LVS

LVS may refer to one of the following:

  • Las Vegas Strip, a major American thuroughfare
  • Layout Versus Schematic electronic circuit verification
  • Linux Virtual Server a load balancing function in the Linux kernel
  • Light Value Scale, an exposure system proposed by Friedrich Deckel and used on cameras in the 1950s and 1960s
  • Litera Valley School, Patna, a school in Patna, Bihar
  • Logistics Vehicle System, a family of United States Marine Corps tactical vehicles
  • Logistics Vision Suite, range of IT solutions by Mantis Informatics for companies' logistics (WMS, TMS etc.) which can be integrated with storage facilities (up to ASRS), and other IT systems (ERP, MRP II, SCM etc.).
  • Left ventricular systolic function, a measure used in heart failure
  • LVS, a series of Russian-made tramcars
  • LVS-80
  • LVS-86
  • LVS-89
  • LVS-93
  • LVS-97
  • LVS-2005
  • LVs, a plural of LV
  • LVS may be one of the following codes:
  • APEX system

    APEX stands for Additive system of Photographic EXposure, which was proposed in the 1960 ASA standard for monochrome film speed, ASA PH2.5-1960, as a means of simplifying exposure computation.

    Exposure equation

    Until the late 1960s, cameras did not have built-in exposure meters, and many photographers did not have external exposure meters. Consequently, it often was necessary to calculate exposure from lighting conditions. The relationship of recommended photographic exposure to a scene's average luminance is given by the camera exposure equation

    where

  • A is the relative aperture (f-number)
  • T is the exposure time ("shutter speed") in seconds
  • B is the average scene luminance ("brightness")
  • S_x is the ASA arithmetic film speed
  • K is the reflected-light meter calibration constant
  • Use of the symbol B for luminance reflects photographic industry practice at the time of ASA PH2.5-1960; current SI practice prefers the symbol L. German sources typically used k for the relative aperture. Many authors now use N and t for relative aperture and exposure time.

    LVS-86

    LVS-86 is a model of tramcar developed at the Leningrad Tram Manufacturing Plant in the former Soviet Union. LVS stands for "Leningrad-made articulated tram" in Russian, and 86 refers to the model year. The design was based on the LVS-80 tramcar. 473 LVS-86s were built from 1987 until 1997. LVS-86s currently run in Saint Petersburg and formerly in Arkhangelsk. Tram operation in Arkhangelsk ceased in July 2004.

    Technical specifications

    LVS-86 is a 1,524-millimetre (5 ft) Russian gauge tramcar with six axles. Two equal-sized sections articulate around a central mm bogie. Each section has two electric motors which can also act as brakes, supplemented by pneumatic brakes and magnetic track brakes. The central bogie is not motorized. The motors are controlled by potentiometers or thyristors.

    The tram has 27 seats and holds 327 riders when fully loaded. Most trams have four-segment folding doors at the front and rear and at the middle of each section. LVS-86 is 22.5 metres long, 2.55 metres wide, and 3.15 m high. Unloaded, it weighs 29.5 tonnes. Multiple trams can be linked together and controlled from a single cab.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    All Is Numb

    by: 32 Leaves

    C'mon drift away through fundamental boundaries
    To find ourselves surrounding
    The ones who've already gone and come back stronger
    All is numb
    I've been lost too long
    My fate's been mistakenly chosen
    All is numb
    Yeah I've done you wrong
    My fate's been mistakenly chosen
    Here you'll stay
    Where lies are spread wide open
    And ties are not so strong
    That place you'll never find me
    I've already gone
    [chorus]
    I guess my thinking too much is what's been fuckin' me up
    It's my own worst enemy, but
    It will never own me...
    Who am I kidding anyway?
    [chorus]




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