-
1 press robot
Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > press robot
-
2 робот для обслуживания прессов
1) Engineering: press robot2) Mechanics: press-working robot3) Robots: forming robot, press( - working) robotУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > робот для обслуживания прессов
-
3 робот-прессовщик
Engineering: press robot -
4 робот для обслуживания штампов
Robots: forming robot, press( - working) robotУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > робот для обслуживания штампов
-
5 meccanico
(pl -ci) 1. adj mechanical2. m mechanic* * *meccanico agg. mechanical (anche fig.): energia meccanica, mechanical energy; ingegneria meccanica, mechanical engineering; lavoro meccanico, mechanical work (anche fig.); movimenti meccanici, mechanical movements (anche fig.); stampa meccanica, power press; (tess.) telaio meccanico, power loom // uomo meccanico, robot◆ s.m. mechanic; (tecnico) engineer; (mar.) engine-room artificer; portare l'auto dal meccanico, to take the car to the garage (o the mechanic); meccanico dentista, dental mechanic.* * *[mek'kaniko] meccanico -a, -ci, -che1. agg(anche), fig mechanical2. sm* * *1.pl. -ci, -che [mek'kaniko, tʃi, ke] aggettivo1) (mosso da un congegno) mechanical; [ giocattolo] mechanical, clockwork2) (fatto a macchina) machine attrib.3) (di macchina) [difetto, guasto] mechanical4) fis. ing.5) (automatico) [gesto, lavoro] mechanical, automatic2.* * *meccanicopl. -ci, -che /mek'kaniko, t∫i, ke/1 (mosso da un congegno) mechanical; [ giocattolo] mechanical, clockwork2 (fatto a macchina) machine attrib.3 (di macchina) [difetto, guasto] mechanical; problemi -ci engine trouble4 fis. ing. ingegneria -a mechanical engineering; industria -a engineering (industry); officina -a machine shop5 (automatico) [gesto, lavoro] mechanical, automatic⇒ 18 (f. -a) (per auto) (garage) mechanic, motor mechanic; (in fabbrica) engineer. -
6 время простоя
1. down-time2. standing time3. downtime4. time-out5. dead time6. down timeпростой; время простоя — idle time
простой; время простоя; нерабочее время — standing time
7. ineffective timeпростой, время простоя — down time
8. timeout value9. timeout values -
7 вычислительная машина
1. brain2. calculating machine3. calculator4. computing engine5. computing machine6. computing machinery7. machine8. computer9. computer systemРусско-английский большой базовый словарь > вычислительная машина
-
8 ковочный
-
9 Korolov (Korolyev), Sergei Pavlovich
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 12 January 1907 (30 December 1906 Old Style) Zhitomir, Ukrained. 14 January 1966 Moscow, Russia[br]Russian engineer and designer of air-and spacecraft.[br]His early life was spent in the Ukraine and he then studied at Tupolev's aeroplane institute in Moscow. In the mid-1930s, just before his thirtieth birthday, he joined the GIRD (Group Studying Rocket Propulsion) under Frederick Zander, a Latvian engineer, while earning a living designing aircraft in Tupolev's bureau. In 1934 he visited Konstantin Tsiolovsky. Soon after this, under the Soviet Armaments Minister, Mikhail N.Tukhachevsky, who was in favour of rocket weapons, financial support was available for the GIRD and Korolov was appointed General-Engineer (1-star) in the Soviet Army. In June 1937 the Armaments Minister and his whole staff were arrested under Stalin, but Korolov was saved by Tupolev and sent to a sharaska, or prison, near Moscow where he worked for four years on rocket-and jet-propelled aircraft, among other things. In 1946 he went with his superior, Valentin Glushko, to Germany where he watched the British test-firing of possibly three V-2s at Altenwaide, near Cuxhaven, in "Operation Backfire". They were not allowed within the wire enclosure. He remained in Germany to supervise the shipment of V-2 equipment and staff to Russia (it is possible that he underwent a second term of imprisonment from 1948), the Germans having been arrested in October 1946. He kept working in Russia until 1950 or the following year. He supervised the first Russian ballistic missile, R-1, in late 1947. Stalin died in 1953 and Korolov was rehabilitated, but freedom under Nikita Kruschev was almost as restrictive as imprisonment under Stalin. Kruschev would only refer to him as "the Chief Designer", never naming him, and would not let him go abroad or correspond with other rocket experts in the USA or Germany. Anything he published could only be under the name "Sergeyev". He continued to work on his R-7 without the approval that he sought for a satellite project. This was known as semyorka, or "old number seven". In January 1959 he added a booster stage to semyorka. He may have suffered confinement in the infamous Kolyma Gulag around this time. He designed all the Sputnik, Vostok and some of the Voshkod units and worked on the Proton space booster. In 1966 he underwent surgery performed by Dr Boris Petrovsky, then Soviet Minister of Health, for the removal, it is said, of tumours of the colon. In spite of the assistance of Dr Aleksandr Vishaevsky he bled to death on the operating table. The first moon landing (by robot) took place three weeks after his death and the first flight of the new Soyuz spacecraft a little later.[br]Further ReadingY.Golanov, 1975, Sergey Korolev. The Appren-ticeship of a Space Pioneer, Moscow: Mir.A.Romanov, 1976, Spacecraft Designers, Moscow: Novosti Press Agency. J.E.Oberg, 1981, Red Star in Orbit, New York: Random House.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Korolov (Korolyev), Sergei Pavlovich
См. также в других словарях:
Robot industriel — Robotique industrielle Sommaire 1 Présentation 1.1 Définition 1.2 Domaines d utilisation 2 Les robots polaires … Wikipédia en Français
Robot Carnival — Originaltitel ロボット・カーニバル Transkription Robotto Kānibaru … Deutsch Wikipedia
Robot — This article is about mechanical robots. For other uses of the term, see robot (disambiguation). For software agents, see Bot. ASIMO (2000) at the Expo 2005, a humanoid robot … Wikipedia
Robot combat — Not to be confused with Military robots. A spinner type robot attacks Robot combat is a hobby/sport in which two or more custom built machines use varied methods of destroying or disabling the other. As of today, in most cases these machines are… … Wikipedia
Robot jockey — A robot jockey is commonly used on camels in camel racing as a replacement for human jockeys. Developed beginning in 2004, the robotic jockeys are slowly phasing out the use of human jockeys, which, in the case of camel racing in Saudi Arabia,… … Wikipedia
Android (robot) — An android is a robot[1] or synthetic organism[2] designed to look and act like a human. Although android is used almost universally to refer to both sexes, and those of no particular sex, Android technically refers to the male form, while Gynoid … Wikipedia
I, Robot — For other uses, see I, Robot (disambiguation). I, Robot First edition cover … Wikipedia
Humanoid robot — A Humanoid Robot is a robot with its overall appearance based on that of the human body. In general humanoid robots have a torso with a head, two arms and two legs, although some forms of humanoid robots may model only part of the body, for… … Wikipedia
Real robot — Le real robot (リアルロボット, riaru robotto?, lit. « robot réel » ou « robot réaliste ») est un sous genre du mecha dans la science fiction japonaise, apparu en 1979 avec la série Mobile Suit Gundam. Il repose principalement sur la… … Wikipédia en Français
Military robot — Artificial Soldier redirects here. For the album by industrial group Front Line Assembly, see Artificial Soldier. Gladiator unmanned ground vehicle Military robots are autonomous robots or remote controlled devices designed for military… … Wikipedia
Super Robot Wars — nihongo| Super Robot Wars |スーパーロボット大戦| Sūpā Robotto Taisen|or Super Robot Taisen, abbreviated as SRW is a series of tactical role playing video games produced by the Japanese gaming company, Banpresto, a division of Bandai, for various video game … Wikipedia