tscotte - first off welcome to the forum, with 10 years scrap experience I'm sure you will have plenty of knowledge to share with all here at SMF and I hope you do. Your question and/or statement about IR sensors may seem to be "No Big Deal" to you. Honestly it's something I have been wanting to research for a awhile now and I will all in good time. I also think you should remember you are new to this forum. With that please realize there are many here that have contributed to this forum for months and years before you joined. This forum needs both the experienced and contributing members, as well as the new members. With any task or experience, a person (IMO) should familiarize them selves with as much knowledge as possible. Personally I find, when this is done, I'm able to benefit much more myself and at the same time all around me have benefited. More importantly I have learned more about myself, my surroundings and all other persons I have interacted with. That positive interaction with other people is the most important part of any task. As a member of this forum we all want and need, that positive interaction with each other. My experience with this forum and it's members has always been positive and I have benefited tremendously. I have also took the time to learn about how this forum works, how different members interact with each other and me. This forum and it's members want to help each other, we don't always agree though, but respect is given and earned. That's what really allows us all to learn and at the same time contribute. I think if you take the opportunity to read the old post, spend sometime learning about the members who shared their hard "learned" knowledge with this forum previously. You might just find, you will benefit, just as we all have. You have a lot to gain by being a positive and contributing member here. We all can gain from your positive contributions and ten years of scrap wisdom, so again I welcome you.
I consider myself to be a expert swimmer, I have spent most of my life around water, been taught by the very best swimming instructors. What I always do before I "Jump into the Deep end of the Pool", I wade into the shallow end first. I learn about the calm water before I dive into the deep unknown!
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