you might be loosing a gear or a wheel baring, it could be a lot of tings
Well, water colors, no; any can of paint, sure. Clean and scuff spokes for max adherence.
If the city is considered as the hub (centre) of a wheel, the spokes will be the urban area, while the wheel rim will be the rural countryside surrounding the wheel.
From wikipedia *The Tweel (a portmanteau of tire and wheel) is a prototype tire designed by Michelin. The tire uses no air and therefore cannot burst or become flat. Instead, flexible polyurethane spokes are used to support an outer rim. Handling gains have been cited as a reason to adopt this type of motor vehicle tire. If problems with the prototypes (such as excess vibration and noise at higher speed) are resolved, the first applications for the tire may be in the military where a flat-proof tire would be advantageous to maneuvering vehicles in difficult or dangerous areas. *Currently, the Tweel is being used for low-speed, low-weight applications, such as wheelchairs and construction equipment (for example, a skid loader). Tests on production cars have shown it is within 5% of a conventional tire and wheel's rolling resistance. If Michelin's prototypes go as planned, models for cars may appear around 2016. *The Tweel has been presented in a variety of applications. Eventually it may be able to outperform conventional tires since it can be designed to have high lateral strength (for better handling) without a loss in comfort. *The Tweel consists of a cable-reinforced band of conventional "tire" rubber with molded tread, a shear band just below the tread that creates a compliant contact patch, and a series of energy-absorbing polyurethane spokes. The rectangular spokes can be designed to have a range of stiffnesses, so engineers can control how the Tweel handles loads. The inner hub contains a matrix of deformable plastic structures that flex under load and return to their original shape.
One of the folk tales Achebe divulges in Things Fall Apart is a tale which explains why turtles have bumpy shells. It goes into a story where he was a very greedy man, who wanted to be in the sky with the birds. They didn't trust him at first, but eventually they all gave him a feather to get up there. He was the spokes person, so he said he was going to eat first. Eventually everyone was mad at him and took their feathers back. He asked one of them to tell his wife to put all the soft things out side of his house, so that he could jump down in safety. However, the bird told his wife to put all the hard things out. As the turtle jumped out of the sky, he fell upon the hard object and broke his shell. Eventually it healed, but was extremely bumpy because of the cracks in it.
Un-polarized white light typically vibrates in all directions radially from its axis of travel (think of a bicycle wheel with spokes radiating from the centre; the spokes represent the vibrations or transverse waves, the wheel hub is the direction of the light ray). When this light ray reflects off of a NON-METALLIC surface, the vibrations are cancelled out, except for those that are still reflected because they have the right incidence. Now think of a bunch of wood strips nailed to a pole for climbing. The strips represent the remaining transverse waves, the pole is the ray of light.How the polarizing filter's coating works is a subject too complicated to enter into here. Suffice to say that when we turn it and orient it correctly, it will now "cancel out" most of the remaining transverse waves, which our eyes see as a sort of "haze". Some say it "darkens colours" such as in fall foliage or the sky but this is not accurate. The removal of the haze essentially "purifies" the colours, seemingly enriching them. You can also remove reflections from glass windows or water using this filter. The filter works best/only when your angle of view is equal to the angle of incidence of the reflected light. Thus, pointing it at one scene at one time of day can produce very different results at another time.If you've absorbed this, try a trick question. I told my students that the surface had to be non-metallic, but was initially surprised to see that the filter would remove my reflection from a metal car fender. Why did it? Because the reflection is bouncing off of paint, not metal!It reduces glare because all of the light waves are vibrating in the same direction.A polarizing filter is a handy photography accessory that can be used with both film and digital cameras.The filter is used to reduce or eliminate glare, increase overall saturation, and darken blue skies in photographs.
There are many types of spokes. Some are the spokes on a bicycle, another are the spokes on a wheelchair, or you can even find them on baby carriages.
Spokes are examples of pre-stressed construction elements.
Spokes are found as part of wheels, for instance on a bicycle. They connect the hub to the rim.
a bicycle wheel?
The bicycle wheel had multiple spokes that connected the rim to the center hub.
No, but the spokes on a bicycle do.
360 / 30 = 12 , so 12 spokes in that wheel.
Bicycle spokes are usually made of stainless steel, although cheap/old bikes might have spokes of galvanized steel instead. Some high-end bikes have thick spokes out of aluminum alloy. There are occasional uses of carbon fibre spokes too.
Most spokes are metal, and metals are conductors.
The address of the Three Oaks Spokes Bicycle Club is: Po Box 366, Three Oaks, MI 49128-0366
"Spokes" are the things that branch out from the centre of wheels to the outside edge of the wheel, to stabilise them. So wagon spokes are the things that branch out of wagon wheel centres (usually wooden, in this case). Bicycle wheels also have spokes.
It depends how many spokes it has