No not really because of its stickiness so no use string
Diffrent color duct tape could work or sparkles.
It isn't duck tape, it is duct tape. Tape that is used to join and seal duct work. Very sticky tape. Duct tape also has a layer of interconnecting fibers to provide strength and rigidity. These fibers are also designed to be very strong, but if duct tape is ripped from the side at a 90-degree angle, the fibers break very easily resulting in easy usability without scissors or a knife.
With duct tape I install and maintain duct work for a living if you want to seal the joints just wrap the tape around the duct. If you need to cover a hole you will need to screw a piece of metal on the duct over the hole and tape over the edges of your patch. this is the simplest and cheapest way I know to do it.
yes, yes it is!!!....
Duct tape is nonconductive, and is not CAT6. If you have a damaged CAT6 cable, you could put duct tape over the damaged area, but there is no guaruntee the damage won't cause the cable to underperform (your network may not work at 1Ghz).
WD-40 work great
It depends what you are using it for. -I can think of things duct tape will be excellent for, and I can think of other things that hot glue would be better for.
With the ever handy duct tape! Simply pull a piece off and pat it against the spaces where the paper is. It will come off the jacket easily...along with those annoying "pills" that happen to fleece. If you have no duct tape (!?) then masking tape will work nicely too. A lint roller could work as well though it does not have as strong of adhesive as duct tape.
You'll need a band aid for that. If you don't have one, take a Kleenex, rip it in half longways, wrap that around your foot, and use duct tape to tap the end of the tissue up.
Yes, but you have to let it dry before youcan touch it, or it'll smear.
Duct Tape in SpaceWhoever told you this is wrong. Duct tape is useful everywhere. See:http://www.ducttapeguys.com/NASA/index.htmlBut you'd have some major trouble with suction cups!Duct tape saved one of the Apollo crewsThey did have trouble getting duck (not "duct", it was used to seal the edges of canvas duck tarps to protect cargo from rain etc.) tape to hold on one of the later Apollo missions. The fender of the Lunar Rover needed repairing but was so dusty the duck tape wouldn't hold. They ended up using clamps to hold a spare map in place so the tire would not throw dust all over the astronauts.
The answer is quite simple, your duct work is not insulated somewhere. What is happening is the really cold air is blowing through the duct work and where it is not insulated, its causing condensation to form. It then builds up and starts dripping. You can either go to a hardware store and ask them for duct wrap or just buy a roll of fiberglass insulation and wrap it around and secure with duct tape.