what are "R-condition"and "T-condition" in the designation of Steels ??
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how many psi to one bar?
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wt is dynamic coupling????
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In a boiler Natural gas flow 10,000 N cubic meter and combustion air flow 22,000 cubic meter, how I convert gas flow N cubic meter to cubic meter to maintain fuel air ratio? Thank you. ashekullah
Greetings This question is about hydraulics and I request an expert to answer it. A simple hydraulic machine is made up of two heads, a larger one with a larger force inside a wider pipe and a smaller one with a smaller force inside a smaller pipe in width as in the second picture on this link: http://science.howstuffworks.com/hydraulic1.htm The question is this: what happens if the smaller head and the smaller force doesn’t exist but the smaller pipe is high enough to take all the liquid? For example the larger head is 1.00 sqr metre and can go down 1.00m under a weight of 100.00kg. The cross sectional area of the smaller pipe is 0.001 sqr metre. Now when the larger head goes down 1.00m, how high the liquid from the wider pipe can go into the smaller pipe of the cross sectional area of 0.001 sqr metre? Regards
In General please do read newspapers.And be thorough with 10th history and Geography.Biology also