Subsea Electronics to 4500psi

Hey; there is a company in the northeast called Benthos who makes high pressure spheres. You simply put your "normal" parts in them and away you go to full ocean depth. Here is their webpage. By the way MIT has a lab that does this sort of thing, maybe they would be a good source for info.

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OJ wrote:

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**THE-RFI-EMI-GUY**
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On Wed, 29 Oct 2003 14:36:29 +0000, Guy Macon Gave us:

Which is why full encapsulation would be needed.

Their could be no "pass thrus" either. It would have to use radio coms.

Reply to
DarkMatter

On Wed, 29 Oct 2003 14:52:46 +0000, Guy Macon Gave us:

A rare thing, indeed.

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DarkMatter

On Wed, 29 Oct 2003 23:13:56 -0500, Keith R. Williams Gave us:

Funny that, since they can handle 40 plus G tests for conformance to meet reqs for space applications.

Reply to
DarkMatter

You continue to insist on advertising the fact that haven't a clue.

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Keith R. Williams

On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 21:52:21 -0500, Keith R. Williams Gave us:

top chewing on your fingers. You are babbling.

Reply to
DarkMatter

You're simply proving what an idiot you are. Mil spec parts are designed for *one* envrionment. 4500psi tain't it!

Reply to
Keith R. Williams

On Fri, 31 Oct 2003 22:05:02 -0500, Keith R. Williams Gave us:

You're a Dumbshit again, as usual.

mil spec parts are designed for a range of environmental conditions from full vacuum (space) to a specific positive number of atmospheres pressure. That's pressure. They are also able to withstand greater heat ranges than standard ICs are as well.

The word for today is range.

Go get some clues, and come back later... much later.

Reply to
DarkMatter

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