0TreeLemur Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 Anybody have one of these they are willing to sell? I'm especially interested in the version with P/N ending in -17, which indicates functionally variable reflectance with double stator imposivity. Negative reluctance version not desired. Thanks! Quote
EricJ Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 The retro-encabulator is the Rockwell version that does nearly the same thing. Might be an option if there's not a turbo-encabulator available. Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 18 Author Report Posted March 18 Thanks. Maybe one of our newer members can offer one of those! I'd prefer the original as made by Allis-Chalmers though. Quote
bradp Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 Does the original machine have a base-plate of prefabulated aluminite, surmounted by a malleable logarithmic casing in such a way that the two main spurving bearings are in a direct line with the pentametric fan? Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 I think I have one of these in the garage: https://www.rfcafe.com/miscellany/humor/ge-turbo-encabulator.pdf Its a GE version and I know that’s not the one you are looking for, but if this one will work, hit me up. 1 Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 You got to love the crapalloy case. The rich Corinthian tungsten. 1 Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 19 Author Report Posted March 19 2 hours ago, bradp said: Does the original machine have a base-plate of prefabulated aluminite, surmounted by a malleable logarithmic casing in such a way that the two main spurving bearings are in a direct line with the pentametric fan? Yes! Good catch! All true, except the A-C design replaced spurving bearings with anachroic helecoidal units housed in a rendundant plenum to avoid the known problem with want of lubricity. Quote
philiplane Posted March 19 Report Posted March 19 I'm on my second overhaul of a 1966 Turbo Encabulator and I'm still amazed at the intricacy of the divergent girdle spring installation, alongside the spurving bearing case and the lunar waneshaft. Magnificent engineering and execution! 1 Quote
dkkim73 Posted March 21 Report Posted March 21 I appreciate the desire to keep things stock and "use the right tool for the right job", but maybe you should just retrofit the original setup with an oscillation overthruster? Simpler approach, arguably. And no need to keep checking inverse reactive current every 25 hrs. *PP thoughts only... 1 Quote
0TreeLemur Posted March 21 Author Report Posted March 21 22 minutes ago, dkkim73 said: I appreciate the desire to keep things stock and "use the right tool for the right job", but maybe you should just retrofit the original setup with an oscillation overthruster? Simpler approach, arguably. And no need to keep checking inverse reactive current every 25 hrs. *PP thoughts only... I've considered that... but it creates a challenge because I don't think it will couple to the KC192 autopilot computer without over-driving the interelectrode diffusion integrator. Of course, Garmin sells a total solution, but I don't want to drop 65 AMU's on that turnkey solution. Quote
0TreeLemur Posted May 14 Author Report Posted May 14 BTW- a couple of weeks ago I received a DM from a MS noob (0 posts) saying that they have one for sale. When I asked how much they wanted for it, I got no reply. Drat. Still looking. 1 Quote
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