I can speak about a scratch dial first hand as we have one on our parish church. Scratch dials were in regular use before clocks and especially watches were generally available to tell the time. Before mechanical timepieces the only reliable way (and that was not that reliable!) was by using the sun's position in the sky, and hence a sundial. A scratch dial is made of a small hole in the wall of a church (around 3/4 inch in diameter and an inch deep) surrounded by lines radiating from it at particular angles like the spokes in a wheel. The lines represent the times, on a Sunday, of the various services and were spaced out accordingly when the dial was made. To use a scratch dial, a finger is inserted into the hole perpendicular to the wall, and the edge of the sun's shadow of the finger is examined against the lines scratched into the stone, so that a visitor can see how long it will be before the next service.
point pick nose apply makeup wear a ring dial a phone scratch
Scratch and scrimp
I was struggling with this myself.. You might have got your answer already, but in case you haven't... Turn the middle dial to zero (the fan control) and pull on it with some pilers. You should probably wrap then with a cloth as to not scratch the dial. You'll see the bulb and have to use some needlenose pilers to pull it out..
A dial
The Dial was created in 1840.
To scratch is a verb and a scratch is a noun.
dial-up is when you have no brordband and you have to dial-up to get on to the internet.
It certainly is possible to scratch it, but this stand is scratch resistant and won't scratch easily - but almost nothing out there is really "scratch proof". Generally, no it won't scratch easily.
They will scratch and mess up. They will scratch and mess up. They will scratch and mess up. They will scratch and mess up. They will scratch and mess up. They will scratch and mess up.
A clock face is also called a dial, face dial, clock face dial, or dial face.
Michael Scratch goes by Scratch.
Bill Dial's birth name is William Allen Dial.