| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | France | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 6 months |
| seen | May 2 at 10:17 | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
Software Engineer, with a degree in Distributed Systems.
I went through Networking (protocols design, TCP/IP etc...), dev (ASM, C, C++), sys admin and maintenance (Solaris, Linux, Windows), web dev (PHP, JS, Macromedia stuff, AJAX), reconverted to video games dev (handheld devices) fo a AAA games company.
Now I am an independent iPhone/mobile/web dev.
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Nov 9 |
revised |
Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? added 688 characters in body |
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Nov 8 |
comment |
Who is (or was) Susan Williams? @LarsTech I feel like a legend just died. |
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Nov 8 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Nov 8 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Nov 8 |
accepted | What are the largest Technic-compatible tires on the market? |
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Nov 8 |
comment |
What are the best options for building a LEGO RC car? @pcantin I like the form factor! very efficient! |
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Nov 7 |
revised |
Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? added 11 characters in body |
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Nov 7 |
revised |
Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? added 1016 characters in body |
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Nov 6 |
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Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? Also currently this is more of an "academic" question as I don't intend to build one of these immediately... I might end-up buying one from LPEpower as I don't have the parts, the time, tools and experience of modifying the required parts to get one running properly. So before investing in parts that are heavily modified I want to make sure this is a viable/fun solution. |
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Nov 6 |
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Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? Sorry I wasn't attentive yesterday :) |
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Nov 6 |
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Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? I am not sure about CO2... On a few occasions I have noticed "snow" coming out of my markers. When the marker gets some liquid CO2 from the tank (or from condensation?) it tends to shoot pellets faster with white jets of CO2 coming out of the muzzle. The way CO2 is expelled in violent successive releases might be why it happens. I'm not sure about what would happen if the gas was released uniformly. That's why I really would like to have an answer from someone who tried that kind of thing. |
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Nov 6 |
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Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? @Joubarc could, but it defeats the idea of running from a pneumatic engine if you need another engine and power source to power it. |
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Nov 6 |
revised |
added 287 characters in body |
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Nov 6 |
suggested | suggested edit on |
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Nov 6 |
wiki | |
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Nov 5 |
revised |
Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? Remover the power-functions tag as this question is not related to Power functions. The engines in question are entirely mechanical with no electronics and made of (modified) technic parts and third party additions. |
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Nov 5 |
asked | Is a N2 or CO2 paintball tank a viable power source for a LEGO pneumatic Engine? |
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Nov 5 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Nov 5 |
revised |
What are the largest Technic-compatible tires on the market? changed the question to tires because @Joubarc found the biggest wheels but without tires (which was not the intent of the question) |
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Nov 1 |
awarded | Beta |