Yes.
Swords often have grooves in order to help maintain proper harmonic/dynamic balance and to help reduce weight without losing strenght. The grooves are often incorrectly referred to as "blood grooves" but are correctly called fullers.
it should be located just to side of the harmonic ballancer.it will be a little box looking sensor with about 3 fins that ride in the grooves on the harmonic ballancer. as the ballancer rotates the sensor picks up readings from it. it has a couple of wires attached to the sensor also.
The original Ping Eye golf clubs had v grooves.
I assume you mean GROOVES - the Glacial Grooves were formed by the receeding glaciers.
A quarter has 119 grooves, or reeds. The grooves are used as an anti-counterfeiting strategy.
Infectious Grooves was created in 1989.
150 grooves
a quarter has 130 grooves.
The spiral grooves in a guns barrel are known as rifling. Its what puts a spin on the bullet as it leaves the barrel for accuracy. The grooves are called..... well, grooves. The ungrooved part between grooves is called a land. So looking through the barrel of a rifled firearm, you will see the "lands and grooves" that make up the rifling.
Sperm grooves are located on the 21st segment of an earthworm. Sperm grooves are the area sperm travels through when earthworms mate.
The spiral grooves in a guns barrel are known as rifling. Its what puts a spin on the bullet as it leaves the barrel for accuracy. The grooves are called..... well, grooves. The ungrooved part between grooves is called a land. So looking through the barrel of a rifled firearm, you will see the "lands and grooves" that make up the rifling.
A glacier produces grooves and scratches.