Engineering Dictionary
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An alphabetical listing of General terms and items. |
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A tower house consisting of a rectangular block with towers protruding at the two diagonally opposite corners, a number of gun ports covered every part of the buildings exterior walls, designed for the close quarters defence by musket and pistol. See tower house.
Probably a fixed wooden tower for archers. (Arabic)
A spiked hurdle used in field fortifications (Mamluk). (Arabic)
1) An Abbasid encampment surrounded by ditches and brushwood. 2) An Abbasid woven field defencework for protecting archers. (Abbasid)
The ability to adjust the display of a process or strain meter so that zero on the display corresponds to a non-zero signal, such as 4 mA, 10 mA, or 1 V dc. The adjustment range is normally expressed in counts.
1. The difference expressed in degrees between true zero and an indication given by a measuring instrument. 2. See Zero Suppression
The electrical zero point where zero millivolts would be displayed. Used in conjunction with the slope control to provide a narrower range calibration.
The resistance of a thermistor or RTD element with no power being dissipated.
The span of an indicator or chart recorder may be offset from zero (zero suppressed) such that neither limit of the span will be zero. For example, a temperature recorder which records a 100 span from 400 to 500 is said to have 400 zero suppression.
The making or breaking of circuit timed such that the transition occurs when the voltage wave form crosses zero voltage; typically only found in solid state switching devices.
A trench excavated by besiegers and running towards the besieged position from the parallel trench in a zig zag pattern, to reduce the amount of exposure to defensive fire from the besieged. See approaches.
In computer graphics, causing an object to appear smaller or larger by moving the window and specifying various window sizes.
An outworks consisting of an outer courtyard surrounded by curtain walls provided with flanking towers, forming part of a concentric fortification. (G. keep). Back to top |