Health Tips In Urdu
-------------------------------------------
Romina Carrisi Power: "Sono contenta che tra i miei genitori sia tornato il sereno" | K.N.B.T - Duration: 4:19.-------------------------------------------
The CD Player with a Robot Inside: Pioneer CLD-M301 - Duration: 13:45.These two machines both have the same primary mission.
Their mission, should they choose to accept it,
is to play five compact discs in a row uninterrupted. On the left, we have
a Sony CDP-C235, which accomplishes its mission in a completely ordinary and mundane fashion.
On the right is a Pioneer CLD-M301.
And it has a little robot inside to help it along.
The Sony machine uses a boring ol' carousel to do its work. When you press eject, after
making a startling amount of creaking noises, the drawer opens with a single CD front and center.
Pressing Disc Skip spins the circular inner portion 72 degrees to present you with
the next disc. Each depression for a disc is handily marked in stylish print.
(Just in case the vacuum fluorescent display wasn't enough.)
Pressing eject on the Pioneer machine presents you with this monstrous and confusing tray,
littered with tiny little markings, details, and indentations. At least you can see all
the discs at once, I guess. But wait. There's a 6th spot in the middle. And what's with
all the little felt pads everywhere? Also, this is just one solid piece of plastic. How's
the machine supposed to select a disc if it can't move? Ah, well that explains the robot.
The machine from Pioneer isn't just a CD player. It's also a Laserdisc player. Now
if you don't know what Laserdiscs are, you must be pretty new here, as I've made an
entire exhaustive series on the format which should be appearing in the corner pretty soon.
I'll warn you, it's a long series.
In two sentences Laserdiscs were the first
consumer optical disc, released in test markets at the tail of 1978 and therefore beating
the CD by nearly 4 years. These 12 inch--
a little late there, are we?--
These 12 inch discs contain up to an hour of near-DVD quality analog video per side, and although they stuck
around until the first year of the new millenium, their market penetration in North America
was an abysmal 2% at its peak which probably explains why you haven't heard of them before,
if you haven't.
OK that last sentence was a bit of a runon.
The Compact Disc, released in 1982, was a near-immediate success (unlike Laserdisc).
By 1984, Pioneer was making Laserdisc players that could also play CDs. They wanted in on
that action, and some executive (probably) wisely thought, why not make a twofer, and
maybe spur along the sales of Laserdisc. Sadly it didn't really help the sales of Laserdisc,
but by the early nineties, the Compact Disc was all the rage. How lame you were if you
didn't have a CD player by the time Home Improvement hit the airwaves.
Not long into the first years of being on the market, the CD changer was developed to
allow for playing multiple discs at once. I couldn't find any info on exactly when
the first CD changers were released, but I can tell you that 1991 seems to have been
a pretty important year as this was the first year Pioneer made a machine like this. Not
wanting to miss out on the new wave of CD changers, Pioneer decided, by golly, we can
squeeze that into a Laserdisc player!
And they did! And this is the result. Now, Pioneer faced a bit of an odd problem when
designing a combo CD changer and Laserdisc player.
See in CD changers like this Sony,
the actual CD reader is shoved in a corner inside the machine. The CDs themselves are
brought to it when the carousel turns. But that can't be done in this machine because
it also needs to be able to play a Laserdisc. For this machine, the actual disc transport
has to be in the center.
So Pioneer, the manufacturer brave enough to design a little ferris wheel to lift the
laser to the top side of a Laserdisc to allow for laying both sides of a single disc, decided
to just use a robotic arm to pick up the disc and bring it to the center. Why not?
Take a look at this in action. This spot here is disc 1. Watch what it does.
(various mechanical sounds)
OK, that's pretty impressive. Now let's select disc 5 over here.
(more various mechanical sounds)
I love how this machine works, but it's hard to get a good view
of what exactly it's doing. Nothing a screwdriver can't fix!
At first glance, this may not look like much.
This black plastic circle functions as the upper clamp.
In many optical disc drives, the spindle motor works with a piece like this
to actually clamp the disc down as it spins. Together, they essentially form an optical
disc sandwich. Usually these clamps are pretty loose and spin freely, and sure enough…
so does this one. But you'd be wrong to think this is any ordinary optical drive disc
clamp. This is in fact how the player picks up the CDs.
If I start turning this drive belt by hand, you'll see that the clamp moves towards
the end of the arm where it would be positioned above a CD. But once it stops, if I keep turning
eventually these three little fingers will pop out here. These hold on to a CD through the center hole.
Holding a CD from the center meant that even the 80mm mini cd was compatible.
Rather ingeniously, the fingers lock in place once the motor reaches its end stop.
When the motor is reversed, the disc clamp returns to the center, bringing the disc along with it.
Only when it's back to the center and the motor keeps spinning further do the fingers
retract into the clamp and let the disc go. At this point it can play the disc.
When it's time to put the disc back, the player will first reverse the motor even farther,
which re-engages and locks the fingers. Then it spins forward and travels to the end, with
the fingers locked in place the whole time. This time, running the motor beyond its end
stop disengages the fingers, which lets go of the disc, and then reversing the motor
brings it back to the center.
I'm glad I took this apart because it revealed a very elegant simplicity to this mechanism.
Notice how the drive gear engages with this track. At each end, the track is fragmented.
These sections here can actually move when this pin is released, and are pulled by the
same motor which moves the grabby clamper. These plastic hook things are what actually
engage and disengage the fingers that hold the disc, and they're attached to these
small moveable sections of track. When the clamp reaches the end of its travel, it hits
the lock pin which frees the small track section and allows it to move. But ingeniously, by
this point the drive gear is already off the stationary track segment, meaning the gear
is only engaged with the moveable piece. With the small section of track now free to move,
the motor works to pull it towards the clamp, which pulls the hook thing along with it.
This pushes or pulls on small tabs above the clamp, and these extend or retract the disc
grabbing fingers. When the motor reverses direction, it first pushes the track back
to it's normal position where it locks in place, and after the track has stopped moving
and locked in, the gear can now move the disc clamp along the track.
Arranging the track like this allowed for a single motor to move the clamp and engage
the fingers. This is really genius engineering in my humble opinion. It echoes the both side
play mechanism from the CLD-D502--the same motor which moves the laser along the rails
sends it to the top, too. You can see the tracking gear spinning as it reaches the top.
At the end of its travel, it engages with the linear teeth here to move the laser towards
the center of the disc. By the way, I'm pretty sure these could be considered rack
and pinion systems, with this the rack and that the pinion.
As cool as this machine is, it suffers from being both a sub-par Laserdisc player as well
as a sub-par CD changer.
Let's put the Disc Grabber 9000™ back in place and compare
operation of these two machines.
When compared to a carousel CD changer, the Pioneer machine is significantly slower to
change discs. Let's do a race. We'll switch from disc one to disc 2 on both machines.
(even more various mechanical noises)
Yeah that wasn't even close. Also, the Sony machine
has the advantage of being able to spin the carousel backwards. If you want to go from
disc 1 to disc 5, the Sony machine will simply rotate counterclockwise and get straight to
disc 5. The Pioneer has to travel all the way around to do the same thing. The farthest
the Sony machine ever has to travel is 2 spaces away, whereas the Pioneer will always have
to travel the relative distance between discs. However you could argue that the Pioneer machine
is more convenient to load up, so long as the convoluted tray isn't a bother, as you
have access to all 5 discs at once.
Oh, but the Sony does have a neat party trick courtesy of its disc tray. You might have
noticed that the access cutouts for the laser transport are slanted. This is to allow for
the disc ex-change system. The Sony will allow you to swap out the other 4 discs while it's playing the fifth.
The recess for whichever disc is in the back left corner has its cutout
go straight back and lines up with the reader mechanism, allowing room for the laser carriage
to travel beneath it. This means that the disc tray can move outward while it holds
on to the disc it's playing. The machine is even smart enough to present the discs
two at a time, so that you never even see the spot for the disc it's currently playing.
Though often times it has to do a bit of a shuffle to reassure itself what position its
actually in before it closes the tray.
Aside from this feature, the Sony is just overall better at being a CD changer. Its
faster, the display is far more comprehensive and there are many more controls on the machine
itself. Perhaps most importantly, it's a heck of a lot quieter. Pioneer again used clever
cost saving and simple engineering, and the machine uses the same motor that drives the
disc tray for lifting and lowering the disc grabber thing. Again I admire the simplicity,
but that motor is loud! And because of the way it operates, it makes a plethora of distinct
noises and in general is just bizarre sounding.
(A plethora of distinct, bizarre sounding noises)
By the way, the Sony machine isn't a goodwill find, it was the CD player I grew
up with. It's always made that creaking sound.
(pronounced creaking sound as the disc is lowered)
But its still far less intrusive than all this nonsense.
(yet still more various, bizarre, distinct mechanical noises)
So then, how does it do as a Laserdisc player? Well, it's not bad. There's nothing inherently
wrong with its performance, although there are plenty of players with better video performance.
And they combined the CD changing aspect into it rather well. Pioneer actually marketed
the fact that you can leave your favorite CDs in place when you want to play a Laserdisc.
Also perhaps less known is that you can place a 6th CD in the center which it will play,
but it does prevent using the changer. But this means you can leave your 5 favorites
in place, and play a 6th disc individually. I can actually see the appeal for that.
But what the CD changer makes impossible is a both-side play mechanism. There simply is
no way to fit the top rails for the laser and this robot thing in the same case without
extensive modification of both systems. You can see that the construction of these machines
is very similar, with the one on the right having a both side play mechanism rather than
a disc changer. I think the only way to combine these two systems together would be to stack
them and design a claw-machine like apparatus to grab a CD through this space. Even if they
pulled it off, the machine would likely be hideously expensive and comically tall.
So, to buy this machine means getting a less-than-ideal Laserdisc player and a less-than-ideal CD
changer. Now, I understand that there were plenty of single side machines being sold
that didn't even have a CD changer inside. Both Side Play was really a high-end item.
But then you have to ask, is its clunky CD changer worth it?
To that, I'd say yeah...
This was a pretty clever move by Pioneer. They seem to have
priced this model just a hundred dollars higher than a basic Laserdisc player.
Abe's of Maine apparently wanted just seventy bucks more for it over a CLD-S201, a basic Laserdisc
player. That made it significantly cheaper than buying two devices. But, and this is
a BIG but, it was still more than double the price of a basic CD changer. In fact, it's
more expensive than ANY of these CD changers, including the Sony CDP-C910 which accommodates
10 CDs in a cartridge magazine.
I think Pioneer's intent with these machines was to try and ride the wave of the CD changer
and spur sales of Laserdiscs at the same time. Laserdisc did receive a bit of a boom in the
late 80's and early 90's as the home theater scene came into light. If someone was looking
for a CD changer, why not take a look at a machine that can play Laserdiscs, too?
But I'm sure it was still a hard sell. And not just because of the price. Unless you
had already integrated your TV into your home stereo, having a CD player hooked into your
TV isn't exactly ideal. I suppose it's nice, but it won't sound great. That said,
this player does produce a neat graphic on screen when changing discs. Yipee.
Oh, and one last unsettling thing. Laserdisc are heavy and spin at very high speeds--up
to 30 revolutions per second, or 1,800 RPM. I am not a fan of how close the disc changing
mechanism is to the disc's surface. That sharp metal thing is awfully close to that
scratchable disc. In fact, this machine has the tightest clearances I've ever seen in
a Laserdisc player. With a Laserdisc playing above a tray full of CDs, it's not even
a centimeter above them. That's a tad scary.
Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoyed this video. If this is your first time running
across the channel and you like what you saw, please consider subscribing! And a big thank
you to everyone who's subscribed. This channel just passed 100,000 subscribers! I never really
thought that would happen, and I'm truly blown away. The folks on Patreon deserve huge
thanks for making that possible--it's with your support that I've been able to go part
time at work and make videos more regularly. Without that, I'm sure this wouldn't have
happened. If you'd like to become one of the awesome people who make this channel possible,
please check out my Patreon page. There's a link on your screen, or you can find it
down below in the description. As always, thanks for your consideration,
and I'll see you next time.
(sound of the Disc Grabber 9000™ traveling back and forth)
-------------------------------------------
18 Trailer | Pilot Theatre - Duration: 1:22.Hi, my name is Eleanor.
I'm 17 and I live in York.
So, I'm Eva.
I live in York.
My name is Lauryn, this is my introduction for the 18 project.
I would say that I am going to miss being a teenager
and being able to experience things as a teenager.
To me, being an adult means being able to do what you want to do without being told
that you can't because you're a child.
You are old enough to have that responsibility to take care of yourself.
You're also not at that point where you don't have a safety net.
It means a lot of responsibility because you've got to worry
about money a lot more than you did as a kid.
You've got to worry about where the next paycheck is coming from.
I'm also nervous to turn 18.
I'm nervous to become an adult.
-------------------------------------------
Por Amar sin Ley | Elena casi descubre a Ricardo y Alejandra muy amorosos - Duration: 1:29.-------------------------------------------
Carlo Conti e il ritorno a l'Eredità dopo la morte di Frizzi | M.C.G.S - Duration: 2:38.-------------------------------------------
Wissenswertes über Wasser in Plastikflaschen 2 - Duration: 1:42.-------------------------------------------
Police Car | Formation And Uses | Cartoons For Babies by Kids Channel - Duration: 11:41.Police Car
-------------------------------------------
Opel KARL 1.0 Start/Stop 75pk Innovation - Duration: 0:59.-------------------------------------------
L'Isola dei famosi, eliminati Jonathan e Francesca Cipriani? | Wind Zuiden - Duration: 3:32.-------------------------------------------
Wissenswertes über Wasser in Plastikflaschen 1 - Duration: 4:01.-------------------------------------------
Silvia Provvedi per ora ha detto no al matrimonio con Corona | M.C.G.S - Duration: 3:44.-------------------------------------------
Anticipazioni Uomini e donne, la scelta di Nicolò: scoppia la bufera | Wind Zuiden - Duration: 3:26.-------------------------------------------
Opel KARL 1.0, 75pk Innovation ** Nieuw / Euro 2.000,- korting ** - Duration: 1:01.-------------------------------------------
Isola dei Famosi: notizie ufficiali sulla situazione di Franco | Wind Zuiden - Duration: 3:27.-------------------------------------------
L'Isola dei famosi 2018, Franco è stato squalificato o no? Ecco le novità | Wind Zuiden - Duration: 3:26.-------------------------------------------
Anticipazioni Uomini e donne, la scelta di Nicolò: scoppia la bufera | Wind Zuiden - Duration: 3:26.-------------------------------------------
ChuChu TV Baby Shark ABC ...-------------------------------------------
The CD Player with a Robot Inside: Pioneer CLD-M301 - Duration: 13:45.These two machines both have the same primary mission.
Their mission, should they choose to accept it,
is to play five compact discs in a row uninterrupted. On the left, we have
a Sony CDP-C235, which accomplishes its mission in a completely ordinary and mundane fashion.
On the right is a Pioneer CLD-M301.
And it has a little robot inside to help it along.
The Sony machine uses a boring ol' carousel to do its work. When you press eject, after
making a startling amount of creaking noises, the drawer opens with a single CD front and center.
Pressing Disc Skip spins the circular inner portion 72 degrees to present you with
the next disc. Each depression for a disc is handily marked in stylish print.
(Just in case the vacuum fluorescent display wasn't enough.)
Pressing eject on the Pioneer machine presents you with this monstrous and confusing tray,
littered with tiny little markings, details, and indentations. At least you can see all
the discs at once, I guess. But wait. There's a 6th spot in the middle. And what's with
all the little felt pads everywhere? Also, this is just one solid piece of plastic. How's
the machine supposed to select a disc if it can't move? Ah, well that explains the robot.
The machine from Pioneer isn't just a CD player. It's also a Laserdisc player. Now
if you don't know what Laserdiscs are, you must be pretty new here, as I've made an
entire exhaustive series on the format which should be appearing in the corner pretty soon.
I'll warn you, it's a long series.
In two sentences Laserdiscs were the first
consumer optical disc, released in test markets at the tail of 1978 and therefore beating
the CD by nearly 4 years. These 12 inch--
a little late there, are we?--
These 12 inch discs contain up to an hour of near-DVD quality analog video per side, and although they stuck
around until the first year of the new millenium, their market penetration in North America
was an abysmal 2% at its peak which probably explains why you haven't heard of them before,
if you haven't.
OK that last sentence was a bit of a runon.
The Compact Disc, released in 1982, was a near-immediate success (unlike Laserdisc).
By 1984, Pioneer was making Laserdisc players that could also play CDs. They wanted in on
that action, and some executive (probably) wisely thought, why not make a twofer, and
maybe spur along the sales of Laserdisc. Sadly it didn't really help the sales of Laserdisc,
but by the early nineties, the Compact Disc was all the rage. How lame you were if you
didn't have a CD player by the time Home Improvement hit the airwaves.
Not long into the first years of being on the market, the CD changer was developed to
allow for playing multiple discs at once. I couldn't find any info on exactly when
the first CD changers were released, but I can tell you that 1991 seems to have been
a pretty important year as this was the first year Pioneer made a machine like this. Not
wanting to miss out on the new wave of CD changers, Pioneer decided, by golly, we can
squeeze that into a Laserdisc player!
And they did! And this is the result. Now, Pioneer faced a bit of an odd problem when
designing a combo CD changer and Laserdisc player.
See in CD changers like this Sony,
the actual CD reader is shoved in a corner inside the machine. The CDs themselves are
brought to it when the carousel turns. But that can't be done in this machine because
it also needs to be able to play a Laserdisc. For this machine, the actual disc transport
has to be in the center.
So Pioneer, the manufacturer brave enough to design a little ferris wheel to lift the
laser to the top side of a Laserdisc to allow for laying both sides of a single disc, decided
to just use a robotic arm to pick up the disc and bring it to the center. Why not?
Take a look at this in action. This spot here is disc 1. Watch what it does.
(various mechanical sounds)
OK, that's pretty impressive. Now let's select disc 5 over here.
(more various mechanical sounds)
I love how this machine works, but it's hard to get a good view
of what exactly it's doing. Nothing a screwdriver can't fix!
At first glance, this may not look like much.
This black plastic circle functions as the upper clamp.
In many optical disc drives, the spindle motor works with a piece like this
to actually clamp the disc down as it spins. Together, they essentially form an optical
disc sandwich. Usually these clamps are pretty loose and spin freely, and sure enough…
so does this one. But you'd be wrong to think this is any ordinary optical drive disc
clamp. This is in fact how the player picks up the CDs.
If I start turning this drive belt by hand, you'll see that the clamp moves towards
the end of the arm where it would be positioned above a CD. But once it stops, if I keep turning
eventually these three little fingers will pop out here. These hold on to a CD through the center hole.
Holding a CD from the center meant that even the 80mm mini cd was compatible.
Rather ingeniously, the fingers lock in place once the motor reaches its end stop.
When the motor is reversed, the disc clamp returns to the center, bringing the disc along with it.
Only when it's back to the center and the motor keeps spinning further do the fingers
retract into the clamp and let the disc go. At this point it can play the disc.
When it's time to put the disc back, the player will first reverse the motor even farther,
which re-engages and locks the fingers. Then it spins forward and travels to the end, with
the fingers locked in place the whole time. This time, running the motor beyond its end
stop disengages the fingers, which lets go of the disc, and then reversing the motor
brings it back to the center.
I'm glad I took this apart because it revealed a very elegant simplicity to this mechanism.
Notice how the drive gear engages with this track. At each end, the track is fragmented.
These sections here can actually move when this pin is released, and are pulled by the
same motor which moves the grabby clamper. These plastic hook things are what actually
engage and disengage the fingers that hold the disc, and they're attached to these
small moveable sections of track. When the clamp reaches the end of its travel, it hits
the lock pin which frees the small track section and allows it to move. But ingeniously, by
this point the drive gear is already off the stationary track segment, meaning the gear
is only engaged with the moveable piece. With the small section of track now free to move,
the motor works to pull it towards the clamp, which pulls the hook thing along with it.
This pushes or pulls on small tabs above the clamp, and these extend or retract the disc
grabbing fingers. When the motor reverses direction, it first pushes the track back
to it's normal position where it locks in place, and after the track has stopped moving
and locked in, the gear can now move the disc clamp along the track.
Arranging the track like this allowed for a single motor to move the clamp and engage
the fingers. This is really genius engineering in my humble opinion. It echoes the both side
play mechanism from the CLD-D502--the same motor which moves the laser along the rails
sends it to the top, too. You can see the tracking gear spinning as it reaches the top.
At the end of its travel, it engages with the linear teeth here to move the laser towards
the center of the disc. By the way, I'm pretty sure these could be considered rack
and pinion systems, with this the rack and that the pinion.
As cool as this machine is, it suffers from being both a sub-par Laserdisc player as well
as a sub-par CD changer.
Let's put the Disc Grabber 9000™ back in place and compare
operation of these two machines.
When compared to a carousel CD changer, the Pioneer machine is significantly slower to
change discs. Let's do a race. We'll switch from disc one to disc 2 on both machines.
(even more various mechanical noises)
Yeah that wasn't even close. Also, the Sony machine
has the advantage of being able to spin the carousel backwards. If you want to go from
disc 1 to disc 5, the Sony machine will simply rotate counterclockwise and get straight to
disc 5. The Pioneer has to travel all the way around to do the same thing. The farthest
the Sony machine ever has to travel is 2 spaces away, whereas the Pioneer will always have
to travel the relative distance between discs. However you could argue that the Pioneer machine
is more convenient to load up, so long as the convoluted tray isn't a bother, as you
have access to all 5 discs at once.
Oh, but the Sony does have a neat party trick courtesy of its disc tray. You might have
noticed that the access cutouts for the laser transport are slanted. This is to allow for
the disc ex-change system. The Sony will allow you to swap out the other 4 discs while it's playing the fifth.
The recess for whichever disc is in the back left corner has its cutout
go straight back and lines up with the reader mechanism, allowing room for the laser carriage
to travel beneath it. This means that the disc tray can move outward while it holds
on to the disc it's playing. The machine is even smart enough to present the discs
two at a time, so that you never even see the spot for the disc it's currently playing.
Though often times it has to do a bit of a shuffle to reassure itself what position its
actually in before it closes the tray.
Aside from this feature, the Sony is just overall better at being a CD changer. Its
faster, the display is far more comprehensive and there are many more controls on the machine
itself. Perhaps most importantly, it's a heck of a lot quieter. Pioneer again used clever
cost saving and simple engineering, and the machine uses the same motor that drives the
disc tray for lifting and lowering the disc grabber thing. Again I admire the simplicity,
but that motor is loud! And because of the way it operates, it makes a plethora of distinct
noises and in general is just bizarre sounding.
(A plethora of distinct, bizarre sounding noises)
By the way, the Sony machine isn't a goodwill find, it was the CD player I grew
up with. It's always made that creaking sound.
(pronounced creaking sound as the disc is lowered)
But its still far less intrusive than all this nonsense.
(yet still more various, bizarre, distinct mechanical noises)
So then, how does it do as a Laserdisc player? Well, it's not bad. There's nothing inherently
wrong with its performance, although there are plenty of players with better video performance.
And they combined the CD changing aspect into it rather well. Pioneer actually marketed
the fact that you can leave your favorite CDs in place when you want to play a Laserdisc.
Also perhaps less known is that you can place a 6th CD in the center which it will play,
but it does prevent using the changer. But this means you can leave your 5 favorites
in place, and play a 6th disc individually. I can actually see the appeal for that.
But what the CD changer makes impossible is a both-side play mechanism. There simply is
no way to fit the top rails for the laser and this robot thing in the same case without
extensive modification of both systems. You can see that the construction of these machines
is very similar, with the one on the right having a both side play mechanism rather than
a disc changer. I think the only way to combine these two systems together would be to stack
them and design a claw-machine like apparatus to grab a CD through this space. Even if they
pulled it off, the machine would likely be hideously expensive and comically tall.
So, to buy this machine means getting a less-than-ideal Laserdisc player and a less-than-ideal CD
changer. Now, I understand that there were plenty of single side machines being sold
that didn't even have a CD changer inside. Both Side Play was really a high-end item.
But then you have to ask, is its clunky CD changer worth it?
To that, I'd say yeah...
This was a pretty clever move by Pioneer. They seem to have
priced this model just a hundred dollars higher than a basic Laserdisc player.
Abe's of Maine apparently wanted just seventy bucks more for it over a CLD-S201, a basic Laserdisc
player. That made it significantly cheaper than buying two devices. But, and this is
a BIG but, it was still more than double the price of a basic CD changer. In fact, it's
more expensive than ANY of these CD changers, including the Sony CDP-C910 which accommodates
10 CDs in a cartridge magazine.
I think Pioneer's intent with these machines was to try and ride the wave of the CD changer
and spur sales of Laserdiscs at the same time. Laserdisc did receive a bit of a boom in the
late 80's and early 90's as the home theater scene came into light. If someone was looking
for a CD changer, why not take a look at a machine that can play Laserdiscs, too?
But I'm sure it was still a hard sell. And not just because of the price. Unless you
had already integrated your TV into your home stereo, having a CD player hooked into your
TV isn't exactly ideal. I suppose it's nice, but it won't sound great. That said,
this player does produce a neat graphic on screen when changing discs. Yipee.
Oh, and one last unsettling thing. Laserdisc are heavy and spin at very high speeds--up
to 30 revolutions per second, or 1,800 RPM. I am not a fan of how close the disc changing
mechanism is to the disc's surface. That sharp metal thing is awfully close to that
scratchable disc. In fact, this machine has the tightest clearances I've ever seen in
a Laserdisc player. With a Laserdisc playing above a tray full of CDs, it's not even
a centimeter above them. That's a tad scary.
Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoyed this video. If this is your first time running
across the channel and you like what you saw, please consider subscribing! And a big thank
you to everyone who's subscribed. This channel just passed 100,000 subscribers! I never really
thought that would happen, and I'm truly blown away. The folks on Patreon deserve huge
thanks for making that possible--it's with your support that I've been able to go part
time at work and make videos more regularly. Without that, I'm sure this wouldn't have
happened. If you'd like to become one of the awesome people who make this channel possible,
please check out my Patreon page. There's a link on your screen, or you can find it
down below in the description. As always, thanks for your consideration,
and I'll see you next time.
(sound of the Disc Grabber 9000™ traveling back and forth)
-------------------------------------------
НТКЗЯ - Действуй всегда сразу! | Никогда Не откладывай на потом! - Duration: 3:25.-------------------------------------------
Free "Sinister" 21 Savage Ty...-------------------------------------------
Medytacja Pisma Świętego - Jak wyjść z grobu? [#J 20,1-9] - dla niesłyszących (j. migowy) - Duration: 1:06:44.-------------------------------------------
The Name Your Moons Challenge Ep.4/Planet JUPITER/For kids - Duration: 2:12.Welcome Back to the "Name your Moons Challenge!"
I'm your host, The Sun.
Today, Jupiter will try to name all 69 of his moons!
That's a lot of names.
Good Luck Buddy!
Ganymede, Isonoe, Europa, Io, Herse, Kore,
Kallichore , Themisto Sinope, Leda , Callisto
Erinome, Adrastea, Eurydome, Amalthea
Metis, Euporie, Chaldene, Kalyke, Thebe, Cyllene
Hegemony, Carpo , Mneme, Hermippe, Elara, Carme
Iocaste, Pasiphaë, Aoede, Praxidike,
Helike, Kale, Callirrhoe, Megaclite, Orthosie
Eukelade, Arche, Pasithee, Dia, Sponde, Taygete,
Thelxinoe, Euanthe, Autonoe, Ananke,
Thyone, Aitne, Lysithea, Harpalyke, Himalia
Jupiter L1, Jupiter L2 I think that's all I have to do
These are all the moons I've met Plus 16 more without names yet.
Uhh…
Aren't you going to list your 16 provisional moons?
They're just numbers.
How hard could it be?
Sigh...
S/2003 J2, S/2003 J3
S/2003 J4, S/2003 J5
S/2003 J9, S/2003 J10
S/2003 J12, S/2003 J15
S/2003 J16, S/2003 J18
S/2003 J19, S/2003 J23
S/2011 J1, S/2011 J2
S/2016 J1, S/2017 J1
YEAH!
That was awesome Jupiter!
You Rock!
That's all for today!
See you all next time on the Name your Moons Challenge!
Bye!
-------------------------------------------
The CD Player with a Robot Inside: Pioneer CLD-M301 - Duration: 13:45.These two machines both have the same primary mission.
Their mission, should they choose to accept it,
is to play five compact discs in a row uninterrupted. On the left, we have
a Sony CDP-C235, which accomplishes its mission in a completely ordinary and mundane fashion.
On the right is a Pioneer CLD-M301.
And it has a little robot inside to help it along.
The Sony machine uses a boring ol' carousel to do its work. When you press eject, after
making a startling amount of creaking noises, the drawer opens with a single CD front and center.
Pressing Disc Skip spins the circular inner portion 72 degrees to present you with
the next disc. Each depression for a disc is handily marked in stylish print.
(Just in case the vacuum fluorescent display wasn't enough.)
Pressing eject on the Pioneer machine presents you with this monstrous and confusing tray,
littered with tiny little markings, details, and indentations. At least you can see all
the discs at once, I guess. But wait. There's a 6th spot in the middle. And what's with
all the little felt pads everywhere? Also, this is just one solid piece of plastic. How's
the machine supposed to select a disc if it can't move? Ah, well that explains the robot.
The machine from Pioneer isn't just a CD player. It's also a Laserdisc player. Now
if you don't know what Laserdiscs are, you must be pretty new here, as I've made an
entire exhaustive series on the format which should be appearing in the corner pretty soon.
I'll warn you, it's a long series.
In two sentences Laserdiscs were the first
consumer optical disc, released in test markets at the tail of 1978 and therefore beating
the CD by nearly 4 years. These 12 inch--
a little late there, are we?--
These 12 inch discs contain up to an hour of near-DVD quality analog video per side, and although they stuck
around until the first year of the new millenium, their market penetration in North America
was an abysmal 2% at its peak which probably explains why you haven't heard of them before,
if you haven't.
OK that last sentence was a bit of a runon.
The Compact Disc, released in 1982, was a near-immediate success (unlike Laserdisc).
By 1984, Pioneer was making Laserdisc players that could also play CDs. They wanted in on
that action, and some executive (probably) wisely thought, why not make a twofer, and
maybe spur along the sales of Laserdisc. Sadly it didn't really help the sales of Laserdisc,
but by the early nineties, the Compact Disc was all the rage. How lame you were if you
didn't have a CD player by the time Home Improvement hit the airwaves.
Not long into the first years of being on the market, the CD changer was developed to
allow for playing multiple discs at once. I couldn't find any info on exactly when
the first CD changers were released, but I can tell you that 1991 seems to have been
a pretty important year as this was the first year Pioneer made a machine like this. Not
wanting to miss out on the new wave of CD changers, Pioneer decided, by golly, we can
squeeze that into a Laserdisc player!
And they did! And this is the result. Now, Pioneer faced a bit of an odd problem when
designing a combo CD changer and Laserdisc player.
See in CD changers like this Sony,
the actual CD reader is shoved in a corner inside the machine. The CDs themselves are
brought to it when the carousel turns. But that can't be done in this machine because
it also needs to be able to play a Laserdisc. For this machine, the actual disc transport
has to be in the center.
So Pioneer, the manufacturer brave enough to design a little ferris wheel to lift the
laser to the top side of a Laserdisc to allow for laying both sides of a single disc, decided
to just use a robotic arm to pick up the disc and bring it to the center. Why not?
Take a look at this in action. This spot here is disc 1. Watch what it does.
(various mechanical sounds)
OK, that's pretty impressive. Now let's select disc 5 over here.
(more various mechanical sounds)
I love how this machine works, but it's hard to get a good view
of what exactly it's doing. Nothing a screwdriver can't fix!
At first glance, this may not look like much.
This black plastic circle functions as the upper clamp.
In many optical disc drives, the spindle motor works with a piece like this
to actually clamp the disc down as it spins. Together, they essentially form an optical
disc sandwich. Usually these clamps are pretty loose and spin freely, and sure enough…
so does this one. But you'd be wrong to think this is any ordinary optical drive disc
clamp. This is in fact how the player picks up the CDs.
If I start turning this drive belt by hand, you'll see that the clamp moves towards
the end of the arm where it would be positioned above a CD. But once it stops, if I keep turning
eventually these three little fingers will pop out here. These hold on to a CD through the center hole.
Holding a CD from the center meant that even the 80mm mini cd was compatible.
Rather ingeniously, the fingers lock in place once the motor reaches its end stop.
When the motor is reversed, the disc clamp returns to the center, bringing the disc along with it.
Only when it's back to the center and the motor keeps spinning further do the fingers
retract into the clamp and let the disc go. At this point it can play the disc.
When it's time to put the disc back, the player will first reverse the motor even farther,
which re-engages and locks the fingers. Then it spins forward and travels to the end, with
the fingers locked in place the whole time. This time, running the motor beyond its end
stop disengages the fingers, which lets go of the disc, and then reversing the motor
brings it back to the center.
I'm glad I took this apart because it revealed a very elegant simplicity to this mechanism.
Notice how the drive gear engages with this track. At each end, the track is fragmented.
These sections here can actually move when this pin is released, and are pulled by the
same motor which moves the grabby clamper. These plastic hook things are what actually
engage and disengage the fingers that hold the disc, and they're attached to these
small moveable sections of track. When the clamp reaches the end of its travel, it hits
the lock pin which frees the small track section and allows it to move. But ingeniously, by
this point the drive gear is already off the stationary track segment, meaning the gear
is only engaged with the moveable piece. With the small section of track now free to move,
the motor works to pull it towards the clamp, which pulls the hook thing along with it.
This pushes or pulls on small tabs above the clamp, and these extend or retract the disc
grabbing fingers. When the motor reverses direction, it first pushes the track back
to it's normal position where it locks in place, and after the track has stopped moving
and locked in, the gear can now move the disc clamp along the track.
Arranging the track like this allowed for a single motor to move the clamp and engage
the fingers. This is really genius engineering in my humble opinion. It echoes the both side
play mechanism from the CLD-D502--the same motor which moves the laser along the rails
sends it to the top, too. You can see the tracking gear spinning as it reaches the top.
At the end of its travel, it engages with the linear teeth here to move the laser towards
the center of the disc. By the way, I'm pretty sure these could be considered rack
and pinion systems, with this the rack and that the pinion.
As cool as this machine is, it suffers from being both a sub-par Laserdisc player as well
as a sub-par CD changer.
Let's put the Disc Grabber 9000™ back in place and compare
operation of these two machines.
When compared to a carousel CD changer, the Pioneer machine is significantly slower to
change discs. Let's do a race. We'll switch from disc one to disc 2 on both machines.
(even more various mechanical noises)
Yeah that wasn't even close. Also, the Sony machine
has the advantage of being able to spin the carousel backwards. If you want to go from
disc 1 to disc 5, the Sony machine will simply rotate counterclockwise and get straight to
disc 5. The Pioneer has to travel all the way around to do the same thing. The farthest
the Sony machine ever has to travel is 2 spaces away, whereas the Pioneer will always have
to travel the relative distance between discs. However you could argue that the Pioneer machine
is more convenient to load up, so long as the convoluted tray isn't a bother, as you
have access to all 5 discs at once.
Oh, but the Sony does have a neat party trick courtesy of its disc tray. You might have
noticed that the access cutouts for the laser transport are slanted. This is to allow for
the disc ex-change system. The Sony will allow you to swap out the other 4 discs while it's playing the fifth.
The recess for whichever disc is in the back left corner has its cutout
go straight back and lines up with the reader mechanism, allowing room for the laser carriage
to travel beneath it. This means that the disc tray can move outward while it holds
on to the disc it's playing. The machine is even smart enough to present the discs
two at a time, so that you never even see the spot for the disc it's currently playing.
Though often times it has to do a bit of a shuffle to reassure itself what position its
actually in before it closes the tray.
Aside from this feature, the Sony is just overall better at being a CD changer. Its
faster, the display is far more comprehensive and there are many more controls on the machine
itself. Perhaps most importantly, it's a heck of a lot quieter. Pioneer again used clever
cost saving and simple engineering, and the machine uses the same motor that drives the
disc tray for lifting and lowering the disc grabber thing. Again I admire the simplicity,
but that motor is loud! And because of the way it operates, it makes a plethora of distinct
noises and in general is just bizarre sounding.
(A plethora of distinct, bizarre sounding noises)
By the way, the Sony machine isn't a goodwill find, it was the CD player I grew
up with. It's always made that creaking sound.
(pronounced creaking sound as the disc is lowered)
But its still far less intrusive than all this nonsense.
(yet still more various, bizarre, distinct mechanical noises)
So then, how does it do as a Laserdisc player? Well, it's not bad. There's nothing inherently
wrong with its performance, although there are plenty of players with better video performance.
And they combined the CD changing aspect into it rather well. Pioneer actually marketed
the fact that you can leave your favorite CDs in place when you want to play a Laserdisc.
Also perhaps less known is that you can place a 6th CD in the center which it will play,
but it does prevent using the changer. But this means you can leave your 5 favorites
in place, and play a 6th disc individually. I can actually see the appeal for that.
But what the CD changer makes impossible is a both-side play mechanism. There simply is
no way to fit the top rails for the laser and this robot thing in the same case without
extensive modification of both systems. You can see that the construction of these machines
is very similar, with the one on the right having a both side play mechanism rather than
a disc changer. I think the only way to combine these two systems together would be to stack
them and design a claw-machine like apparatus to grab a CD through this space. Even if they
pulled it off, the machine would likely be hideously expensive and comically tall.
So, to buy this machine means getting a less-than-ideal Laserdisc player and a less-than-ideal CD
changer. Now, I understand that there were plenty of single side machines being sold
that didn't even have a CD changer inside. Both Side Play was really a high-end item.
But then you have to ask, is its clunky CD changer worth it?
To that, I'd say yeah...
This was a pretty clever move by Pioneer. They seem to have
priced this model just a hundred dollars higher than a basic Laserdisc player.
Abe's of Maine apparently wanted just seventy bucks more for it over a CLD-S201, a basic Laserdisc
player. That made it significantly cheaper than buying two devices. But, and this is
a BIG but, it was still more than double the price of a basic CD changer. In fact, it's
more expensive than ANY of these CD changers, including the Sony CDP-C910 which accommodates
10 CDs in a cartridge magazine.
I think Pioneer's intent with these machines was to try and ride the wave of the CD changer
and spur sales of Laserdiscs at the same time. Laserdisc did receive a bit of a boom in the
late 80's and early 90's as the home theater scene came into light. If someone was looking
for a CD changer, why not take a look at a machine that can play Laserdiscs, too?
But I'm sure it was still a hard sell. And not just because of the price. Unless you
had already integrated your TV into your home stereo, having a CD player hooked into your
TV isn't exactly ideal. I suppose it's nice, but it won't sound great. That said,
this player does produce a neat graphic on screen when changing discs. Yipee.
Oh, and one last unsettling thing. Laserdisc are heavy and spin at very high speeds--up
to 30 revolutions per second, or 1,800 RPM. I am not a fan of how close the disc changing
mechanism is to the disc's surface. That sharp metal thing is awfully close to that
scratchable disc. In fact, this machine has the tightest clearances I've ever seen in
a Laserdisc player. With a Laserdisc playing above a tray full of CDs, it's not even
a centimeter above them. That's a tad scary.
Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoyed this video. If this is your first time running
across the channel and you like what you saw, please consider subscribing! And a big thank
you to everyone who's subscribed. This channel just passed 100,000 subscribers! I never really
thought that would happen, and I'm truly blown away. The folks on Patreon deserve huge
thanks for making that possible--it's with your support that I've been able to go part
time at work and make videos more regularly. Without that, I'm sure this wouldn't have
happened. If you'd like to become one of the awesome people who make this channel possible,
please check out my Patreon page. There's a link on your screen, or you can find it
down below in the description. As always, thanks for your consideration,
and I'll see you next time.
(sound of the Disc Grabber 9000™ traveling back and forth)
-------------------------------------------
How To Trade Penny Stocks with Confidence - Duration: 6:25.-------------------------------------------
SEARCHING MY KITTEN - Duration: 5:09.Hi Fans, today we let's meet with a special video
so, I lost my kitten. I'll explain you, every mornings I am
awake by kitten who scratching at the door and coming say me ''hello''
I'm alone at home and I needed 2hours and 30 mintues
for see me ''Minou'' is not here
I searched everywhere
for be sure she isn't here fore don't be stupid before searching her outside
I searched everyhere, in the garden. If you want we can looking again
I don't see footprints. Hopefully there is snow for see if..
I slippe with the snow
Hopefully, there is snow for see the footprints and follow her
You'll gonna say ''it's a kitten, she can find her way'' but
we'll leave tonight at Lethbridge, so if we don't find her before
she is gonna staying 3-4 days outside
she never been outside before
I am pretty sure the most people think I am stupid to searching my kitten
But I like her, she's so a friendly, she makes me hugs!
So I l searched everywhere before we leaving for don't going outside for nothing
and find her after on the stairs and asks me ''hi, what are you doing?''
We going to an adventure to searching Minou
I am a fan of Sherlock Holmes so I like making videos like that
We going outisde, the footprints come back on the road here.
the babies footprints leads here
I'm afraid 'cause after the plain
there is a road and she never been at roads. Here it's a neighborhood
there is not much cars here or they drive very slowly
but at the road.. and I'm afraid it's
canadian decided to adopt her ''nooo''
so the footprints pass to..
a tree..
I seeing the footprints pass close of the trees
so I gonna going arnoud
I am going to sink for a kitten!!!
You know what, I going to the trees where the kitten walks
because she was smart and not walked in the snow
If I find her, I'll kill her. (kidding)
I just came here, but there's a lot of footprints but her prints
are very more ''fresh'' than the others so, It's going this way!
it's going to the people's house, what am I doing?
The footprints don't go further. It's very stop at the people's house..
What am I doing? I"m not gonna asking ''hello did you saw my kitten?''
Imagine she's adopted by others canadian people
What am I supposed to do? Me too, if I find a kitten outside with the cold I adopt her
I can understand them..
She walked so far away, me too I can't find my way ... in fact where am I?
Voilà, I going back to my house
So, my Watson.
I wanted making a nice ambience with the fire but it make too much noises
So no thanks. I gonna end my video here, in my Sherlock's house.
If Minou come back I will say you, of course
and if she doesn't come back..
I lost my cat, I lost my cat.
If you find her, say me, say me.
(yeah in english the sentences look garbage)
3 days later
Hi Fans, we let's meet at.. the night.
my hoster mother said me, the neighborhood find the cat
so I going to catch her in them garden (trying to catch)
there is footprints here!
we don't find the cat, apparently she was in them garden
but she left. We put a rest of chicken in us garden to attract her
but for the moment we attract just a bunny, great..
it's been 4 days she's outside.. So we will see what happen
and finally
all it's good now
Minou came after 4 days outside in the cold
my neighborhood succeeded to catch her
So the research/mission Minou is done
I give you a lot of kisses and see you soon for new videos
Others cases waiting us Watson
-------------------------------------------
What happens when you start running? - Duration: 6:03.Hi, I'm Raquel Domínguez from www.operacionbikini.es and today I'm here to
talk to you about a very interesting topic What happens to your body when you start
run? Have you considered it? Be very attentive, they see you counting the
phases through which your body is going when you start running The first
week ... I'm not going to cheat you ... it's hard. Your body rebels and can be summarized in
a word holds. What is going to happen in your body? The first days
your mind is going to rebel and it's going to make it very difficult because it seems very
hard what you're doing, so, you have to pull strength of will and
motivation to tell your body that are you willing to keep running by
hard it be. At the organic level, if ever you've run before or if you've been around a lot
time without doing it, your body does not have your organs prepared to endure
a lot of time running so more has had a feeling of agony
respiratory and it seems that the heart it's going to come out of your chest. They also go to
appear muscle aches and pains, on all in the legs. If you expected
lose weight in a week I feel disappointed but it will not be like that,
the good news because your color yes it will improve, it will improve so much
the color of the skin like that of mucous membranes, because the circulation
blood is stimulated a lot. What happens during the first month? Well, if you have passed
the first weeks and you've reached your first month, things improve. To level
psychological the worst has already happened now you'll only think about running even if you
performance is not yet too much Well, do not be fooled, the good is
that the feeling of agony that you had at beginning will have decreased
considerably and you will begin to notice mental benefits of running
you will be happier One of the things you are most likely to notice
it's like your cardiorespiratory system improvement, you will feel that you can breathe
better and the pulse will no longer trigger so much. When you want to go faster
you can notice how your muscles are they collapse and that is due to the accumulation of
lactic acid in your legs, so you still can not run long
followed, take it easy. L bequests to this point surely already
you have lost enough volume not you worry if the scale does not tell you
You have lost weight but the volume sure is noticeable.
The first three months have already passed, How could this period be defined?
at this point you can already say that You are a runner.
I am convinced that you will already be leading a healthier lifestyle,
thanks to running take care of other aspects of your life as for example in the
feeding. In your body they are already many things happening, the most important thing
everything is that there has been a great improvement in lung capacity, too
there has been a great improvement in the cardiac capacity and finally also
there has been a great improvement in the liver capacity. Your liver is
becomes more efficient in the recycling of lactic acid circulating through the blood and
that makes it improve its efficiency to the time to burn fat, how cool no. But
do not come up because your body structures like bones
tendons and ligaments still not are ready to go faster and
maybe minutes if you want to go more fast of what is due
you start to notice pains and discomfort that they can end in injuries. Of course, at the
aesthetic will look like it's rejuvenated several years,
people are going to start telling you you see better
When about six months have passed since you've started your adventure
run, you can define everything in one Word, unstoppable, you feel unstoppable. TO
these heights running is already part of your life, you already know all the benefits that you
contributes and you understand why there is so much People hooked on this running. further
notes how you feel each time a lot best. At muscoskeletal level, your
joints already begin to get used to running after having
generated the adaptations that they need to better support the
career impacts. And at the level aesthetic, the legs will be more
toned and stylized, the abdomen has reduced considerably and the
fat page is generally noticed, so you will be great Before you give
realize that your first year will have passed running, well done. By now,
yes you can say you're done All a runner, you will really feel
well, almost like a superhero, you feel super fit and in your body have
past a lot of things, the pulsations at rest they have descended a lot, the
blood pressure too, the heart gets It has become much bigger and much more
effective to your mission to pump blood, the respiratory system has improved
amazing way and they disappear almost by complete those situations that you had at
principle that they made you pass so badly such as flatus, the sensation
to run out of air or that the heart it came out of your chest, that's something
past. In addition, your muscles have also improved
slow fevers have multiplied and also the number of mitochondria that
there are inside them, those mitochondria are ovens
combustion that make the muscle in a more efficient way so
Congratulations And on an aesthetic level, you you will feel great not only will you feel
in form you have also gotten your body remains stable despite
eat a lot. At this point, surely you think why I would not have started before
run. I hope you liked my video today,
if you liked it please do not stop giving it a like and share it and
remember that I'll be waiting for you in the next video I do not miss
bye bye
-------------------------------------------
《我是歌手》最后一场常规赛排名 - Duration: 3:44.-------------------------------------------
Qui est Rodolphe Manens, l'ex-aspirant de Laeticia Hallyday avant sa rencontre avec Johnny ? - Duration: 3:01.-------------------------------------------
Blac Chyna pète un plomb en présence de ses enfants et c'est violent ! - Duration: 2:03.-------------------------------------------
《歌手》赛程结束,7人决赛名单出炉,她的落选成今年最大遗憾! - Duration: 2:57.-------------------------------------------
Prince Harry et Meghan Markle : pourquoi ils n'ont pas assisté à la messe de Pâques avec la reine - Duration: 2:40.-------------------------------------------
Nathalie Baye dévoile un cliché d'elle enfant : sa fille Laura Smet est son portrait craché - Duration: 2:47.-------------------------------------------
Alexandra Rosenfeld sort une blague TRÈS osée sur Instagram - Duration: 2:10.-------------------------------------------
Angelina Jolie et Brad Pitt : leur divorce sera bientôt prononcé - Duration: 2:31.-------------------------------------------
ACCUEIL SECURITE POUR LES INTERIMAIRES - Duration: 4:46.-------------------------------------------
[FR] LE PLAY TROU M'A TUER (Divinity original sin 2 #11) - Duration: 1:15:09.-------------------------------------------
TRUMP SENDS IN THE FEDS – Dozens of Illegals Rounded Up, Arrested - Duration: 13:40.TRUMP SENDS IN THE FEDS – Dozens of Illegals Rounded Up, Arrested
Border Patrol agents in Texas just arrested 38 illegal aliens after finding them stuffed
in a truck in the Southern part of the state.
Breitbart reported that the migrant men, women, and children were huddled together in dangerous
conditions as they tried to sneak through the checkpoint located 80 miles from the Mexican
border.
Thirty of them were in the back of a big trailer, while eight more were found in two pickup
trucks that were being driven by members of the same family.
The illegal aliens were discovered early Saturday morning after a K-9 alerted to suspicious
cargo in the trailer.
Agents then directed the driver of the 18-wheeler to move his rig to the secondary inspection
station.
Officials said that the migrants inside the trailer were men, women, and children from
Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Mexico.
"These smuggling tactics continue to place immigrants in extreme danger," Rio Grande
Valley Sector Chief Patrol Agent Manuel Padilla, Jr. said in a written statement.
"With summer approaching, we will continue to work with our local, state, and federal
partners, as well as the community, to prevent senseless tragedies."
On Monday, a K-9 agent alerted to a Ford pickup truck at the Falfurrias Checkpoint.
When officials searched the vehicle, they found an illegal immigrant in the cabin and
three more hiding in a bed frame.
Just minutes later, a Dodge truck approached the same checkpoint and a K-9 agent alerted
to the vehicle.
When agents searched this one, they found two migrants hiding in the truck's cabin
and another two more hiding in a sofa in the back.
The drivers of the vehicles will be prosecuted on human smuggling charges, while those inside
will be processed for immigration violations and will be turned over to immigration officials
for processing.
This is the dangerous side of illegal immigration that the left does not want the world to see.
They try to vilify Border Patrol agents when these officials are really trying to protect
illegal aliens from being smuggled across the border in dangerous ways.
What do you think about this?
Let us know your thoughts in the comments section.
No comments:
Post a Comment