Depends on the smoke. White smoke from burning antifreeze would be a crack in the cylinder head or bad head gasket. Dark smoke would be burning oil from bad piston rings.
The duration of The K Factor is 300.0 seconds.
The K Factor was created on 2010-02-06.
The K Factor ended on 2010-03-20.
Just don't smoke. k? k
YES.If k is even then 2 is a factor of k.If 5 is also a factor of k then 2 x 5 = 10 is another factor of k.NOTE : The product of two or more prime factors of a number produces another factor.
It is a factor in all numbers of the form 310*k where k is an integer.
k(k + 5)
What is a sprinkler's "K-factor The K-factor is the nozzles's / sprinkler's constant at a given volume flow rate and is generally calculated with a formula: K = Q / √ p K = sprinkler's / nozzle's constantQ = volume flow rate (l/min)p = pressure at the sprinkler / nozzle (bar) examples: K-factor 57 = 171 l/min / √ 10 barK-factor 80 = 240 l/min / √ 9 barK-factor 115 = 345 l/min / √ 9 bar Generally the thread (DN) is associated with a K-factor. 3/8″ DN 10 K-factor 57½″ DN 15 K-factor 80½″ DN 15 K-factor 115¾″ DN 20 K-factor 160 == ==
What is a sprinkler's "K-factor The K-factor is the nozzles's / sprinkler's constant at a given volume flow rate and is generally calculated with a formula: K = Q / √ p K = sprinkler's / nozzle's constantQ = volume flow rate (l/min)p = pressure at the sprinkler / nozzle (bar) examples: K-factor 57 = 171 l/min / √ 10 barK-factor 80 = 240 l/min / √ 9 barK-factor 115 = 345 l/min / √ 9 bar Generally the thread (DN) is associated with a K-factor. 3/8″ DN 10 K-factor 57½″ DN 15 K-factor 80½″ DN 15 K-factor 115¾″ DN 20 K-factor 160 == ==
Yes.
You don't.
no