Under Pressure" is a 1981 song recorded by Queen and David Bowie. It marked Bowie's first released collaboration with another recording artist as a performer, and is featured on Queen's 1982 album Hot Space. The song reached #1 on the UK Singles Chart. It was also number 31 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the '80s.[1]
The 1997 Nissan Pathfinder does not have a schrader valve. If you want to test the fuel pressure system (fuel pump, lines, pressure regulator) you have to insert a 'T' in the fuel line under the hood and connect a fuel pressure gauge to the 'T'.
there ant 1
staccatos and tenutos
Need to find the leak first. Usual place to check is at the lines. They rot out & start to leak. Make sure the trany fluid is at the proper level, start the vehicle to pressurize the system, crawl under and see where the drips are coming from
Lost from their self titled album. The chorus, backing vocals and all the lines under the solo and towards the end have it.
Yes the ac lines are under pressure. The high side is under dangerously high pressure. The Freon needs to be removed by a reclaiming machine and the pressure will be removed.
No need to bleed lines, since the system is under pressure.
under neth intake manifold replae fuel lines while your under there.
50
Emission Spectrum
Lines of Barometric pressure
I KNOW ON THE 1996 TACOMA THE FUEL FILTER IS UNDER THE HOOD, BELOW THE INTAKE MANIFOLD. On the 1996, it is along the driver's side frame rail under the truck. It looks like a metal can with the metalic high pressure lines coming from tank and going to engine. Since the collars of these pressure lines are made of soft metal, I have found it difficult to remove without rounding the hex shaped collar or crushing the fuel lines with the pressure of vice grips...
The low pressure port is the one on the accumulator (the canister). The low pressure lines are the bigger lines and the high pressure are the small lines.
Pressure by the hydraulic pump is made​​.
isobars lines of equal pressure
Meteorologists draw lines called isobars on weather maps to connect locations with the same air pressure. Wind blows from areas of high to low pressure.
There is no word beginning with b that refers to lines on a map running through places experiencing equal pressure. Those lines are called isobars, meaning lines of equal pressure. (iso means the same and bar is a unit of measure of pressure.)