This sounds like the old Aeternum pressure cooker. The lid is not perfectly round but rather oval. one must lift the handle up, turn it 90 degrees (so the metal bar is offset from the indents in the top by 90 degrees) to insert it and then turn back 90 degrees and push the handle down so the ends of the metal cross bar fit into the indents. . if the gasket is old you can get a new one from Miracle Exclusives in Danbury CT. There are other brands out there now that use the same design like Astral, Sunpentown and Lagostina but the Aeternum factory shut down.
An Italian bottom bracket has a 36mm diameter and a 24mm spindle, while an English bottom bracket has a 34.8mm diameter and a 24mm spindle. The threading on the Italian bottom bracket is right-hand threaded on both sides, while the English bottom bracket has a left-hand thread on the drive side.
Yes
The pressure at the bottom of the pitcher of water 35cm deep is higher than at the bottom of the bathtub of water 30cm deep. Pressure in a fluid increases with depth, so the deeper the water column, the greater the pressure at the bottom. This is due to the weight of the water above exerting a force on the bottom.
English and Italian bottom brackets differ in their threading standards. English bottom brackets have a 1.37" x 24 TPI threading, while Italian bottom brackets have a 36mm x 24 TPI threading. This means that the two types are not interchangeable and require specific tools and parts for installation.
it is in the tomb
At the bottom, there is the additional weight of the gas or liquid above the surface level.
Neither. He was a eunuch.
It's usually at the bottom of your toolbox, covered by other tools.
Because water pressure is more intense at depth than it is near the surface - hence the dam has to be stronger at the bottom - it withstands more pressure at the bottom.
Fluid pressure is the greatest at the deepest point. If the fluid is in different shaped vessels, the pressure is the greatest at the bottom of the vessel no matter what the shape.
you find out missing numbers in addition by subtracting the numbers that are writen
V. J. Monacella has written: 'The pressure on the sea bottom due to a moving pressure distribution' -- subject(s): Hydrostatic pressure, Ocean bottom