insulator accumulator - definitie. Wat is insulator accumulator
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Wat (wie) is insulator accumulator - definitie

ARITHMETIC REGISTER
Accumulator machine; Accumulator-based architecture
  • Front panel of an [[IBM 701]] computer with lights displaying the accumulator and other registers
  • Walther WSR-16 mechanical calculator. The row of digit-wheels in the carriage (at the front), is the Accumulator.

non-conductor         
  • A three-phase insulator used on distribution lines, typically 13.8 kV phase to phase. The lines are held in a diamond pattern, multiple insulators used between poles.
  • Three-core copper wire power cable, each core with an individual colour-coded insulating sheath, all contained within an outer protective sheath
  • glazing]] (1977)
  • PVC-sheathed [[mineral-insulated copper-clad cable]] with two conducting cores
  • open-wire]] transmission for telephone communication, manufactured for AT&T in the period from c. 1890 to WW-I; It is secured to its support structure with a screw-like metal or wood pin matching the threading in the hollow internal space. The transmission wire is tied into the groove around the insulator just below the dome.
  • Open-wire telegraph pole with porcelain insulators in [[Quidenham]], [[Norfolk]], [[United Kingdom]]
  • Egg-shaped strain insulator
  • Bottom-contact third rail in a sheath insulator
MATERIAL WHOSE INTERNAL ELECTRIC CHARGES DO NOT FLOW FREELY, AND WHICH THEREFORE DOES NOT CONDUCT AN ELECTRIC CURRENT
Electrical insulators; Glass insulators; Glass insulator; Nonconductor; Nonconductors; Non-conductor; Insulator (power engineering); Insulator string; Telegraph insulators; Electrical insulator; Electric insulator; Weathershed; Insulator chain; Insulation (electric); Insulation (electrical); Electric insulation; Electrical insulation; Insulator (Electrical); Creepage; Insulator (electric); Non-conductors; Nonconducting; Non-conducting; Insulator (electrical); Electrical Insulator; Electricity insulation; Creepage distance; Bad insulator; Sheath insulator; Insulator (telegraph and power transmission)
¦ noun a substance that does not conduct heat or electricity.
Derivatives
non-conducting adjective
Nonconductor         
  • A three-phase insulator used on distribution lines, typically 13.8 kV phase to phase. The lines are held in a diamond pattern, multiple insulators used between poles.
  • Three-core copper wire power cable, each core with an individual colour-coded insulating sheath, all contained within an outer protective sheath
  • glazing]] (1977)
  • PVC-sheathed [[mineral-insulated copper-clad cable]] with two conducting cores
  • open-wire]] transmission for telephone communication, manufactured for AT&T in the period from c. 1890 to WW-I; It is secured to its support structure with a screw-like metal or wood pin matching the threading in the hollow internal space. The transmission wire is tied into the groove around the insulator just below the dome.
  • Open-wire telegraph pole with porcelain insulators in [[Quidenham]], [[Norfolk]], [[United Kingdom]]
  • Egg-shaped strain insulator
  • Bottom-contact third rail in a sheath insulator
MATERIAL WHOSE INTERNAL ELECTRIC CHARGES DO NOT FLOW FREELY, AND WHICH THEREFORE DOES NOT CONDUCT AN ELECTRIC CURRENT
Electrical insulators; Glass insulators; Glass insulator; Nonconductor; Nonconductors; Non-conductor; Insulator (power engineering); Insulator string; Telegraph insulators; Electrical insulator; Electric insulator; Weathershed; Insulator chain; Insulation (electric); Insulation (electrical); Electric insulation; Electrical insulation; Insulator (Electrical); Creepage; Insulator (electric); Non-conductors; Nonconducting; Non-conducting; Insulator (electrical); Electrical Insulator; Electricity insulation; Creepage distance; Bad insulator; Sheath insulator; Insulator (telegraph and power transmission)
·noun A substance which does not conduct, that is, convey or transmit, heat, electricity, sound, vibration, or the like, or which transmits them with difficulty; an insulator; as, wool is a nonconductor of heat; glass and dry wood are nonconductors of electricity.
Hydraulic accumulator         
  • [[Citroën XM]] engine bay, showing two of Citroën's distinctive green spherical accumulators, used for the [[hydropneumatic suspension system]]
  • [[Grimsby Dock Tower]]
  • Steam fire engine, with vertical copper accumulator
  • A bladder-type hydraulic accumulator. Fluid fills the internal rubber bladder which expands, compressing the air inside the sealed shell.
  • Piston accumulator
  • [[Hydraulic engine house, Bristol Harbour]]
RESERVOIR TO STORE AND STABILISE FLUID PRESSURE
Hydraulic accumulators; Pressure accumulator; Accumulator tower
A hydraulic accumulator is a pressure storage reservoir in which an incompressible hydraulic fluid is held under pressure that is applied by an external source of mechanical energy. The external source can be an engine, a spring, a raised weight, or a compressed gas.

Wikipedia

Accumulator (computing)

In a computer's central processing unit (CPU), the accumulator is a register in which intermediate arithmetic logic unit results are stored.

Without a register like an accumulator, it would be necessary to write the result of each calculation (addition, multiplication, shift, etc.) to main memory, perhaps only to be read right back again for use in the next operation.

Access to main memory is slower than access to a register like an accumulator because the technology used for the large main memory is slower (but cheaper) than that used for a register. Early electronic computer systems were often split into two groups, those with accumulators and those without.

Modern computer systems often have multiple general-purpose registers that can operate as accumulators, and the term is no longer as common as it once was. However, to simplify their design, a number of special-purpose processors still use a single accumulator.