Depending on type of pipe and how it is welded I know it should 150 p.s.i. Probably more but without knowing all the variables it's hard to say for sure. Depending on type of pipe and how it is welded I know it should 150 p.s.i. Probably more but without knowing all the variables it's hard to say for sure.
Teflon tape, which is wrapped around the threads, or plumber's putty, which is applied to the threads should be quite effecive at stopping the leak. These can be found at any hardward store, and are inexpensive.
The threads on a baseballs main purpose i suppose was to hold the two strips of leather together to create a nice leather surface (I would assume when the first baseball was made this was the only purpose) --- however, now that pitchers have learned how to use them, they will use the threads to grip the ball different ways, resulting in different spins on the ball and makes the ball move through the air in "abnormal" ways -- without getting too scientific, the ball moves different directions and break different ways due to the difference in air pressure created by the threads on the ball cutting through the air -----tigersy2k3
weaving
They are standard right hand threads.
Yes.
do
Sound waves [unlike electromagnetic radiation] must have a 'medium' or substance through which to travel. A graphed 'wave' is not an analog representation of a sound, but literally a graph of wavelength/frequency on the X axis and amplitude/loudness on the Y axis. Imagine a bubble-like slab or thick sheet of "pressure" moving through the air away from the sound source. The slab is going to have a thickness. It must, because the pressure is moving through a physical substance (air, water, whatever) and because if there were zero thickness, there would be no "pressure". The amount of pressure in the curved slab determines the volume/loudness of the sound. How closely stacked the slabs are next to each other determines the pitch (high/low) being produced.
A full thickness burn is through all the layers of the skin. The wound will look black or white and dry or leathery. The full thickness burn is painless because all nerves are destroyed, but the edges of full thickness burns are often partial thickness burns, which are extremely painful.
arteries need to withstand the pressure of the blood being pumped away from the heart. the heart needs a lot of pressure to pump blood throughout the body through the arteries, so they need to be thicker. veins don't have to be as thick because they are just carrying the blood back.
The supraspinatous is one of the 4 tendons that form the rotator cuff of the shoulder. Full-thickness means the tear is completely through thesupraspinatoustendon. If not full-thickness, it would be categorized as partial.
They're called the warp - and the weft. The warp is the vertical threads attached to the frame - the weft is the threads drawn through the warp in the process of weaving.
yes. however it depends on clothe type and thickness.