This usually means a leak in the line somewhere, very small if it needs overnight for you to notice. But any fuel leak is dangerous, have it checked out.
Many techniques have been developed for the measurement of pressure and vacuum. Instruments used to measure pressure are called pressure gauges or vacuum gauges.
a bomb
It actually isn't best do do this. It was once thought that during a tornado the rapid drop in pressure could cause buildings to explode. This notion has been disproven. It is wind and debris, not the pressured drop, that causes damage during a tornado. Even in a strong tornado the pressure drop is not enough to cause significant damage.
yes
the capital has only been open all night during what events
You are responsible. You should not have been parked illegally.
Depends how long it has been there.
I've been seeing the answer as "hydrostatic pressure" on other websites, but I am pretty sure it is Blood Pressure. I hope I was able to help :/
Yes, live life Y.O.L.O! Smoke it and go night night
What causes numbness to the head My boyfriend has been feeling numbness on his head. Like the other night it went thru his hole body. He was out of it he could hear me?
Start with the fuel pump. I have found in purchasing vehicles that have been parked for any length of time that I had always had to replace the fuel pump, strainer and filter.
They should have been lowered to the ground.
Of course it is your fault. The fact that the car was illegally parked is of no consequence. You didn't look where you were backing or you would not have hit the parked car. Would you have hit this car if you had been looking? Perhaps the illegally parked car is a Mini Cooper, parked illegally 1 foot behind a Hummer and therefore not visable when the driver looks before backing up...
No most post '85 cars were manufactured with "sealed" cooling systems. It sounds like it is still under pressure.
This is called water hammer and occurs when pipes have not been secured down properly or when the water pressure is excessively high
Generally speaking, the driver in motion is considered to be at fault when a parked car is hit, even if the car was parked illegally. The exception to this would be if the car was parked in a dangerous, hard-to-see location and the driver in motion could not have reasonably avoided hitting it. For example, if a car is parked on a sharp curve in the travel lane of a narrow road, and the driver of a car driving around the curve at the speed limit would not be able to see the parked car until too close to it to avoid a collision, then the driver might not be liable for damage to the parked car, and indeed the driver who parked the car might be liable for damage to the car that hit it.
Yes you can, because I have been there with my school and the coach that I was in was parked in the Bronx Car Park.