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1 area of inefficiency
Автоматика: участок неэффективного использования (напр. оборудования) -
2 area of inefficiency
участок неэффективного использования (напр. оборудования)English-Russian dictionary of mechanical engineering and automation > area of inefficiency
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3 area
1) площадь; поверхность2) зона; участок3) область действия; область применения•- area of cut per unit time
- area of inefficiency
- area of instantaneous contact
- area of passage
- assembly area
- base area
- bearing area
- bearing surface area
- blade area
- buffer area
- cable area
- calculated area
- carrying area
- charging area
- chip area
- chucking area
- CIM area
- clearance area
- collar area
- common data area
- common service area
- communications area
- contact area
- control area
- controlled area
- cross-sectional area
- cumulative contact area
- cutting area
- danger area
- data area
- deviation area
- discharge area
- dual work area
- effective area
- elliptical contact area
- enclosed working area
- environmentally controlled area
- equivalent cross-section area
- equivalent cross-sectional area
- exclusion area
- exit area
- finished-tool-storage area
- fixture build area
- fixture load/unload area
- flow area
- focusing area
- forbidden area
- force-transfer area
- free-fall area for chips
- galvanizing area
- goods inwards area
- goods-receiving area
- grinding area
- gripping area
- guarded area of the machine
- hazard area
- hazardous area
- heating area
- high EMI area
- high RFI area
- high-rise storage area
- high-volume area
- high-wear area
- holding area
- image area
- inactive area
- interfacial area
- intermittent area
- internal/external communications area
- laser manufacturing production area
- laser-heated area
- lateral area
- lifting-surface area
- light-sensitive area
- load-and-unload area
- locating area
- low-volume area
- machine-tool area
- machine-tool use area
- machining area
- manned area
- manual machining area
- manual setting-up area
- manufacturing area
- mounting area
- net area
- no-go area
- nominal area
- nonexposed area
- nonirradiated area
- nonworking area
- nozzle area
- operating area of the machine
- operating area
- overstressed local area
- paint area
- painted area
- painting area
- pallet area
- pallet-loading area
- pallet-parking area
- piston area
- plan area
- plane area
- premachining area
- preparation-of-parts area
- problem area
- production area
- prohibited area
- racking area
- ready area
- reference area
- refurbishment area
- robot arm total working area
- robot operating area
- roof area
- rough hole area
- rupture area
- sectional area
- setting-up area
- set-up area
- shearing area
- slipping area
- specific application area
- staging area
- storage area
- superimposed area
- supporting area
- system control area
- table work area
- test area
- throat area
- tool service area
- tool-inventory area
- tool-presetting area
- tool-staging area
- transitional area
- treated area
- uncontrolled area
- unit area
- useful area
- user area
- wash area
- washing area
- weld area
- work area
- working area
- workpiece-staging area
- workplace areaEnglish-Russian dictionary of mechanical engineering and automation > area
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4 участок неэффективного использования
Automation: area of inefficiency (напр. оборудования)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > участок неэффективного использования
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5 участок неэффективного использования
(напр. оборудования) area of inefficiencyРусско-английский исловарь по машиностроению и автоматизации производства > участок неэффективного использования
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6 Agriculture
Historically, Portugal's agricultural efficiency, measured in terms of crop yields and animal productivity, has been well below that of other European countries. Agricultural inefficiency is a consequence of Portugal's topography and climate, which varies considerably from north to south and has influenced farm size and farming methods. There are three major agricultural zones: the north, center, and south. The north (the area between the Douro and Minho Rivers, including the district of Trás-os-Montes) is mountainous with a wet (180-249 cm of rainfall/year), moderately cool climate. It contains about 2 million hectares of cultivated land excessively fragmented into tiny (3-5 hectares) family-owned farms, or minifúndios, a consequence of ancient settlement patterns, a strong attachment to the land, and the tradition of subdividing land equally among family members. The farms in the north produce the potatoes and kale that are used to make caldo verde soup, a staple of the Portuguese diet, and the grapes that are used to make vinho verde (green wine), a light sparkling white wine said to aid the digestion of oily and greasy food. Northern farms are too small to benefit from mechanization and their owners too poor to invest in irrigation, chemical fertilizers, or better seeds; hence, agriculture in the north has remained labor intensive, despite efforts to regroup minifúndios to increase farm size and efficiency.The center (roughly between the Douro and the Tagus River) is bisected by the Mondego River, the land to either side of which is some of the most fertile in Portugal and produces irrigated rice, corn, grapes, and forest goods on medium-sized (about 100 hectares) farms under a mixture of owner-cultivation and sharecropping. Portugal's center contains the Estrela Mountains, where sheep raising is common and wool, milk, and cheese are produced, especially mountain cheese ( Queijo da Serra), similar to French brie. In the valley of the Dão River, a full-bodied, fruity wine much like Burgundy is produced. In the southern part of the center, where the climate is dry and soils are poor, stock raising mixes with cereal crop cultivation. In Estremadura, the area north of Lisbon, better soils and even rainfall support intensive agriculture. The small farms of this area produce lemons, strawberries, pears, quinces, peaches, and vegetables. Estremadura also produces red wine at Colares and white wine at Buçelas.The south (Alentejo and Algarve) is a vast rolling plain with a hot arid climate. It contains about 2.6 million hectares of arable land and produces the bulk of Portugal's wheat and barley. It also produces one of Portugal's chief exports, cork, which is made from bark cut from cork oaks at nine-year intervals. There are vast groves of olive trees around the towns of Elvas, Serpa, and Estremoz that provide Portugal's olives. The warm climate of the Algarve (the most southern region of Portugal) is favorable for the growing of oranges, pomegranates, figs, and carobs. Almonds are also produced. Farms in the south, except for the Algarve, are large estates (typically 1,000 hectares or more in size) known as latifúndios, worked by a landless, wage-earning rural work force. After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, these large estates were taken over by the state and turned into collective farms. During the 1990s, as the radicalism of the Revolution moderated, collectivized agriculture was seen as counterproductive, and the nationalized estates were gradually returned to their original owners in exchange for cash payments or small parcels of land for the collective farm workers.Portugal adopted the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) when it joined the European Union (EU) in 1986. The CAP, which is based on the principles of common pricing, EU preferences, and joint financing, has shifted much of Portugal's agricultural decision making to the EU. Under the CAP, cereals and dairy products have experienced declines in prices because these are in chronic surplus within the EU. Alentejo wheat production has become unprofitable because of poor soils. However, rice, tomatoes, sunflower, and safflower seed and potatoes, as well as Portuguese wines, have competed well under the CAP system. -
7 intrude
1. intransitive verbintrude [up]on somebody's grief/leisure time/privacy — jemanden in seiner Trauer stören/jemandes Freizeit beanspruchen/in jemandes Privatsphäre (Akk.) eindringen
2. transitive verbintrude in[to] somebody's affairs/conversation — sich in jemandes Angelegenheiten / Unterhaltung (Akk.) einmischen
aufdrängen (into, [up]on Dat.)* * *[in'tru:d]((sometimes with on) to enter, or cause (something) to enter, when unwelcome or unwanted: He opened her door and said `I'm sorry to intrude'; I'm sorry to intrude on your time.) stören,eindringen- academic.ru/39065/intruder">intruder- intrusion* * *in·trude[ɪnˈtru:d]I. vi1. (meddle) stören2. (unwelcome presence)am I intruding? störe ich gerade?inefficiency has \intruded into every area in allen Bereichen breitete sich Ineffizienz austo \intrude on sb's grief jdn in seiner Trauer stören▪ to \intrude on sb's privacy in jds Privatsphäre eindringento \intrude on sb's thoughts jdn bei seinen Gedanken störenII. vt▪ to \intrude sth etw einbringen* * *[ɪn'truːd]1. vistörenhis mother intruded on our relationship — seine Mutter mischte sich in unsere Beziehung ein
2. vtremark einwerfen* * *intrude [ınˈtruːd]A v/t1. intrude o.s. into sich eindrängen in (akk) (a. fig):intrude o.s. into sb’s affairs sich in jemandes Angelegenheiten eindrängen oder einmischen;a suspicion intruded itself into his mind ein Verdacht drängte sich ihm auf;he intruded his ideas into our conversation er mischte sich mit seinen Ansichten in unsere Unterhaltung2. aufdrängen (sth [up]on sb jemandem etwas; o.s. [up]on sb sich jemandem)B v/i2. sich aufdrängen (on, upon dat)3. stören:intrude (up)on sb’s time jemandes Zeit ungebührlich in Anspruch nehmen;am I intruding? störe ich?* * *1. intransitive verbintrude [up]on somebody's grief/leisure time/privacy — jemanden in seiner Trauer stören/jemandes Freizeit beanspruchen/in jemandes Privatsphäre (Akk.) eindringen
2. transitive verbintrude in[to] somebody's affairs/conversation — sich in jemandes Angelegenheiten / Unterhaltung (Akk.) einmischen
aufdrängen (into, [up]on Dat.)* * *v.eindringen v. -
8 intrude
in·trude [ɪnʼtru:d] vi1) ( meddle) stören;2) ( unwelcome presence)an I \intrude? störe ich gerade?;to \intrude into sth in etw akk eindringen;inefficiency has \intruded into every area in allen Bereichen breitete sich Ineffizienz aus;to \intrude on sb's grief jdn in seiner Trauer stören;to \intrude on sb's privacy in jds Privatsphäre eindringen;to \intrude on sb's thoughts jdn bei seinen Gedanken stören vtto \intrude sth etw einbringen;to \intrude oneself upon sb sich akk jdm aufdrängen -
9 Watt, James
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 19 January 1735 Greenock, Renfrewshire, Scotlandd. 19 August 1819 Handsworth Heath, Birmingham, England[br]Scottish engineer and inventor of the separate condenser for the steam engine.[br]The sixth child of James Watt, merchant and general contractor, and Agnes Muirhead, Watt was a weak and sickly child; he was one of only two to survive childhood out of a total of eight, yet, like his father, he was to live to an age of over 80. He was educated at local schools, including Greenock Grammar School where he was an uninspired pupil. At the age of 17 he was sent to live with relatives in Glasgow and then in 1755 to London to become an apprentice to a mathematical instrument maker, John Morgan of Finch Lane, Cornhill. Less than a year later he returned to Greenock and then to Glasgow, where he was appointed mathematical instrument maker to the University and was permitted in 1757 to set up a workshop within the University grounds. In this position he came to know many of the University professors and staff, and it was thus that he became involved in work on the steam engine when in 1764 he was asked to put in working order a defective Newcomen engine model. It did not take Watt long to perceive that the great inefficiency of the Newcomen engine was due to the repeated heating and cooling of the cylinder. His idea was to drive the steam out of the cylinder and to condense it in a separate vessel. The story is told of Watt's flash of inspiration as he was walking across Glasgow Green one Sunday afternoon; the idea formed perfectly in his mind and he became anxious to get back to his workshop to construct the necessary apparatus, but this was the Sabbath and work had to wait until the morrow, so Watt forced himself to wait until the Monday morning.Watt designed a condensing engine and was lent money for its development by Joseph Black, the Glasgow University professor who had established the concept of latent heat. In 1768 Watt went into partnership with John Roebuck, who required the steam engine for the drainage of a coal-mine that he was opening up at Bo'ness, West Lothian. In 1769, Watt took out his patent for "A New Invented Method of Lessening the Consumption of Steam and Fuel in Fire Engines". When Roebuck went bankrupt in 1772, Matthew Boulton, proprietor of the Soho Engineering Works near Birmingham, bought Roebuck's share in Watt's patent. Watt had met Boulton four years earlier at the Soho works, where power was obtained at that time by means of a water-wheel and a steam engine to pump the water back up again above the wheel. Watt moved to Birmingham in 1774, and after the patent had been extended by Parliament in 1775 he and Boulton embarked on a highly profitable partnership. While Boulton endeavoured to keep the business supplied with capital, Watt continued to refine his engine, making several improvements over the years; he was also involved frequently in legal proceedings over infringements of his patent.In 1794 Watt and Boulton founded the new company of Boulton \& Watt, with a view to their retirement; Watt's son James and Boulton's son Matthew assumed management of the company. Watt retired in 1800, but continued to spend much of his time in the workshop he had set up in the garret of his Heathfield home; principal amongst his work after retirement was the invention of a pantograph sculpturing machine.James Watt was hard-working, ingenious and essentially practical, but it is doubtful that he would have succeeded as he did without the business sense of his partner, Matthew Boulton. Watt coined the term "horsepower" for quantifying the output of engines, and the SI unit of power, the watt, is named in his honour.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1785. Honorary LLD, University of Glasgow 1806. Foreign Associate, Académie des Sciences, Paris 1814.Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson and R Jenkins, 1927, James Watt and the Steam Engine, Oxford: Clarendon Press.L.T.C.Rolt, 1962, James Watt, London: B.T. Batsford.R.Wailes, 1963, James Watt, Instrument Maker (The Great Masters: Engineering Heritage, Vol. 1), London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers.IMcN
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