
5-5
Term Definition
Bounce
Bouncing is the tendency of any two metal contacts in an electronic device
to generate multiple signals as the contacts close or open. When you
press a key on your computer keyboard, you expect a single contact to be
recorded by your computer. In fact, however, there is an initial contact, a
slight bounce or lightening up of the contact, then another contact as the
bounce ends, yet another bounce back, and so forth. A similar effect takes
place when a switch made using a metal contact is opened.
BPS
See Bits Per Second.
Bridge
Generally a short-circuit on a PC board caused by solder joining two
adjacent tracks.
British Thermal Unit
Energy required to raise one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. One
pound of water at 32 F
°
requires the transfer of 144 BTUs to freeze into
solid ice.
Browser
Software which formats Web pages for viewing; the Web client
BS&W
See Bottom Solids (or sediment) and Water.
BTU
See British Thermal Unit.
Btu Method
A method of allocating costs between different operations or between
different products based upon the heat content of products produced in the
various operations or of the various produced products.
Btu per Cubic Foot
A measure of the heat available or released when one cubic foot of gas is
burned.
Btu, Dry
Heating value contained in cubic foot of natural gas measured and
calculated free of moisture content. Contractually, dry may be defined as
less than or equal to seven pounds of water per Mcf.
Btu, Saturated
The number of Btu’s contained in a cubic foot of natural gas fully saturated
with water under actual delivery pressure, temperature and gravity
conditions. See BTU, DRY.
Btu/CV
Used to express the heating content of gas. See British Thermal Units or
Calorific Value.
BtuMMI
Refers to the interface program or software that operates the Btu
Analyzer.
Buffer
(1) A temporary storage device used to compensate for a difference in
data rate and data flow between two devices (typically a computer and a
printer); also called a spooler; (2) An amplifier to increase the drive
capability, current or distance, of an analog or digital signal.
BUS
A data path shared by many devices (e.g., multipoint line) with one or
more conductors for transmitting signals, data, or power.
Bus Master
A type of controller with the ability to read and write to devices on the
computer bus.
Busbar
A heavy, rigid conductor used for high voltage feeders.
Summary of Contents for uFLO
Page 1: ...2100890 001 AB TOTALFLOW µFLO Computer User s Manual ...
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Page 16: ...1 2 FLO 6213 Figure 1 1 µFLO 6213 Dimensions ...
Page 18: ...1 4 Figure 1 3 Bottom View µFLO 6213 9 367 9 992 8 647 Figure 1 4 Bottom View µFLO 6210 ...
Page 39: ...2 9 FLO 6213 Figure 2 7 µFLO 6213 Wall Mounted ...
Page 50: ...2 20 Figure 2 13 Mounting AC Charger ...
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Page 70: ...4 6 11 9 5 4 1 13 3 FLO 6210 12 8 7 10 2 Figure 4 2 µFLO 6210 Component Cable Locations ...
Page 71: ...4 7 1 6 FLO 6213 5 13 3 2 4 7 8 10 9 12 11 Figure 4 3 µFLO 6213 Component Cable Locations ...
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