Yeah, but that’s hundreds of years ago and they’re a staple food now. Unlike Jicamas, where I had to Google what that even is.
So, linguistically not really comparable
Yeah, but that’s hundreds of years ago and they’re a staple food now. Unlike Jicamas, where I had to Google what that even is.
So, linguistically not really comparable
But these aren’t found in Western Europe
I know you can get it at Albert Heijn
Edit: I just learned that Aldi chocolate is sourced through Tony’s supply lines, so they should be the same level of slave-free
It isn’t American, and it doesn’t taste like shit.
The founder, Teun van der Keuken, is a Dutch guy. He started this journey with sueing himself before a Dutch judge, on account of participating in slave labour (by buying chocolate in a supermarket, knowing that it’s likely produced by slave labour)
As a christian, that’s how I like to read it too.
IR bottom heaters are usually not strong enough for reballing. They’re for boards that are hard to solder, because there’s a lot of copper or a heatsink for example.
The bottom heater preheats the whole board, not to soldering temperatures but enough to make soldering a lot easier.
Hmm, it seems to me most of those bubbles will happen not where you need them. Maybe if you throw in the base first and the acid later (or the other way around)
Soda and vinegar is an odd combination. Soda is a base, making water alkali. Vinegar is an acid, making water acidic. Together, they make water neutral again, with a lot of pretty bubbles.
Either one can work really well depending on the stuff you need to get rid of. But adding one to the other just weakens it.
Not on the walls I’ve painted. I don’t know about pool balls, but I’d imagine they need a solid layer of paint too, otherwise they’d flake in no time with the abuse they get.
Space is about 100 km up, on a sphere that has a radius of 6000 km, so some 2% is air.
A pool ball has a radius of 30 mm roughly, so 2% of that is 0.6mm. Seems like a very thin coat of paint to me, but roughly correct.
What’s the point of espionage if you can’t even gossip
The ID.4 doesn’t just have capacitive buttons, it has swipe controls on the steering wheel.
And of the most frustrating cars I have ever driven.
That’s blatantly untrue. My plant ID app gives multiple suggestions with certainty percentages.
I’m going to send you a pdf, you van email me back with the notes or comments in the PDF itself, whatever souts your fancy, and I’ll keep those notes and send you a new PDF with them.
I do this, but from Word.
I learned Latex for my master thesis. Never used it again afterwards, except for my resumé.
That is a typical setup for heating here in the Netherlands, I have it in my house. OP is in Germany, so probably not too different.
Edit: OP is not in Germany, but there are German stickers in the picture
There is another pump that is in inline with the heater. This pump is needed to mix the hot water from the heater with circulating water from the floor heating, to have an acceptable temperature for the floor. Water directly from the heater can be too hot for floor heating.
The red knob is a thermostat. Hot water will flow in their, coming from the gas furnace most likely. The floor heating can’t handle too hot water, so it’s mixed with the circulating water coming from the top rail. The tube going from the thermostat to the top rail probably only has a thermometer in it, to measure the temperature of the returning water. If it’s too cold, more hot water can be mixed in.
The pump you see is circulating water through the floor heating. The gas furnace will have another pump, distributing hot water through the building.
The fumes are from the flux, if you’re evaporating lead your iron is a few thousand degrees too high.
Still shouldn’t breathe that, but that’s also true for lead-free solder