Science & Technology Building Opened in 2002, the Science and Technology Building was partially funded by BC3′s first capital campaign through the BC3 Education Foundation. The Science and Technology Building houses: Biology, Chemistry, Anatomy and Physiology, Physics, Mathematics, Metrology, Electronics, Nanofabrication, Manufacturing, Robotics, Computer Aided Drafting and Design, Architecture, Faculty Offices and Faculty Lounge.
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This video represents a working Helicon® gear set. Spiroid® and Helicon® gears are members of the skew-axis gear family and are designed to broaden gearing design opportunities restricted by the physical limitations of conventional gearing. They are members of the HTSR™ family of products. HTSR™ (High Torque to Space Ratio) is an exclusive line of gearing and coupling products made possible by software, tooling, and manufacturing methods that are the intellectual property of Illinois Tool Works and ITW Heartland. As the acronym indicates, the real value of these products lay in their ability to transmit relatively large amounts of power in compact spaces and with minimal weight.
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One of SilexSolar’s new robot to increase PV Solar panel production at the Homebush Bay NSW Australia manufacturing facility
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This is a simple demonstration of an ABB140 industrial manufacturing robot drawing the famous “Duke D”. Project conducted by Hugh Runyan in the Robotics and Manufacturing Automation Laboratory in the Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science Department, Edmund T. Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University.
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