"You need to build into it the way you would any kind of exercise," advises Jim Sloan, author of Staying Fit Over Fifty. "For backpackers, that would mean doing some hikes and then doing some hikes with a backpack and systematically increasing the weight you carry. It's a training effort." Practicing with the pack will also give you a more realistic view of your limits and weaknesses. Says Sloan, "You don't want to get stuck 10 miles into the back-country with a heavily swollen knee."
Sloan's advice for aging backpackers:
Add weight to the backpack until you can comfortably carry 10 pounds more than you'll carry on your trip. Don't forget to include downhill practice. "Often it's the downhill that leaves people sore. That's because you're stretching the quadriceps muscle at the same time you're contracting it."
If weather is bad or no outdoor trails are available, log miles indoors for aerobic fitness and leg strength. Around the Sierras, where Sloan lives, "it's not unusual to see people in full backpacks on a StairMaster."
Stick to a comfortable walking stride. In your exuberance, don't overstride, which can aggravate your shins. Go faster by picking up the pace.
Lift weights to gain strength and stave off the normal loss of muscle mass from aging. Sloan said the average male will lose 15 pounds of muscle by age 50 if he does no exercise at all. As well as legs, work your upper body. Sloan recommends dumbbell curls and lifts to strengthen arms and shoulders. Also exercise your abdominal and back muscles because they assist in nearly every movement.
Lighten Your Load.
It may seem obvious, though you wouldn't guess it by the bloated packs some aging boomers carry: Reducing the weight of your pack reduces the strain on your joints and muscles. Extra weight increases the chance of injury, says Christopher Larson, orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine and director of education at the Minneapolis Sports Medicine Center.
Rod Johnson, owner of Midwest Mountaineering in Minneapolis, began backpacking in 1969, burdened with a flannel-lined rectangular sleeping bag and other ponderous gear. "My pack was so heavy that when I put it down, I felt like I was floating," Johnson recalls. "Gee, I thought, this would really be fun if it weren't for this heavy pack."
Since then, shaving weight from his pack has been a matter of necessity as well as pleasure. "I have a herniated disk in my back, torn cartilage in my knee, and some torn ligaments in my ankle," he says. "Being able to go light is the only alternative."
Because each step multiplies the force of your weight and the weight you carry, and transmits that force through your aging joints, shedding pounds pays dividends.
Despite his ailments, Johnson, accompanied by his wife, Sharon, and friend Hans Arlton, hiked the 211-mile John Muir Trail in California, which crosses several mountain passes from Yosemite Valley to the summit of 14,500-foot Mt. Whitney. They finished the trip in 13 days. Then Johnson wrote a guide to ultralight packing.
"You don't have to sleep on rocks and eat wheat berries," Johnson says. "You can eat good food and sleep in comfort."
If you're already equipped for camping, you don't need to rush to an outdoor store and ruin your credit, Johnson says. Instead, invest a bit at a time, concentrating on purchases to save the most weight. And after you lighten what you carry in your pack, you can lighten your backpack. Replacing a heavily engineered pack of 6 pounds (designed to carry a heavy load) with a 1- to 2-pound pack, you will need less support for your feet and ankles. Then you might be able to swap stiff leather waffle-stompers for trail-running shoes.
Think Lighter.
Going light is only partly a technological fix. Mostly it's an attitude adjustment.
For example, Johnson takes quick-drying clothes he can wash along the way so he doesn't need extra clothes. He brings a tarp instead of a tent-and sometimes only a space blanket-if rainstorms and bugs are unlikely (not often in Minnesota!). He takes a sleeping bag no warmer and heavier than he figures he'll need. If it turns cold, he sleeps in his down jacket. He doesn't take extra food; if his trip takes longer than expected, he plans to ration.
Johnson's pack, complete with a tent he shares with his wife, stove fuel (Sharon carries the stove), and an umbrella, weighs in at just over 15 pounds. Even figuring food at an added 2 pounds per person per day, there's not much weight on those aging joints.
Hit the Trail.
After getting arthroscopic surgery to clean up my torn meniscus, I was curious: Would my knee hold up on the Superior Hiking Trail? Was I in any kind of condition to try backpacking again?
My wife, Susan, is a good sport about these things, and I recruited her for a four-day trip-despite her surgery on a disc a few years ago.
We both worked out in preparation for the trip. My routine included aerobic work on stair machines and weight work on my legs.
We made key investments in lighter gear. We bought lighter packs, tent, stove, and raingear. I applied a simple formula-dollars spent per ounces saved-to judge which purchases made the most sense.
hen we set out, we were packing pretty light-not ultralight, but not bad. I carried the tent, stove, and a few other ditties, including fly-fishing tackle; that brought my total to 32 pounds. Susan's pack weighed 22.
We started from Silver Bay and immediately climbed a series of rocky domes with beautiful overlooks. Our trekking poles-one for each of us-bit reassuringly into the packed dirt and even outcrops, taking stress off our knees and helping us balance in tricky spots.
The next day we descended to the Baptism River, then headed back up into high hills. The heat was beastly, with 100 percent humidity in the morning and record-high afternoon temperatures. Realizing we were falling behind our schedule but still wanting to see Manitou River and the country beyond, we hitchhiked to cut off a short loop. Four days after we set out, we reached Caribou River, averaging about 10 miles a day.
In retrospect, we could have carried less food. And we probably should have spent more time training with packs. Otherwise, all was OK. Aspirin and ibuprofen took care of minor aches. Knees and backs held up. Freeze-dried food was better than anyone could have expected.
I feel as though I have a few decades of backpacking in me still.
WALKING STICKS
Aging trekkers-from Biblical prophets to Lord of the Rings' wizard Gandalf-carry walking sticks. And for good reason: They take the strain off knees and other lower joints. That's especially important on downhill hikes.
The modern incarnation of the walking stick, the trekking pole, resembles a cross-country ski pole, with a wrist strap to bear weight and a sharp, hard end to bite into the ground. The poles adjust for length, and some are spring-loaded to absorb shock. Using one helps a lot; some hikers use one in each hand.
PACK LIGHT BUT RIGHT
Cutting pounds cuts aches and pains. Lightweight backpacking proponent Rod Johnson hoists the 11-pound, 11-ounce pack he carried on a seven-day, 93-mile loop in Mount Rainier National Park. Food added 2 pounds per person per day. A hiker (left) crosses the Manitou River with ease, carrying a load weighing barely 20 pounds.
CHOICE TRAILS
Get realistic about your ability to gobble up mile after mile of rugged ground. You may want to hike the entire 205 miles of the Superior Hiking Trail, but if you haven't backpacked much, you'd be wise to limit yourself to just a few miles a day, especially over the most rugged portion of this up-and-down route.
Even better: Choose easier terrain. Several state parks have walk-in or backpacking sites and level or rolling trails. Good candidates include Afton, Itasca, Maplewood, Savanna Portage, Lake Bronson, St. Croix, Wild River, Glacial Lakes, and Bear Head Lake. Parks with more rugged trails include Jay Cooke and George Crosby Manitou. For details, go to Minnesota DNR State Parks.