Look by the thermostat housing you will see a single wire with a "L" plug.
unplug the wire which is plugged in to the water sensor for the temp gauge.
Ground the wire to the engine block, turn the ignition key to on but do not start engine
look at the temp gauge it should read all the way to the right (in the red).
If you see this then the gauge is working and the sending unit is bad. If the gauge does not respond check the instrument panel fuse, if the fuse is good the gauge is bad..
The body temp is 38-38.2 Celsius
5w-30 outdoor temp. from & below 0 F (-18 C) to 100 F (38 C) 10w-30 outdoor temp. from 0 F (-18 C) to 100 F (38 C) & above temp.
28/38 * 100% = 73.68% You got about 74% on the test.
Higher than humans, about 38 degrees Celsius, or 100.4 F (Fahrenheit).
It can worth $600 to $750 depending on how good it is.
A 38 out of 50 is a 76%. This is calculated by dividing 38 by 50 (38/50). You then multiply the result by 100, and the solution is your percentage out of 100.
Question is too broad to answer. In general, use ammunition that is the same as the caliber or gauge marked on the firearm. If it is marked .38 Special, use only .38 Special- NOT .38 S&W, NOT .380. NOT .38 Super.
Campbell Playhouse - 1952 The Test Case 2-38 was released on: USA: 26 March 1954
No such weapon made by S&W
Well 37.5 is the "norm" so anything over 38 (especially in a child). If it ever hits 40 I'd get to the hospital. You can also have a temp if it drops under the norm too.
There are a number different gauges for different products. For steel sheets, the gauge ranges from 3 to 38. For aluminum, the gauge ranges from 6 zeroes to 40.
A low C nearly a D. You nearly missed half of the test.