bout 0.9km depends max speed maybe 1km cause your a crap rider probaly 0.9km
85 mph
A stock cr85r expert goes about 60mph. My factory cr85r expert hits about 70-75mph with some factory parts, including fmf pipe, tires,shortened chain for more top end speed and more.
I have a 2004 cr85r withe a "15 in the front and a "47 in the back
I have a 2000 YZ 250 with a platinum PC fatty, and 304 silencer -- and a few mods to the engine block and swing arm for racing. I have hit a top speed of 94 MPH, stock, the bike hit 81 MPH.
The answer depends on what the archer wants out of a silencer. A "string tamer" is an excellent choice to add because it stops string slap and significantly reduces vibration without any loss in arrow speed. If you add "spiders" or an equivalent thereof, you will experience a decrease in arrow speed...albeit by only a few feet per second. This addition can be nullified with the additional use of speed balls; however, an after market adaptation like the speed ball may increase wear on the string. Another vibration/silencer dampener is a good stabilizer. These are but a few of the things you can do to silence a bow.
A silencer is more properly called a sound suppressor. Silencers do not make a firearm truly silent, they only reduce the noise. The sound of a gunshot is composed of two things - the blast of hot gas exiting the muzzle at high speed and the crack of the bullet breaking the sound barrier. The silencer deals with the gas. The inside of a a silencer is a lot like a car muffler. It's basically a large can with barriers called baffles. The gas bounces around these baffles and in the process expands and slows down so that it makes little to no noise as it exits.
Naturopaths maintain that essential fatty acids can speed the clearing of the rash. The patient should eat fish rich in fatty acids (salmon, mackerel, or herring).
You can indeed so. As the M249 is a blaring piece of equipment under normal use, when silenced it is considered by bystanders as "not much of a difference". The silencer itself degrades especially fast because of the amount of rounds/heat. Overall silencing a machine-gun is a bad idea. To expand on the above, from a practical standpoint, you cannot silence a SAW (or Minimi, or any of its other incarnations). Firstly, remember that a "silencer" is actually not a silencer, it's a sound supressor or sound moderator. All a silencer does is lower the amount of noise that the gun produces. The primary means by which a silencer works is by lowering the velocity of the bullet to below supersonic speeds (about 1000 f/s or 330 m/s). This eliminates the supersonic "crack" that the bullet makes. Additionally, the silencer buffers the gas escaping from the muzzle, both reducing muzzle flash (like a flash supressor), and also the not inconsiderable noise that escaping gas causes. The problem is that muzzle and bullet noise are only part of the equation. In an automatic weapon such as the SAW, the cycling action makes a whole lot of noise itself, and that metallic "clack" is both extremely distinctive, and carries quite a distance (though, it is not exceptionally loud). So, even with a silencer, the noise reduction would be modest, at best. In addition, the nature of the way a silencer works to reduce the bullet speed and gas expulsion means that very considerable stress is placed on the silencer materials itself. Virtually no silencer will last more than a couple of hundred rounds, at the most. For an automatic weapon like the SAW, the typical method of use is for supression fire, which means frequent bursts of several seconds, repeated for minutes. In this usage pattern, a silencer would almost certainly not last 5 minutes in actual use. There are certain high-tech (and very expensive) silencers which are made with very high durability materials which can last significantly longer; however, even with such a silencer, the usefulness of it is rather dubious.
2 factors come in to play when silencing a weapon. First and foremost, you must be using a round that is not exceeding the speed of sound. All standard 22 magnum cartridge are faster than the speed of sound. When you shoot a cartridge faster than the speed of sound, it creates a sonic-boom, this is the crack you hear when shooting. The containment of explosion can be handled by a silencer.
Lipase is an enzyme (catalyst) so it speeds up reactions (in this case the breakdown of fats into fatty acids and glycerol).
NO, the THC stays in the fat in your body , when your fatty tissue excretes the THC into your system, you urinate it out. So eating fatty foods will cause another layer of fat to form making it harder for the THC to penetrate and move back into your system. But this is not a guaranteed method though. Speed up your metabolism.
single shot or semi-auto with with a slide lock, projectile below the speed of sound, quality suppressor are the most important. Brand and caliber really don't matter if the previous three are adheared to. Edited to add: I think caliber plays a factor, too. A smaller bore means a smaller hole that sound escapes from. My .22LR silencer sounds a lot quieter with its small bullet moving 1,050 f.p.s. than some 147-grain 9mm ammo I fired though a 9mm silencer, and the 9mm bullets were moving slightly slower, maybe 950 feet per second. I've noticed that even without a silencer, a .17 magnum rimfire sounds quieter than a .22 magnum rimfire. All I can conclude is the size of the bore matters.