I wonder if this could eventually replace surgen's hands at the OR table? Or if it could be eventually used for prostetics? That would be very interesting (and probably very very expensive;)
It does, but with the fans you really need to grommet mount them. Use thick O-rings on the screws where they come in contact with the case (i.e. not the side the fan is on) to buffer the fan's vibration from the case. A lot of the noise is from the fan(s) vibrating the case.
I'm sure the USPA is going, ahhh...riiight.:) Actually, that sounds kinda cool. That would be a big time physical endurance test. Even freefalling the almost 2 minutes from 21,000ft will flat out exhaust many skydivers. Wouldn't mind trying it though. I am guessing you'd need your D to do it and a lowly A like myself couldn't even go near the DZ.:)
I wonder if this technology would let you choose where you wanted the camera pointed/located on the field? That would be truely cool.
I wonder if this could eventually replace surgen's hands at the OR table? Or if it could be eventually used for prostetics? That would be very interesting (and probably very very expensive ;)
It does, but with the fans you really need to grommet mount them. Use thick O-rings on the screws where they come in contact with the case (i.e. not the side the fan is on) to buffer the fan's vibration from the case. A lot of the noise is from the fan(s) vibrating the case.
Hehe, I've already got a Lian-Li PC-60 (the all aluminum case). It kicks ass. :)
I'm sure the USPA is going, ahhh...riiight. :) Actually, that sounds kinda cool. That would be a big time physical endurance test. Even freefalling the almost 2 minutes from 21,000ft will flat out exhaust many skydivers. Wouldn't mind trying it though. I am guessing you'd need your D to do it and a lowly A like myself couldn't even go near the DZ. :)
That is absolutely amazing. I guess the Star Trek idea won't happen. :(