Glossary entry

Chinese term or phrase:

English translation:

(对称)中心线

Added to glossary by Huijun Suo
Apr 3, 2007 10:03
17 yrs ago
Chinese term

Chinese to English Tech/Engineering Computers: Hardware headphone
There is a sign in the English text written by a Chinese. I doubt it is a cent sign, so I suppose it is a Chinese character. If yes, what does it mean then?

"Microphone: ¢6.0*5.0mm
Sensitivity: -54dB±2dB(odB=1V/ubar)
Direction: Noice Cancellation
Impedance:≤2.2KΩ
Current consumption: 2.0V
Sensitivity deduction:1.5V时-3dB以内
SNR:>58dB
Loudhailer:¢40.0mm
Impedance:32Ω
Frequency:20-20Kz
Sensitivity:98.0dB±3dB "
Proposed translations (English)
3 +1 (对称)中心线
4 Size
Change log

Jul 7, 2007 14:57: Huijun Suo Created KOG entry

Jul 8, 2007 18:07: Huijun Suo changed "Edited KOG entry" from "<a href="/profile/614331">Huijun Suo's</a> old entry - "¢"" to ""(对称)中心线""

Proposed translations

+1
4 hrs
Selected

(对称)中心线

Sorry, I correct myself. Maybe it stands for Centre Line, indicated with C and L overlapped. When it is applied to the circular section of a cylinder, the value after it refers to the diameter. Thanks to Wenjer for reminding!

Please refer to:

http://bbs.cmiw.cn/forums/1/131723/ShowPost.aspx#131723

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Note added at 6 hrs (2007-04-03 16:20:41 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

It is not a Chinese character, just a sign used in mechanical drawings.
Peer comment(s):

agree tulip855
9 hrs
Thank you, Tulip!
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you all!"
2 hrs

Size

It's the sign for "Size," usually for diameters, but not always.

That is why you have both "Microphone: ¢6.0*5.0mm" and "Loudhailer:¢40.0mm" in your example.
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