From: Glen Newton on
Can anyone tell me what a tyne, or tynne, coil is? I saw this term
while reading book on magnetic field generation.

Glen Newton
From: Spehro Pefhany on
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 03:32:37 GMT, the renowned glennewton(a)paterson.con
(Glen Newton) wrote:

>Can anyone tell me what a tyne, or tynne, coil is? I saw this term
>while reading book on magnetic field generation.
>
>Glen Newton


Norwegian or Danish for "thin coil"?




Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff(a)interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
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From: Royston Vasey on

"Glen Newton" <glennewton(a)paterson.con> wrote in message
news:4bb17064.3136421(a)news.tpg.com.au...
> Can anyone tell me what a tyne, or tynne, coil is? I saw this term
> while reading book on magnetic field generation.
>
> Glen Newton

"tynne" is norwegian for "thin"? Perhaps that is what is meant.


From: Don Klipstein on
In article <4bb17064.3136421(a)news.tpg.com.au>, Glen Newton wrote:
>Can anyone tell me what a tyne, or tynne, coil is? I saw this term
>while reading book on magnetic field generation.
>
>Glen Newton

I try Google with the phrase (including quotation marks to indicate
exact wording other than capitalization/punctuation phrase) "tyne coil",
and I got few hits, with most making sense to me mentioning
Newcastle-upon-Tyne Coil Winding Services.

Google gets me one hit and I sense it as "lower in making sense" when I
tried "tynne coil".

It appears to me that web searching, inluding web searching with
refinement of search terms, especially beyond what I did for you over
half a minute or so, is something you should do.

There is such a thing as "Google Books". Maybe Google has your book.
In the somewhat likely event they do, I give fair to maybe good chance
that they show enough of the relevant parts of the book that you had a
look at.

Meanwhile, there are several "search engines" besides Google for
web searching. 4 that I can name at this moment are Bing, Yahoo,
Altavista and Dogpile. (Dogpile is more of a "meta search engine",
passing your search query onto several "search engines" and returning to
you the top very few hits from each of several "search engines". Dogpile
does pass one's "search query" onto many more "search engines" than I can
name.)

- Don Klipstein (don(a)misty.com)