4 research outputs found

    John Mandarano, oral history audio, 10/12/2017

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    Interviewee: John Mandarano Interviewer: Zack Modine, Matt Morgante, Tommy Murphy Date: October 12, 2017 Location: SUNY Cortland Memorial Library, Cortland, New York Length: 50:02 John Mandarano was born on February 26, 1954 and has lived in the city of Cortland his entire life. The eldest of five children he has had a good positive relationship with both of his parents and all of his siblings. He was especially close with his father who owned and operated a machine and tool shop in town until 1976. John is a Machinist by trade, a Career he was inspired to do because of his father. His Father’s shop got most of its business from the Brockway Motor Company and when Brockway shutdown in 1977 most of the necessity for a Machine shop in Cortland went away as well. His father’s shop, Cortland Machine and Tool is also how he became close with his younger brother, Patrick, because of his father having both of them around his machine shop when they were young. As a result of their experience in their father’s Machine shop, John and Patrick have their own business venture together where they manufacture custom pieces that people order from them. They both enjoy this because they are able to pick and choose which projects they work on giving them freedom in their work. John worked all over Cortland County throughout his 40+ year career as a Machinist working for his father’s shop as well as Haskell Machine and Tool in Homer, New York. Then when Haskell Machine and Tool burned down in 1978 he moved to Coller Machine in Ithaca, New York. After working at Coller for a period of time he then went back to Cortland to work for Wilson Sporting Goods, making tools and jigs and machinery for their racquetball line of products. John began working for Pall Trinity in Cortland, New York and has been working there for the past 36 years. John is also very involved in the History of Cortland He is a member of the Cortland County Historical Society as well as a board member of the CNY..

    John Mandarano, oral history transcript, 10/12/2017

    No full text
    Interviewee: John Mandarano Interviewer: Zack Modine, Matt Morgante, Tommy Murphy Date: October 12, 2017 Location: SUNY Cortland Memorial Library, Cortland, New York Length: 50:02 John Mandarano was born on February 26, 1954 and has lived in the city of Cortland his entire life. The eldest of five children he has had a good positive relationship with both of his parents and all of his siblings. He was especially close with his father who owned and operated a machine and tool shop in town until 1976. John is a Machinist by trade, a Career he was inspired to do because of his father. His Father’s shop got most of its business from the Brockway Motor Company and when Brockway shutdown in 1977 most of the necessity for a Machine shop in Cortland went away as well. His father’s shop, Cortland Machine and Tool is also how he became close with his younger brother, Patrick, because of his father having both of them around his machine shop when they were young. As a result of their experience in their father’s Machine shop, John and Patrick have their own business venture together where they manufacture custom pieces that people order from them. They both enjoy this because they are able to pick and choose which projects they work on giving them freedom in their work. John worked all over Cortland County throughout his 40+ year career as a Machinist working for his father’s shop as well as Haskell Machine and Tool in Homer, New York. Then when Haskell Machine and Tool burned down in 1978 he moved to Coller Machine in Ithaca, New York. After working at Coller for a period of time he then went back to Cortland to work for Wilson Sporting Goods, making tools and jigs and machinery for their racquetball line of products. John began working for Pall Trinity in Cortland, New York and has been working there for the past 36 years. John is also very involved in the History of Cortland He is a member of the Cortland County Historical Society as well as a board member of the CNY...

    Blissful violence ambiguity in Stanley Kubrick's a clockwork orange

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    Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão. Programa de Pós-Gradução em Letras/Ingrês e Literatura Correspondente.Analise da construção da ambigüidade na narrativa do filme Laranja Mecânica, de Stanley Kubrick (1971). Investiga a relação identificação-afastamento que o filme promove entre o protagonista e o espectador, assim como o modo peculiar como o filme trata a violência. Observa um movimento em direção à ambigüidade que se desenvolve ao longo da obra do diretor, iniciando com estruturas e personagens mais tradicionais, abandonando gradualmente as posições morais seguras. Três filmes são também discutidos como uma amostra da obra do diretor, de modo a traçar a evolução de seu estilo e sua visão de mundo: Dr. Fantástico ou Como Aprendi a Parar de me Preocupar e Amar a Bomba (1963), 2001- Uma Odisséia no Espaço (1968) e De Olhos Bem Fechados (1999)

    Heat transfer and flow characteristics of condensing refrigerants in small-channel cross-flow heat exchangers

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    This study is the first to model and experimentally validate refrigerant inventory of R134a in small-channel cross-flow condensers\sp\dagger. This heat exchanger is used in automotive applications and uses smaller internal volumes than conventional heat exchangers to perform the same task. Since the cost of refrigerants continues to rise due to the phase out of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), internal volume becomes a key design parameter.The model is a one-dimensional, two-fluid model which divides the condenser into several segments and modules. This model accurately predicts the rate of heat transfer and refrigerant pressure drop: the heat transfer was predicted within ±\pm10% of the experiment and the pressure drop was predicted within ±\pm30% for the majority of the data.More importantly, the model predicts refrigerant inventory within ±\pm10% of the experiments for ninety five percent of the data. In the inlet header, the slip ratio was correlated to the Reynolds and Froude numbers, and the homogeneous liquid volume fraction. In the small channels, the Reynolds and Weber numbers, and the homogeneous liquid volume fraction were used to correlate the slip ratio. For the outlet header, the dispersed liquid in the core was modeled using an unsteady gravity model and the annulus was modeled using the liquid-film Reynolds number and inverse viscosity."Finally, the flow regimes were documented for the pipes, headers and small channel condenser tubes. Intermittent flow was the predominate flow regime in the small channels which is consistent with the Damianides flow map and Kelvin-Helmholtz stability criteria. Through the inlet header the flow transitioned from a dispersed liquid to a bubble flow regime. The flow regime in the outlet header was always a dispersed ""gravity driven"" liquid in the core with a thin liquid annulus on the wall. Visual data collected for the headers were in qualitative agreement with the refrigerant inventory model. ftn\dagger Small-channel heat exchanger technology is the subject of United States and foreign patents applied for and issued to Modine Manufacturing Company, Racine, Wisconsin, USA. Current United States patents include 4,615,385, 4,688,311 and 4,998,580."Made available in DSpace on 2011-05-07T13:25:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license.txt: 4922 bytes, checksum: 910b249b4beec47e7ab768910c8f966f (MD5) 9543790.pdf: 9860057 bytes, checksum: d537f09990bd916a1627bcd29868e4aa (MD5) Previous issue date: 1995Item marked as restricted to the 'UIUC Users [automated]' Group (id=2) by Howard Ding ([email protected]) on 2011-05-07T14:54:29Z Item is restricted indefinitely.Restriction data tranferred 2014-07-01T11:25:19-05:00 Original Data Group with Access UIUC Users [automated] Release Date: none Reason: ETDs are only available to UIUC Users without author permissionETDs are only available to UIUC Users without author permissionU of I Onl
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