I take procardia as needed in the winter; works like a charm.
Edit: spelling
MIT Professor Paul Samuelson’s famous quip, “the stock market has predicted nine out of the last five recessions”
Acid buildup in muscle tissue. Here is an article that explains what is happening:
Esit: I originally said that your.muscles are creating waste chemicals quicker than your bloodstream can handle causing those bad chemicals build up locally. While this is true in a broader sense, I think it is more nuanced that that. Reading the article should give a better explaination
deleted by creator
We use three horizontal strips of thin flat stock metal attached to the studs with truss head screws before sheetrock to provide solid blocking at top and bottom of upper cabinets and also at top of base cabinets. The stock can be 20 or 22 ga. And 6" wide. You still may want to catch studs as best you can. I posted a picture showing the two strips that hold the upper cabinets. I’m not sure what the metric equivalent to gauge would be but you guys probably have something similar.
There is a crude ASCII drawing to represent the circuit
And a quick followup:
If the ground was moved to the T3 junction than the battery’s negative terminal would be common to ground and the voltages values across all loads would go back to being positive in regards to the battery’s negative terminal (T1 = 1000V, T2 = 333V, T3 = 0V) ?
One Sheet, Two Pages A sheet of paper has two sides. Each side is considered one page. So a single sheet of unfolded paper is two pages.
Looks like two pages at a time to me.
Blame Van Buren!
Looks like the concrete falls off on the right.
The gasket at the bottom of your overhead compresses to help create a seal along an uneven surface, but it can only do so much. Your gap may be too large to seal before the door bottoms out completely on the left. That said, there is adjustments that set where the door comes to a stop when closing, check your manual and see if the overhead can lower further.
Cool ceiling tile