18-10-2009, 08:59 AM
I refer all to the work of the late Tom Wilson which showed the badge
matched a database for metal, not dust...and whose subsequent analysis
showed detail of the badge including that it had a "spread eagle" on top
of the badge.
Tom was a vice president of quality operations at US Steel in Pittsburg
and his decisions on computer database work of metal was responsible
for detecting metal flaws in multimillion dollar USS contracts.
Jack
PS. Lamson is ignorant about resolving power of lenses. Tom related to
me that LENSES are not even necessary to GATHER INFORMATION
FROM REFLECTED LIGHT. In his assembly line work for USS, he had
invented a NON-LENS which gathered images far more accurately than
glass lenses. He called it a LIGHT VALVE and was in the process of
getting it patented. In the extreme heat of steel production lines, glass
lenses had coating problems and introduced lens distortions, whereas
his light valve was problem-free. Tom was an electrical engineer and
computer expert. I think the light valve was based on the familiar
PINHOLE CAMERA in theory, but electronics magnified the images
produced by the tiny precision hole thousands of times for superior
distortion free images.
http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index....773&st=420
B..
matched a database for metal, not dust...and whose subsequent analysis
showed detail of the badge including that it had a "spread eagle" on top
of the badge.
Tom was a vice president of quality operations at US Steel in Pittsburg
and his decisions on computer database work of metal was responsible
for detecting metal flaws in multimillion dollar USS contracts.
Jack
PS. Lamson is ignorant about resolving power of lenses. Tom related to
me that LENSES are not even necessary to GATHER INFORMATION
FROM REFLECTED LIGHT. In his assembly line work for USS, he had
invented a NON-LENS which gathered images far more accurately than
glass lenses. He called it a LIGHT VALVE and was in the process of
getting it patented. In the extreme heat of steel production lines, glass
lenses had coating problems and introduced lens distortions, whereas
his light valve was problem-free. Tom was an electrical engineer and
computer expert. I think the light valve was based on the familiar
PINHOLE CAMERA in theory, but electronics magnified the images
produced by the tiny precision hole thousands of times for superior
distortion free images.
http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index....773&st=420
B..