Comment Reminds me of old John Henry (Score 2) 46
John Henry told his captain
'A man ain't nothin' but a man
But before I let your steam drill beat me
Down
I'd die with a hammer in my hand. Lord
Lord
I'd dies with a hammer in my hand.'
John Henry told his captain
'A man ain't nothin' but a man
But before I let your steam drill beat me
Down
I'd die with a hammer in my hand. Lord
Lord
I'd dies with a hammer in my hand.'
(Got 'em though. Put it on the shelf, and tried again the end of next year. Surprise, they took it...because they knew that year's book wasn't sunset they didn't even check editions. Even gave me more $$ because evidently the new text must've cost more and obviously wasn't initially "Used", so my carefully peeling off the "USED" sticker definitely paid dividends.)
Seriously, how is this a contentious matter?
Hmmm..."Contentious Matter." Now THERE'S a name for this stuff that I could get behind!
Sorry for the vocab nazi-ism but I see this one very frequently and it's finally pushed me over the edge.
It's toe the line. As in "conforming to the order of things by putting your toes on the line like everyone else".
How does "tow the line" make sense? Is fishing somehow conformist?
He must've been trolling...
Having built a number of gravitational wave observatories that have to see a single gravitational wave...
If they must see that same single gravitational wave over and over again, why do we need to keep building more of them? Why don't we build some to see OTHER gravitational waves?
the single thing a new iPhone will do that an Android won't is the fingerprint thing
My 2011-era Motorola Atrix has a fingerprint reader...
A Thermal Depolymerization demonstration plant was completed in 1999 in Philadelphia by Thermal Depolymerization, LLC, and the first full-scale commercial plant was constructed in Carthage, Missouri, about 100 yards (91 m) from ConAgra Foods' massive Butterball turkey plant, where it is expected to process about 200 tons of turkey waste into 500 barrels (79 m3) of oil per day.
So, while it may not be "cheaper" to burn Turkey than coal or natural gas, it is arguably "cleaner", at least from a net-CO2 perspective.
The higher octane is required in higher altitudes. 87 at sea level will give more power than 91 in Denver (caveats apply)
The main caveat being: That first statement is completely incorrect. As altitude increases, ambient pressure decreases. As ambient pressure goes down, max pressure developed in the cylinder decreases as well. As max pressure decreases, the tenancy for pre-ignition (knocking) decreases. As the tenancy for pre-ignition decreases, octane requirements are lessened.
In other words, all things being equal, higher octane is required in lower altitudes.
(But you are right in your second assertion - assuming your engine will run on 87 octane at sea level, it will indeed make more power at sea level than it will in Denver - mainly because of the increased air density at sea level.)
Same submitter, even!
A tentative deal struck late Tuesday between House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) would cut federal healthcare spending by $21.1 billion.
The savings would be used to pay for a "doc fix" that would eliminate a scheduled 27.4 percent reduction in Medicare physician payment rates for 10 months.
Savings include:
- A $5 billion cut to the health law's $15 billion prevention trust fund;
- The elimination of $2.5 billion in enhanced Medicaid payments to Louisiana in the wake of Hurricane Katrina;
- A $4 billion reduction in so-called Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments to hospitals that take care of people without insurance;
- A $6.8 billion reduction in federal payments to hospitals that collect "bad debt" from insolvent patients, down to 60 percent; and
- Cuts to how much Medicare pays for clinical laboratory tests.
How is it that reducing the funding by 33% *isn't* an attack on women if reducing the fund by a lesser amount *is*?
We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan