Use the <h1> tag. E.G. <h1>This is in a big heading</h1>
H1 by far. The H2 is taller but the H1 is way wider.
H1, H2 or H3? They range from $33,000 for an H3 to $140,000 for an H1.
h2 is more power full
In one go in an external or internal style sheet, you could do this to make all them red: h1, h2, p {color:red} You can also do them individually, if you wanted different colours: h1 {color:blue} h2 {color:green} p {color:red} As inline styles, you could do them like this: <h1 style="color:red">This heading is red</h1>
V1 = (1/3)(pi)(r12)(h1) V2 = (1/3)(pi)(xr12)(h2) V1 = V2 , which means that: (1/3)(pi)(r12)(h1) = (1/3)(pi)(xr12)(h2) Divide both sides by (1/3)(pi) and you get: (r12)(h1) = (xr12)(h2) -> (r12)(h1) = x2(r12)(h2) Divide both sides by (r12) and you get: h1 = x2(h2) -> h2 = (h1)/x2 For example: Cone1: r1 = 10, h1 = 10 Cone2: r2 = 30, h2 = (10/32) = 10/9 = 1.11111111 Then to check: Volume of a cone = (1/3)(pi)(r2)(h) V1 = (1/3)(pi)(102)(10) V1 = 1047.197551 = V2 1047.197551 = (1/3)(pi)(302)(h2) h2 = 1047.197551/((900pi)/3) h2 = 1.111111111 = 10/9
H1 sends a unicast message to H2, but the hub forwards it to all devices.
For vapor compression: beta= Qdot / Ẇ =(h1-h4)/(h2-h1)
AM General LLC Mishawaka, Indiana All Hummer H2 and HMMVEE (H1) are built in Mishawaka, Indiana.
The terminals H1 and H2 an a transformer indicate the primary side of the transformer. The secondary side is usually identified as X1 and X2.
The H1 is the original Hummer or Humvee, based on the military model. The H2 was introduced as a more consumer-friendly model, based on the Chevy Suburban body frame. It's narrower, but slightly longer and taller than the H1. They both share the distinctive Humvee grille design.
hummer H1, hummer H2 (public consumer)