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Dashboard instruments displaying various car and engine conditions. Where the dashboard originally included an array of simple controls (e.g., the steering wheel) and instrumentation to show speed, fuel level and oil pressure, the modern dashboard may accommodate a broad array of gauges, and controls as well as information, climate control and entertainment systems.
So in addition to DASH7 (ISO 18000-7) being an open source, ISO standard, OpenTag is an open-source stack that is quite unique relative to other wireless sensor networking (e.g. ZigBee) and active RFID (e.g. proprietary) options elsewhere in the marketplace today.
The Dash 7 Series was intended to redress the ensuing imbalance between the two competing manufacturers. GE commenced production of the Dash 7 Series in 1976. By the time Dash 7 production ceased in 1985, about 2,800 Dash 7 locomotives had been built - roughly the same number of units as the total production of the Universal Series.
Dash 7 may refer to: DASH7, a wireless sensor and actuator network protocol; De Havilland Canada Dash 7, aircraft manufactured by De Havilland Canada; GE Dash 7 Series, railway locomotive manufactured by GE Transportation Systems; Dash 7, a song directly referencing the aircraft, by the American alt-country band Wilco, on the album A.M. (1995)
An air core gauge is a specific type of rotary actuator in an analog display gauge that allows an indicator to rotate a full 360 degrees. It is used in gauges and displays, most commonly automotive instrument clusters. A typical automotive application is shown at the right. The air core gauge is a type of "air-core motor".
MGWR Class 3; MGWR Class 4; MGWR Class 5; MGWR Class 6; MGWR Class 7; MGWR Class 7–12; MGWR Class 8; MGWR Class 9; MGWR Class 10; MGWR Class 11; MGWR Class 12; MGWR Class 13; MGWR Class 14; MGWR Class 15; MGWR Class 16; MGWR Class 17; MGWR Class 18; MGWR Class 19; MGWR Class A; MGWR Class B; MGWR Class D; MGWR Class D-bogie; MGWR Class D2 ...
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The Tourbillon is powered by a naturally aspirated 8,300 cc (8.3 L; 506.5 cu in) V16 engine. The engine, developed by Cosworth , has a bore x stroke of 92 mm × 78.55 mm (3.62 in × 3.09 in) and is implemented in conjunction with 3 electric motors, 2 located at the front axle and 1 at the rear.