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Clipsal was established by Alfred Gerard in Adelaide, Australia in 1920. Clipsal began by selling a range of adjustable sheet metal fittings which joined the various imported conduits of differing diameters found in Australia at the time. These products helped give the company its name, the phrase "clips all" being abridged to Clipsal. Alfred's ...
Clipsal C-Bus, a home-automation product range manufactured by Clipsal Australia. C-Bus (protocol), an open protocol used by Clipsal C-Bus products. Compatible Bus, a 16-bit local bus in certain PC-98-based personal computers. Cbus (superannuation fund), a superannuation fund for the building and construction industries in Australia
for Australian Cotton Textile Industries Ltd. Bagshaw Ltd. John Stokes Bagshaw: farm machinery, inc. Ridley's "stripper" Castalloy: 1948: 76 Mooringe Ave., North Plympton: aluminium alloy castings [1] pressure cookers alloy wheels: Clipsal: 1920: Alfred Gerard: electrical conduit fittings mains plugs and sockets switchgear: Coldstream: 1926 [2 ...
C-Bus is a communications protocol based on a seven-layer OSI model for home and building automation that can handle cable lengths up to 1000 metres using Cat-5 cable. It is used in Australia, New Zealand, Asia, the Middle East, Russia, United States, South Africa, the UK and, other parts of Europe including Greece and Romania.
The opportunity for an urban development on the site grew out of the South Australian Government's plans for eleven transport-oriented developments in the Adelaide metropolitan area, combined with Clipsal's decision that the Bowden site is surplus to company requirements and plan to vacate. The site was originally offered for sale in early 2008 ...
Original file (891 × 1,458 pixels, file size: 49.39 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 984 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
In 1885, two-pin plug designs appeared and in 1889 there were two-pin plugs and sockets in the GEC catalogue. [28] The 1893 GEC Catalogue included three sizes of what was described as Double plug Sockets with capacities described not in amps, but as "1 to 5 lights", "5 to 10 lights" and "10 to 20 lights". These were clearly recognisable as two ...
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