Mystery Parts!

'Been doing some long-overdue shop cleaning and came across a couple parts I can't identify:

The item on the left is a two-terminal device on some sort of composite substrate. It appears to be reactive, since a resistance measurement took some time to settle from infinity to around 9 megohms. My initial guess was some sort of UHF strip antenna. 'Can't imagine where it might have come from, though.
The second item might be a masked text-to-speech ROM that went with an CTS256-AL2 phonemic speech synthesizer chip (which I have). But I can't find any info about it. BTW, the penciled "112" is not my handwriting, so must have been there when I got the chip.
Thanks!
-Phil
Update: Actually, my CTS256-AL2 is the text-to-code converter for the SPO256-AL2 speech chip. So the RCA chip that's pictured above must be something else entirely.
Post Edited (Phil Pilgrim (PhiPi)) : 5/25/2010 12:10:31 AM GMT
The item on the left is a two-terminal device on some sort of composite substrate. It appears to be reactive, since a resistance measurement took some time to settle from infinity to around 9 megohms. My initial guess was some sort of UHF strip antenna. 'Can't imagine where it might have come from, though.
The second item might be a masked text-to-speech ROM that went with an CTS256-AL2 phonemic speech synthesizer chip (which I have). But I can't find any info about it. BTW, the penciled "112" is not my handwriting, so must have been there when I got the chip.
Thanks!
-Phil
Update: Actually, my CTS256-AL2 is the text-to-code converter for the SPO256-AL2 speech chip. So the RCA chip that's pictured above must be something else entirely.
Post Edited (Phil Pilgrim (PhiPi)) : 5/25/2010 12:10:31 AM GMT
Comments
Rich H
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The Simple Servo Tester, a kit from Gadget Gangster.
I wonder what the side (45 degress from the top) & end views look like.
Jay
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-Phil
Now where's that pic of my ex-wife...?
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·"If you build it, they will come."
Rich H
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The Simple Servo Tester, a kit from Gadget Gangster.
Correct.
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I always have someone watching my back.
I shouldn't be using the present tense anymore, though, as it accidentally got swept into the dustbin. :-( I'm still thinking it was an antenna of some sort.
-Phil
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John R.
Click here to see my Nomad Build Log
-Phil
Then a wiper (think formed metal contact) would be adjusted, then locked in place.
If you probe one end, and slide the other probe over the deposited strip, does the resistance change? (I know, a little late to find out now...)
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John R.
Click here to see my Nomad Build Log
-Phil
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Tracy Allen
www.emesystems.com
Yes, it was a memristor! I worked nights on it for years. (And Phil wonders why I sleep all day!) It was a vision of endless shrimp treats and Fancy Feast that drove me, instead of that dry stuff Phil gives me. Then those so-and-sos at HP Labs got there ahead of me. 'Seems like everything I doo gets scooped!
-Browser
Jim
Anyway, Tracey, I'd be more than disappointed to lose it if what you suggest is true. But I can't recall ever needing or obtaining such a sensor. (Nor can I recall needing a mini UHF antenna, for that matter.) Browser's assertions notwithstanding, I really am mystified.
-Phil
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Chris Savage
Parallax Engineering
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Unfortunately multiple accounts are against the rules. Since you're probably "the boss", and will probably put your paw down, we're really going to miss Phil and all his valuable contributions around here...
And we can't wait for your first obex contribution, I believe its based on a "cat's whisker"...
tubular
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat's-whisker_detector)
LOL!!!! That is so funny!!! And so true!!
However, you forgot:
-Always use sockets for your Propeller. (Assuming that Browser owns one)
-Always include demos. (for that Cat's whisker object)
-And NEVER, I repeat, NEVER mention ANY form of AI!!!!
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Check out my new website!!
Use the Propeller icon!!
Follow me on Twitter! Search "Microcontrolled"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_coulometer
Used for such things as elapsed time
Curtis http://www.alternativefuelsequipment.com/curtis/pdf/Coulometers.pdf
and battery state of charge. You may have had the bare device. Did it have a tiny gap at one end?
-Phil
I'd seen these little tiny thingums on PC boards at Intel in 1974. I new they were used to indicate "on-time" but had no idea how they worked. I'd actually forgot about them. Thirty-six years later, now I know.
DJ
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