Jeri shows how to make a hand operated microwave frequency imaging device from low cost parts.
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Jeri shows how to make a hand operated microwave frequency imaging device from low cost parts.
Video Rating: 4 / 5
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@jeriellsworth first of all I am not a normal human,2nd I love star trek, third I have a thermal imager (vanadium oxide microbolometer ) that is connected to my iPhone 4 so I can do video thermography and I need your help….
I want to connect ten 1500 W microwave oven magnetrons up to a wave guide that is at the focal point of a satellite dish, How can I connect these up to the dish? Will they backfeed each other? Do I need to phase synchronize them?
@TheSolarmike I’m probably not the right person to ask this. I’d look around for a high energy radar expert or someone skilled with microwave radio link equipment.
There are mad views of this video. That is amazing. The interest is growing all over the world.
first condition for a women to be smart is to be born outside of romania …and to live outside of romania ….here womens know nothing …at all
why do you have brace knuckles? lol
@jeriellsworth Oh, cruel, Jeri. Now tLoS has to go look up “misogynistic”…
Jeri: love the fact that you have so much fun. It’s contagious!
Also love the fact that you didn’t have your head filled with “you can’t do that”s in college.
You GO, girl!
@Exus11 “brass” knuckles.
How high could you boost the signal without frying the feed horn (say by sticking an amplifier between the oscillator and that last transistor hooked to the feed horn), and would it help with the penetration depth?
Also, would a dual-axis accelerometer be likely to give good enough readings in terms of x and y? Assuming we rotate it automatically say thirty degrees either way both pitch and yaw.
my kind of lady right there folks!
You sound very well educated on this. I build UBER-computers, better than ANY pre-built. Our 3 comps get new ones each year like that. When that’s done, I build 3-5 more, not as high-$ & powerful as ours, as donations to poor/sick kids, churches, charities, etc. But that’s my limit of electronic skills. I’m an electrician, so could stay with you about 1/3d of this. But Electricity & Electronics are more DIFFERENT than alike, so most of it was a bit over my head. Very interesting & cool though.
Oh yeah, forgot. Your scanner is neat. But being a normal guy and all, I just HAVE to admit if my job included operating one of these, I’d MUCH prefer an industrial-strength one. Like that one used on the reddish-haired chick appearing in YouTube video-clips about these things. From what I’ve seen in those videos (or maybe what I HAVEN’T seen, which would be her CLOTHES), looks like one of those big machines would allow me to check the gals out better … just for guns & such of course. 🙂 🙂
Just saw this video on MSNBC. Nice job.
Jeri… I have never seen any woman so competent in awesome electronics as you… will you marry me? lol
You are AWESOME! 😉
uWave experience *and* knowledgeable about FPGA hw & firmware design?
Too cool … truly, “DC to blue light” capable technically …
.
@jeriellsworth U DaVinci related?
Awesome! Man, I wish I had your job/talent!
Random Comment: I have a pair of the same stools that you used to run your tests on. My feet are propped on one right now.
I just thought it was weird because we’ve had these stools for almost 20 years, and I can’t imagine there’s too many of them out there anymore.
@MoIsMehName A friend was going to throw them out. They could be 20yrs old. 🙂
@TheSolarmike I probably have no idea what I’m talking about, but it sounds like you’re trying to concentrate 15 kilowatts of resonating electrical energy through a parabolic reflector. Are you making a death ray?
Jaime te regardée me parle de science sa ne fais tout chaud dans mes culottes
Ok can we see your tits now?
i love the ending hahaha