Without a bottom head you will not be able to tune your drum.
you memorize it in your head then play it off by heart
Yes, but only at night!Added: If your vehicle lights go out after dark, you cannot drive the vehicle under any circemstance. Park it until daylight or call a towtruck.
No way man....res heads need to vibrate to produce a full sound, the batter heads are made thicker so they won't vibrate.
Just a ring of metal and a moulded plastic sheet :)
yes its illegal to drive Any were with head phones its not safe that's why we have stereo systems.
No, Some cars don't come with head rests.
No. All lights that were manufactured with the car. and/or that are installed on the car, must be operational.
The current head of the government of the state of California is Governor Arnold Schwartzenegger.
don't try it. i drove 20 miles without one and my head gasket blew. its a pressurized system and without the cap, there's no pressure. not a good thing.
Yes, you can but you need to wear a helmet to protect your head in case of an accident.
without a cooling radiator , you can only drive a very short distance. continued driving will cause the engine to overheat, which in turn will cause the head gasket to break or worse the head to crack. you can also melt the pistons or break the connecting rods when the engine seizes due to lack of cooling.
As long as it is a clean hit it is aloud
The access time for a moving head disc drive is greater than that of a fixed head disc drive due to the physical movement required by the read/write head to reach the desired location on the disk. In a moving head drive, the head needs to physically move across the disk's surface to access different sectors, resulting in increased latency. In contrast, a fixed head drive has multiple heads dedicated to specific locations on the disk, allowing for quicker access times as the heads do not need to physically move.
because your a stupid head
Illegal checks to the head
The head of the California department of finance is Ana J. Matosantos. She was appointed by the governor of California, Jerry Brown, in January of 2011.