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A display of JPI avionics. J.P. Instruments is an American aircraft avionics manufacturer. [1] The company was founded in Santa Ana, California marketing its first product, "The Scanner", to monitor engine temperatures in piston engine aircraft. In 1992, JPI came out with the EDM-500 which electronically monitors and stores engine parameters. [2]
The six bit instruction code allows up to 64 programmed operators (octal 00 through 77). If the P bit is set, an instruction code of xx is treated as a call to location 1xx (octal). The location of the POP instruction is saved in location zero. Bit zero of location zero is set to the current value of the overflow indicator and the indicator is ...
JPI may refer to: Pope John Paul I (1912–1978) Java Platform Interface; Jeju Peace Institute, a South Korean think tank; Jinnah Polytechnic Institute, in Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan; Joint Programming Initiative by the European Commission; Journal of Political Ideologies; J.P. Instruments, American avionics manufacturer
TBM 930 introduced in April 2016, with upgraded interior and avionics, [26] including the Garmin G3000 touchscreen avionics suite. The TBM 930 did not replace but augmented the 900 in the TBM lineup. [27] [28] TBM 940 introduced in March 2019, with autothrottle and automatic deicing. [10] It was certified by EBACE show in May. [29]
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An SDS 930 system consists of at least three standard (30 cu ft, 0.85 m 3) cabinets, weighing about 3,200 pounds (1.6 short tons; 1.5 t). [2] It is composed of an arithmetic and logic unit, at least 8,192 words (24-bit + simple parity bit) magnetic-core memory, and the IO unit.
The Porsche 930 is a turbocharged variant of the 911 model sports car manufactured by German automobile manufacturer Porsche between 1975 and 1989. It was the maker's top-of-the-range 911 model for its entire production duration and, at the time of its introduction, was the fastest production car available in Germany. [3] [4] [5]