Maybe, maybe not. The car must be serviceable. You must tell the buyer of anything you know to be wrong with the car. Do that, and have the buyer sign an agreement that they are buying the car "As Is with no Warranty either written or Verbal" and you should be OK. Of course they could still sue you if something goes wrong. The vast majority of the time if you have a signed agreement, the buyer will loose in court. Be upfront and honest, and get a signed agreement. That is all you can do to protect yourself.
I think it has something to do with the amount of protons. I would try looking that up on Google. =) or bing or something, but I'm pretty sure it has something to do with the protons. Sorry if I'm wrong..... Now the atomic mass measurements are made by mass spectrometry.
i say that it will actually have more mass because cars hold a lot more air then cycle because of the amount of volume can be relent to the mass of something
To find the average mass of the 5 cars, you divide the total mass by the number of cars. So, the average mass is 6.4 divided by 5, which equals 1.28. Therefore, the average mass of the 5 cars is 1.28 units.
In 1896, 13 Dureyas cars were made in a factory in Springfield, Mass. These were the very first examples of mass-produced cars.
something to occupy but not mass is solid
Yes. Mass producing cars is not the problem. The fuel for fuel cells is too expensive, so far.
you cant use wiki answers for your homework kid!! Its wrong and i hope u get the answer wrong!
mass
Anything that replaces cars in a morning commute is "mass rapid transit". Be it bus, subways, trolleys - anything that gets cars off the roadways.
Temperature can affect the mass of something and also freezing the object.
Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.Same as any other mass. The mass is sometimes (informally) described as the "amount of substance" something has.
No, but it can be wrongfully applied.