We also have automatic link expansion and backward link tracking eg: -line-topic-search-and-linking-e-g-roam-like-bracket-links/200454/11 renders as : In-line topic search-and-linking, e.g. Roam-like bracket links - #11 by oshyan

For me, the less compatible Discourse is with regular markdown, the harder some other things would become, like moving content between Discourse and other things that use markdown. (My sites and documentation generally use markdown or MDX.)


Download Bracket Just Like That


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We discussed a route potential. We were heading toward Phillipsburg and discussed the possibility of going as far north as the name River Road went. We also discussed going up Alfalfa Hill Road that leads to Adamic Hill Road. This I liked very much because I wanted to photograph the classic windmill at the top of the hill. We decided to hit it on the return route.

We reached our turnaround spot exactly over Route 78. There was small discussion of exploring some of the roads we had passed and we did just that. Immediately after turning around we turned onto Oberly and encountered the entire group. There were at least a dozen riders bundled up, all smiling. Yet again we encountered lonely road with vast turned- over cornfields. As we spun through these fields we continued to encounter other riders from the group. They were smiling too. It certainly was a great day to be out and a great area to be pedaling.

You must slide each half of the bracket into a narrow slit that runs around the edge of the block; each half of the bracket slides into opposite sides of the block. When you slide them in all the way, such that they are fully seated, the two arms of each half meet, and the screws out at the edges of the bracket line up with the holes in the backplate mounting bracket.

The problem I'm having is that I can only get one of the bracket halves fully seated (middle picture below; the right-hand half is seated, but the left-hand half, pointed at with a screwdriver, is not).

I can see why this is happening. Inside the slit, there are small pillars that look to be the wells for the screws that hold the top half of the block to the bottom half. Two of the opposite sides have wells right in the middle of the slit that prevent you from fully seating the bracket (or they prevent that for the intel brackets, anyway - it's a different story for AMD, more on that below).

As for the other two sides, which you must use for the intel bracket, one of those sides has no screw well in the middle. In the middle pic below, that's the right-hand side. With no well in the middle of the slit, the bracket on that side can be fully seated.

But the other side has a well. Unlike the sides adjacent to that one, this well does not travel the full width of the slit - I can see a gap in it, which is maybe supposed to be wide enough to let the bracket on that side slide fully seat. But it's not wide enough, and it's clear that this half-well is the obstruction that is preventing the bracket from seating.

I'm seriously wondering that because, strangely, the one well that is blocking one-half of the intel bracket is the only well that doesn't run all the way across the slit, almost as if it was designed to let the bracket slide past it despite the well's presence. But the clearance in that half-well is just not enough. To me, it looks to be about half the clearance I need.

Can't seem to edit my first post. But looks like maybe I did get the wrong brackets in the package. This is a screencap from the install guide. It's a schematic representation of the intel bracket. It's got notches in the sides for the screw wells, like the AMD bracket shown above. If the intel brackets that actually came with myXC7 had notches like these, I'm sure the brackets would slide in.

As to what the problem was: I had wondered in my OP if the intel brackets needed notches in them like the AMD. They stated that no, I had the right brackets, and the picture of the intel brackets in the user manual (the one I pasted above) was wrong. They said they'd put a notice in to get that corrected.

If the person I dealt with was right about the brackets not needing a notch, then the only other option I can see is that the screw well that was causing the problem I described in my OP should not be there. But it's hard to believe that the XC7 got all the way through and into production with a problem like that. It'd have failed the first time it was tested with intel brackets.

Instead, I think the bottom half of the block I got - the half with the screw well - was the bottom half of a different model of Cosair CPU water block. It'd make sense that they'd make parts that could be used in multiple models using similar top-to-bottom half mounting designs and parts (e.g. screws). So I think there is a bottom half for another model that can be fully assembled (that is, can be mounted to the top half of) with the XC7, but that has this extra little well inside that prevents mounting of the intel brackets. If this is right, they've got a problem on their line, both assembly and HQA, where some XC7s are going out with the wrong bottom halves.

PS: I'd make sure to tell them that you tried very hard to make the brackets work and that you were carful to align the the bracket left-to-right so that the forward-facing arms were both clearing the central part of the housing that they slide by. I lost a day when they came back and asked me to check that because in the one picture I had taken to show the problem, the bracket wasn't centered.

Now, I've seen CPU/GPU mounting system where the brackets act as spring to more firmly seat the block to the processor and so I could almost believe all this is intentional. The way the bending happens seems a bit imprecise, however, so I just don't know.

The only other possibility is a serious HQA issue on their manufacturing line (it's still hard to believe an issue like this would go unnoticed all the way into production, so it would seem more likely that parts are getting mixed up during assembly). This could include, despite what Corsair support said, that the intel brackets should have notches and they're just putting the wrong set of intel brackets in the box. I've asked support again if they have brackets with notches available.

Well, I could not convince myself that the brackets should be misaligned (the misalignment was too sloppy and imprecise to be intentional) as I was wondering in my previous post. And I couldn't wait for Corsair to figure this out on their end.

The part I'm most annoyed about? After two weeks of handling both the old block and the new one over and over while trying to figure out the problem, photographing it extensively for Corsair, and trying to work around the problem, all while leaving the plastic shield in place as often as possible, and being very careful to not touch the TIM when I was forced to remove it to slide the brackets in and out or photograph it, and succeeding it not doing so, what did I do just as I finished inserting the bracket with the newly cut notch and seeing that everything was now perfect?

10 pin connector from MC-36 release plugged in and fully screwed down. Plenty of room. Forgive the focus, iPhone would not focus quite close enough The plate is positioned as closely to the left side of the Z9 as possible. I don't see any issue with the access to the left side ports as the port covers lift up, unlike D850 that folded out horizontally.

W10 pin connector from MC-36 release plugged in and fully screwed down. Plenty of room. Forgive the focus, iPhone would not focus quite close enough The plate is positioned as closely to the left side of the Z9 as possible. I don't see any issue with the access to the left side ports as the port covers lift up, unlike D850 that folded out horizontally.

There is enough room to attach the 10-pin connector, but frustratingly, I find that the perpendicular "tail" of the connector itself juts out in such a way as to obstruct the jaws of the Arca-Swiss clamp if I actually want to put the camera on a tripod in portrait orientation. The workarounds would seem to be either sliding the L bracket further out to provide clearance, which I don't like, or making a short 10-pin extension cable that doesn't stick out at such a problematic angle. I think this is more of a problem with Nikon's placement of the port than with the Kirk L-bracket per se.

The LowePro PhotoSport Outdoor is a camera pack for photographers who also need a well-designed daypack for hiking and other outdoor use. If that sounds like you, the PhotoSport Outdoor may be a great choice, but as with any hybrid product, there are a few tradeoffs. e24fc04721

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