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  2. Pattern (casting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_(casting)

    Thus when the 100 kg block (solid calculation) is filled with liquid it contains a mass of only 94 kg. The 6 kg, has to be supplied from a "riser" or "feeder" during solidification - thus the solid object now has a mass of 100 kg. The method is a system to deal with the volume loss during solidification. This (technically) is not an allowance.

  3. Riser (casting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riser_(casting)

    A bronze casting showing the sprue and risers. A riser, also known as a feeder, [1] is a reservoir built into a metal casting mold to prevent cavities due to shrinkage.Most metals are less dense as a liquid than as a solid so castings shrink upon cooling, which can leave a void at the last point to solidify.

  4. Sprue (manufacturing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprue_(manufacturing)

    The sprue is a large-diameter channel through which plastic flows, usually around the edges of the part or along straight lines. The runner is a smaller channel from the sprue to the individual part. An analogy may be found in a water system that employs a water main (sprue) and smaller pipes (runners) to individual houses.

  5. Glitch removal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glitch_removal

    Gate freezing minimizes power dissipation by eliminating glitching. It relies on the availability of modified standard library cells such as the so-called F-Gate.This method consists of transforming high glitch gates into modified devices which filter out the glitches when a control signal is applied.

  6. Floodgate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floodgate

    Tainter gates are a vertical design that rotates up to allow water to pass underneath. Low friction trunnion bearings, along with a face shape that balances hydrostatic forces, allow this design to close under its own weight as a safety feature. Tainter gate diagram: Tainter gates and spillway: Drum gates are hollow gate sections that float on ...

  7. Gating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gating

    Gating system metalwork, a process in casting; Gating signal, a signal that provides a time window; Clock gating, a power-saving techniques used in synchronous circuits; Power gating, a power-saving technique for circuits; Noise gate, a term in audio signal processing; Frequency-resolved optical gating, a term related to auto correlation in optics

  8. Gating signal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gating_signal

    The goal of signal gating is to selectively allow or block the transmission of signals through a circuit or system. In signal gating, a gating signal is used to modulate the passage of the main signal. The gating signal acts as a control mechanism, determining when the main signal can pass through the gate and when it is blocked.

  9. Clock gating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_gating

    A design must contain these enable conditions in order to use and benefit from clock gating. This clock gating process can also save significant die area as well as power, since it removes large numbers of muxes and replaces them with clock-gating logic. This clock-gating logic is generally in the form of "integrated clock gating" (ICG) cells.