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#4348 Acoustic Fingerprints

#4348 Acoustic Fingerprints #4348  Why do industrial systems (typically mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, etc.) make noise? There should be data in that noise to identify problems, deficiencies and ineficiencies Noise in industrial systems isn't just a byproduct; it is a thermal and mechanical "exhaust" of entropy. When a system is designed to perform a specific task—like rotating a shaft or moving fluid—any energy that doesn't go into that task escapes as vibration, heat, or sound. Why Systems Make Noise The physical origins of industrial noise generally fall into four categories: Mechanical Friction and Impact: This is the most common source. It occurs when surfaces interact (bearings, gears, sliders). In a perfect vacuum with zero friction, this would be silent. In reality, surface irregularities (asperities) collide, creating elastic waves that propagate through the material and into the air. Fluid and Gas Turbulence: In hydraulic or pneumatic systems, noise is...

#4347 Fun Things to Do with FPGAs

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#4347 Fun Things to Do with FPGAs #4347  What are 15 fun things to do with FPGAs? Since you’ve got that cluster of 42 Arty A7-100Ts in the works, you’re clearly beyond the "make an LED blink" stage. However, FPGAs are the ultimate "sandboxes of reality," and there’s a lot of fun to be had by pivoting between high-speed DSP, retro-computing, and sheer hardware hacking. Here are 15 projects ranging from "weekend fun" to "deep-dive engineering": 1. Retro-Console Synthesis (MiSTer Style) Instead of software emulation, use HDL to recreate the actual logic of a MOS 6502 or a Motorola 68000. Implementing a NES or Sega Genesis core on your FPGAs allows for cycle-accurate gaming with zero input lag. 2. Real-Time Ray Tracing Accelerator Build a dedicated pipeline for Bounding Volume Hierarchy (BVH) traversals. Even a modest FPGA can often outpace a general-purpose CPU at the specific intersection math required for ray tracing. 3. Software-Defined Radio (SD...