EGR shouldn't be opening while accelerating. When was the last time you had a tune-up? You know, like Spark-Plugs, Wires, Air Filter, Fuel Filter, Clean Fuel Injectors etc... Sounds like you need a tune-up!
Fight It or Bite It - 2014 Jerking Around 1-6 was released on: USA: 5 February 2014
Yes. Even though its speed doesn't change, its velocity does change, therefore it is accelerating.
Please answer this question
An object with a constant (vector)velocity is not accelerating. An object with a constand (scalar)speed can actually be accelerating, a car with a constant speed that passes around a corner is changing direction and is subjected to a lateral acceleration.
Cleaning products around the home are usually bases.
No, unless the driver is giving it more gas.
Yes, our 2006 Mercury Mountaineer was having random jerking issues around 60mph + and we feared it was the transmission. We recently changed the spark plugs (which were badly rusted and corroded) and the jerking has stopped completely.
The earliest examples of the Cleaning Caddy were discovered in 1872 to make the cleaning of hotels easier for the cleaning staff. That means technically the Cleaning Caddy has been around for at least 141 years in 2013. There have been various manufacturers of the apparatus since then and companies like Sterilite and Ecolab do also produce devices called the Cleaning Caddy.
Front off side
Shaking? As in you holding it and jerking around? Probably not long but I haven't attempted it. And I don't sudgest trying either.
Yes. The simplest example is an object moving at a constant speed in a circle.
Acceleration is change in velocity. These are vectors that have magnitude and direction. Changing either magnitude (speed) or direction will have the skater be accelerating. SO, if the skater is going at a constant speed of 2m/s in a straight line, he is not accelerating. If he is at a constant speed of 2m/s traveling in a circle (you gave the word "around"), he is accelerating. Going around in circles means there is a force constantly changing your direction. Obviously that force is coming from the skaters legs.