The more common phrase is "the rubber hits the road." This expression is often used to indicate the point at which a theory or idea is tested in practice. It emphasizes the transition from planning to action, highlighting the moment when practical application occurs.
The fewer relevant hits the better.
High pressure steam hits the blades of a TURBINE and turns its shaft.
LDRs are switches (when the light hits them they allow electricity to flow if there is a full circuit). So LDRs are different to photodiodes in that way!
if the trees are removed, the heavy rain hits the soil directly and washes it away leaving the stony and infertile soil.
Salton is when you play COD Modern Warfare 2 and some a55hole sneaks up behind you hits you with a riot shield and teabags your dead body.
The genesis of the phrase is (unofficially) credited to a national advertising "jingle" used throughout the 1960s and 1970s by the former Firestone Tire and Rubber Company. Wherever wheels are rolling, No matter what the load, The name that's known is Firestone Where the rubber meets the roads Given that Firestone kept it running for nearly 20 years, a generation of Americans became well acquainted with the tune. At some point - the exact date of which is still to be determined, the phrase "where the rubber meets the road" became part of our lexicon.
Wherever wheels are rolling,No matter what the load,The name that's known is FirestoneWhere the rubber meets the road
This idiom originated from racing - when the rubber hits the road is when the automobile starts moving forward.It means: "when you get to the action", or "when you get busy", "when it gets serious", or it might mean something like "the last word or final outcome of something"... something along those lines, depending on context.
When a bullet hits a rubber sheet, the rubber will absorb some of the bullet's kinetic energy. The rubber sheet will stretch and deform, creating a bulge around the impact area. The bullet's force will eventually be dissipated through the material, causing the rubber to return to its original shape.
It is a ground ball.
The rubber part was made so if it hits something it won't pop.
Google the phrase and you will get hundreds of hits.
When the Bullet Hits the Bone is a song by Golden Earring.
Rubber balls bounce high because rubber is an elastic material that can store and release a lot of energy upon impact. When a rubber ball hits a surface, it deforms and compresses, storing potential energy. As it rebounds, the stored energy is released, propelling the ball back up with force, resulting in a high bounce.
"Ring it up!"
ISM 2000?
Well, cold rubber balls do bounce, but warm rubber balls bounce better because when a cold rubber ball hits the floor, it generates heat instead of a rebound effect because the molecules are so close together that they collide with each other.