That’s kinda what I see when I look under the hood of today’s vehicles. What exactly is that thing?(disassembled view I found online, not our machine)
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That’s kinda what I see when I look under the hood of today’s vehicles. What exactly is that thing?(disassembled view I found online, not our machine)
View attachment 125823
It's an ASML 5500 series scanner. Basically a projector that uses UV light to expose circuit patterns on silicon wafers. It uses 2 robotic stages, one above for the glass "slide" (reticle) with the pattern being projected, and another below that moves the wafer under the projection lens.That’s kinda what I see when I look under the hood of today’s vehicles. What exactly is that thing?
done, and mind blown...never fails to amaze how both friggin smart and stupid humans can beGoogle EUV Lithography if you want your mind blown.
Albert Schweitzer said sorta the same thing: “Man is a clever animal who behaves like an imbecile.”done, and mind blown...never fails to amaze how both friggin smart and stupid humans can be
I remember showing my youngest daughter how to write her first check...when she was 24 years old!Wow! I figured that machine wasn’t just a fancy rice cooker, but that’s way, way above my pay scale. I know how an incandescent light bulb works, but how the heck can a tiny piece of rock with “nano scratches” on it, rule the modern world?
Wow! I figured that machine wasn’t just a fancy rice cooker, but that’s way, way above my pay scale. I know how an incandescent light bulb works, but how the heck can a tiny piece of rock with “nano scratches” on it, rule the modern world?
Finally gave up on glass shower doors and replaced them with shower curtains. Simply replace at minimal cost.So, what did you do for the hard water stains? We have a glass shower door that I can't get clean.
Etching: That came into my vocabulary in the early 70's when I made silver jewelry. Nitric acid etching. I studied the process, but never tried it. And before my time, there was the pick up line, "Would you like to come up and see my etchings?""Fancy rice cooker" lol, I'm using that, thanks. You actually understand this better than you think, since "scratches on rock" isn't off base. Etch is one of the major process steps where the patterns on some chip layers are actually cut using acids, or plasma.
Judy, have you tried headlightrevolution.com ?Passing it down to the daughter, it will be paid off. 2011 Ford Explorer Limited with 139,000 original miles.
And here I thought a box making machine was complicatedAgreed. Although spending all day at work fixing the "appliances from hell" that pattern semiconductor chip circuits, there are few things I despise doing more than fixing home appliances. Youtube can be immensely helpful, or sometimes misleading. I repaired a circuit board on our dryer a few months ago. Was ready to spend a couple hundred on a board, but took the time to test all the relays with a 9v battery and meter. Relays were good, then found a cold solder joint. Cheap easy fix that time, others not so much.
Be glad you don't have to fix these things. I've been wrenching on this shit for over 20 years and still makes my head hurt.
(disassembled view I found online, not our machine)
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You work for Intel? I remember then hiring a few students out of my class for their fabrication plant down near Portland."Fancy rice cooker" lol, I'm using that, thanks. You actually understand this better than you think, since "scratches on rock" isn't off base. Etch is one of the major process steps where the patterns on some chip layers are actually cut using acids, or plasma.
Not to go too far down the silly analogy rabbit hole, but "waffle iron" would be more apropos, since ASML is a Dutch company (or, at least that's the country the suspected aliens decided to help - not a bad choice, actually.) That, or maybe a fancy "tanning bed" for computer chips. The trick being getting the bed adjusted right, while moving, in a focused image plane roughly 1,000th the thickness of a human hair. Side to side position is even tighter at a small fraction of that. I watch this stuff in action, put in process corrections measured in single digit nanometers, and still don't believe it works! Still fascinating though. If I was closer to mid-point in my career, I'd be all over learning that EUV stuff, but too much for my 60+ yo brain.
And agreed on above comments regarding the range of human ingenuity and stupidity. I used to think the instant access to knowledge, (including resources like YouTube) would be what raised humanity out of ignorance. Unfortunately the social media level of tech seems to have only served as a platform to fuel like-mindedness.
I did a long time ago. Started out as a Product Engineering tech at the Jones Farm campus... back when they made CMOS memory. Then later (late 90's) as on-site Field Service for SVG at the Aloha Fab. Had a few more changes before I ended up at a foreign owned fab here in SWW for the last 21 years.You work for Intel? I remember then hiring a few students out of my class for their fabrication plant down near Portland.
i can relate. the electrician i have been using is a bit anal, and way overexplains everything. and points out the problem of his predecessors...I recently experienced an intermittent electrical malfunction in my laundry room. I am quite sure I would have been left in the dark had I not discovered the YouTube video on how to write a check.
Thank you much for the suggestion, these turn signal lights are in the side mirrors.Judy, have you tried headlightrevolution.com ?
Better yet, there's a sub forum on the V6 F150 site that deals with Explorers since they share a lot of the same components with the F150. Plenty of links to parts and lots of videos.