Minato source plus sérieuse
Publié : 10/11/05, 13:32
Désolé je me suis trompé pour le post j'aurais dû répondre au message précédent...
Voici une source officielle avec 5 pages de contenu
http://www.japaninc.net/article.php?art ... 302&page=1
article de John Dodd
Send feedback to editors@japaninc.net
Pour ce qui est d'un effondrement boursier dû à ce système, je n'y crois guère. Le japon importe pratiquement tout ses besoins énergétiques... ce système permetttrait au contraire de réduire la facture... et donc permettre aux entreprises de faire davantage de bénéfices.
"le Japon est très vulnérable, car toutes ses matières premières et toutes ses sources d'énergie viennent de l'extérieur"
http://membres.lycos.fr/jbraun/HG/Terminale/Japon.html
"Petit extrait de l'article anglais"
Although we learned in school that magnets were always bipolar and so magnetically induced motion would always end in a locked state of equilibrium, Minato explains that he has fine-tuned the positioning of the magnets and the timing of pulses to the stators to the point where the repulsion between the rotor and the stator (the fixed outer magnetic ring) is transitory. This creates further motion -- rather than a lockup. (See the sidebaron page 41 for a full explanation).
Real products
Nobue Minato leads us to the two devices that might convince a potential investor that this is all for real.
First, she shows us the cooling fan prototype that is being manufactured for a convenience store chain's 14,000 outlets (3 fans per outlet). The unit looks almost identical to a Mitsubishi-manufactured fan unit next to it, which is the unit currently in wide use. In a test, the airflow from both units is about the same.
The other unit is the car air conditioning prototype that caught our eye as we came in. It's a prototype for Nippon Denso, Japan's largest manufacturer of car air conditioners. The unit is remarkably compact and has the same contours and size as a conventional unit. Minato's manufacturing skills are clearly improving.
How it works (lien slide bar à droite)
http://www.japaninc.net/article.php?articleID=1303
Je continu mes recherches
Voici une source officielle avec 5 pages de contenu
http://www.japaninc.net/article.php?art ... 302&page=1
article de John Dodd
Send feedback to editors@japaninc.net
Pour ce qui est d'un effondrement boursier dû à ce système, je n'y crois guère. Le japon importe pratiquement tout ses besoins énergétiques... ce système permetttrait au contraire de réduire la facture... et donc permettre aux entreprises de faire davantage de bénéfices.
"le Japon est très vulnérable, car toutes ses matières premières et toutes ses sources d'énergie viennent de l'extérieur"
http://membres.lycos.fr/jbraun/HG/Terminale/Japon.html
"Petit extrait de l'article anglais"
Although we learned in school that magnets were always bipolar and so magnetically induced motion would always end in a locked state of equilibrium, Minato explains that he has fine-tuned the positioning of the magnets and the timing of pulses to the stators to the point where the repulsion between the rotor and the stator (the fixed outer magnetic ring) is transitory. This creates further motion -- rather than a lockup. (See the sidebaron page 41 for a full explanation).
Real products
Nobue Minato leads us to the two devices that might convince a potential investor that this is all for real.
First, she shows us the cooling fan prototype that is being manufactured for a convenience store chain's 14,000 outlets (3 fans per outlet). The unit looks almost identical to a Mitsubishi-manufactured fan unit next to it, which is the unit currently in wide use. In a test, the airflow from both units is about the same.
The other unit is the car air conditioning prototype that caught our eye as we came in. It's a prototype for Nippon Denso, Japan's largest manufacturer of car air conditioners. The unit is remarkably compact and has the same contours and size as a conventional unit. Minato's manufacturing skills are clearly improving.
How it works (lien slide bar à droite)
http://www.japaninc.net/article.php?articleID=1303
Je continu mes recherches