Ijust got a Canon R6 and I was curious of the manufacture date of the battery. It's an LP-E6NH with a few numbers on it such as 3-30-2 and 2022119A. I believe the second number could be the manufacture date but I'm not sure.
Dont know if this will help, you probably already looked but I just did a quick check on several of my Dell monitors. All of them had the date of manufacture listed on the back at least the year but some month and year. The oldest I had was dated Sept. 2002. Check carfully because on some of mine it was in very, very small print mixed in with all the other info that is crammed into those little stickers.
Thanks guys. Appreciate your young eyes. Also, I believe I have figured out the encoded year and month in the serial number. On this example CN-0U072N-64180-99G-02FU the 99 is September 2009 (first 9 is year and second 9 is month. You might check in out on your system monitors to verify. Thanks again.
I have checked several R7000 units and the command just returns null. The same for one early R7800 I have checked. Yet, several later manufacturer R7800 units (those with non removable antenna) return the date.
This seems like a common error in at least earlier aircraft, vehicles come with an MSO (Manufactures Statement of Origin) and state titles are issued from it. Since there is no MSO's or titles on aircraft the FAA uses the a date from the Airworthiness Certificate. When I did the ADS-B rebate on my E, one of the things to check was if all the info on the FAA register was correct, mine was actually missing the year model. A quick search on the FAA's site produced a phone number to call for registrations, 10 minutes later it was done, didnt ask any questions or have me send anything in..... quick and simple
Hi,
We have several Symmetra RM 6000 in our org. We recently noticed that two are not reporting valid manufacture dates: one reports (via web) 12/11/0, that is not a typo, just a single "0" for the year, and no serial. The other says "12345678" for the manufacture date, but reports the correct SN. They both have firmware 213.137W.
We suspect that this may be causing our ISX manager software to ignore or misreport the state of these two UPS.
Is there a way to alter these values in the UPS?
unfortunately, that information is pulled from the main intelligence module and you cant update it. i'd have to suspect that when these were programmed at the factory, there was a typo made. are the UPSs operating normally otherwise? I have seen "ED123456789" for a serial number once before and it was in a strange situation.
I have a similar situation with a Symmetra 6k that I just finally networked this morning. I use an Infrastruxure Manager device to watch my UPS's, and when I set this one up today (1.5 years after initial install), it shows a Global UPS age violation, which causes the status to show as a yellow warning symbol. Under the Manufacture Date listed for the MIM, it indicates 10/27/0, though the serial number would indicate that the MIM was manufactured in '06. Does this mean the only way to get accurate info again is to replace that MIM? And if that's the case, since this is a manufacturing error, could I count on APC to replace it to make it right? The UPS is functioning fine.
i would call into APC support and refer to this thread if you need to. i cant make any promises at this point but if this is causing a big problem, i don't see why it would be a problem to replace it for you since it isn't something you can fix on your own. again, i cant make any promises but i'll see what i can do. if you refer to this thread, the person you speak to can check with me.
I'm looking to retrieve the manufacture date on Extreme / Enterasys switches. Found this article =000089269 It states the first two digits are year and the 3rd/4th digits is week of manufacture along with an alpha (manufacturer) and five more digits after that.
My serial numbers have 7 digits after the first 4 digits then an alpha like A, B, E, H, J, F. Am I to assume those 7 digits after the first 4 are unique designations? Is there a document which explains the alpha at the end? Example. My serial number is 12345678901A. Looking for more details on these serial numbers.
So it's the time of the year again when the trad rack needs some TLC after a season of beating. I was trying to compile an sheet with dates of when my cams were manufactured so that I can plan on getting some of them re-slung before the start of the next season. This is the first time I'm doing this and don't really have the receipts for all my purchases, so I'm going about trying to id the manufacture dates from the cams. I have a mixed set of cams (metolius, omega pacifics, and BDs) and so far I have been able to ID the BD cams (4 digits on the flat section of the colored lobe e.g. 7041- 41st day of the year 2007) and Metolius (date printed on the trigger) but I haven't had much luck with the omega pacific link cams. Any of you fine gentleman help out this OCD climber?
Excellent question. I was actually planning on reslinging my cams based on age and wear level (which ever comes earlier). Based on age, the general consensus seems to be to resling Nylon after 5 years of moderate use and Dyneema after 2 years. Based on wear, any fading, fraying and discolouration is a good indicator that its time to get it resling.
Thanks for the info. I wouldn't be terribly surprised if my cams cams are from 2006. I bought it on a sale and they don't sell in very large volumes. This is a good enough reason for me to get them reslung.
This is a topic for separate discussion. I agree with with your sentiment and think they are not for beginners, but I strongly believe that there's a place for the link cam in the experienced trad climbers rack. I have especially found them useful on long alpine routes to decrease the weight of my rack.
This is a topic for separate discussion. I agree with with your sentiment and think there not for beginners, but I strongly believe that there's a place for the link cam in the experienced trad climbers rack. I have especially found them useful on long alpine routes to decrease the weight of my rack.
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The DOT code is important for many reasons but is most importantly used to register your tire with the manufacturer. Registering your tires provides the tire manufacturer with your name and address to be able to contact you in case of a recall.
Lately I found myself in the possession of several Seagate Cheetah 15K.7 SAS drives. These represent the pinnacle of hard disk engineering; with 15,000 RPM, the drives deliver up to around 200 MB/s sustained throughput (both read and write!) and have average access time approximately 5 milliseconds. They run a bit warm but are surprisingly quiet.
These Seagate drives do not appear to report the date of manufacture through software (some other drives do), and although Seagate knows exactly what the drives are based on the serial number, the date of manufacture is not shown there either.
I scoured the Internet for legible photos of Cheetah drives with a clear date of manufacture on the label. I found one IBM-branded drive with a lot code of A-01-1005-1 and DOM: 01AUG2009. Indeed plugging 10051 as a date code into the converter here we get August 1, 2009.
I could not find this lot number to date code relationship documented anywhere; it is guesswork on my part, but so far it has been confirmed by observation where both the lot number and date of manufacture are available. Perhaps this information will help someone.
I support computers for the House of Representatives. Every two years we have elections and some win and some lose. The Freshman Congressman inherit equipment from the previous Congressman however the 'history' of the equipment is not exactly inherited.
I am trying to find a way to determine how old each item they inherited is, and looking up the HP Desktops on the website by its serial number only seems to tell me if it is still under warranty or not, and when the warranty expired or expires.
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