it depends of the alignment of the moon stars and the sun, but also sometimes the humidity, its normally around 120.09814
yes different liquids have different freezing temperatures
Diamond.
You can take as much as you wish but it will not work
It makes white. If you take a color wheel and twirl it really fast (Newton Color Wheel) it turns into white, or off white-ish grey.
It takes a white candle to burn out like 2 and a half hours maybe even 3 hours.
depends on the temperatures
An extraordinary digging ability, and the ability to resist temperatures up to 6000oC.
Maybe, it depends on how much white out you put on your nails
Yes because you don't want to take the chance of it sticking to the pan.
It is always free to take a tour around the white house.
buy a teflon rod, take a mini lathe and stick in the teflon. take a lathe chizzle and scrape away until down to the flatface wheel size. drill hole while still in lathe. first as 1/16 inch. then go in 1/4 of a centimeter in then take the chizzle and lathe them off. buy some bearings and stick um in
you stick a thermometer in the liquid
go to the doctor
nope.
1.7 U.S. quarts is enough for an oil change. Regarding the oil, any good synthetic will do, provided it does not contain Moly or Teflon (PTFE). Some people use the Honda GN4 oil which is safe for wet clutch application. Regular automobile oils contain additives that will cause your clutch to slip. Oils safe for wet clutch applications have JASO MA printed on the container. Depending on outside temperature, use a 15-40 W oil or thicker for higher temperatures and perhaps 10-30 for very low temperatures.
Actually potholders and oven mitts can be made of almost any flexible insulating material (e.g. cotton, rayon, kevlar, silicone resin, nomex, teflon) that will not melt or burn at the temperatures it will be used at.
It depends on the temperature and how much thermal protection you have. Exposed skin in very low temperatures can acquire frostbite in minutes.