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#251
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But being heavier than air they magicaly climb to the top of the
atmosphere? Digital Signal Processing. God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O http://www.billhughes.com/ Stephen Cowell wrote: > > "L.W. (ßill) Hughes III" > wrote in message ... > > I'll bet Steve won't have a clue as to why all gas water heaters > > are installed two feet off the floor, either. > > I'll bet Bill doesn't have a clue as to why > you have to LDP before you can LACC > from a different block of memory on > the TI 320F2497 DSP... but I damn sure > know that fumes accumulate along the > floor. Sparky the Fire Dog taught me > that one! > __ > Steve > . |
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#252
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That such an incredible stupid question. The air is being pushed
down on the equator, like a constant high pressure, where in spreading out creates winds going westerly to the north on our north side and to the south in the southern hemisphere. Now if you would back off a little bit, it would be like ****ing into the wind, something I'm sure your little mind does all the time. God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O http://www.billhughes.com/ Stephen Cowell wrote: > > Tell it to Dave! > > Bill: do you assert that the air one foot north of > the equator doesn't mix with the air one foot > south of the equator? > __ > Steve > . |
#253
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I'm sure you could carry your hot air across. But it's not going to
be pushed there via the jet stream. God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O http://www.billhughes.com/ Stephen Cowell wrote: > > Bill... does the air one foot north of the > equator mix with the air one foot south > of the equator? > __ > Steve > . |
#254
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"L.W. (=DFill) Hughes III" > wrote in message = ... > But being heavier than air they magicaly climb to the top of the > atmosphere? Vortex, Bill... vortex. Does the air one foot north of the equator mix with the air one foot south of it? __ Steve .. |
#255
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"L.W. (=DFill) Hughes III" > wrote in message = ... > That such an incredible stupid question. The air is being pushed > down on the equator, like a constant high pressure, where in spreading > out creates winds going westerly to the north on our north side and to > the south in the southern hemisphere. Now if you would back off a = little > bit, it would be like ****ing into the wind, something I'm sure your > little mind does all the time.=20 Bill: do you assert that the air one foot north of the equator doesn't mix with the air one foot south of the equator? __ Steve |
#256
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Vortex is where your head is at, which as swollen as you may think,
couldn't begin to fill the atmosphere. God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O http://www.billhughes.com/ Stephen Cowell wrote: ><snip babbling> |
#257
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You're a total waste of time.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O http://www.billhughes.com/ Stephen Cowell wrote: ><snip incoherent babbling> |
#258
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L.W.(ßill) Hughes III wrote:
> I'll bet Steve won't have a clue as to why all gas water heaters > are installed two feet off the floor, either. All? I've never seen one mounted in such a manner so I assume it must be a Califlornia thing. Would it matter if the gas was natural or LPG, or did your state regulators figure that height was a good trigger point for both? Here is a little experiment for the "heavier than air" folks: Go out into the middle of the street, dump about 5 gallons of gasoline on the ground and stand in the middle of the puddle. Inhale deeply. Because gasoline vapors are much heavier than air you should not smell anything. Now take out some matches and try lighting one. Safe, right? The process is called diffusion, and is due to the Brownian motion of matter. You cannot fart anywhere on the planet without everyone, everywhere eventually having to breathe it in. -- jeff |
#259
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I believe the raised mounting of (gas fired) water heaters is an OSHA
requirement for business establishments nationwide and a local requirement for home water heaters in some states. "jeff" > wrote in message news:10jre.2447$kj5.2270@trnddc03... > L.W.(ßill) Hughes III wrote: > >> I'll bet Steve won't have a clue as to why all gas water heaters >> are installed two feet off the floor, either. > > All? I've never seen one mounted in such a manner so I assume it must be a > Califlornia thing. Would it matter if the gas was natural or LPG, or did > your state regulators figure that height was a good trigger point for > both? > > Here is a little experiment for the "heavier than air" folks: Go out into > the middle of the street, dump about 5 gallons of gasoline on the ground > and stand in the middle of the puddle. Inhale deeply. Because gasoline > vapors are much heavier than air you should not smell anything. Now take > out some matches and try lighting one. Safe, right? The process is called > diffusion, and is due to the Brownian motion of matter. You cannot fart > anywhere on the planet without everyone, everywhere eventually having to > breathe it in. > > -- > jeff |
#260
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At last, a real world example we can understand :-)
Dave Milne, Scotland '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ "jeff" > wrote in message news:10jre.2447$kj5.2270@trnddc03... > You cannot fart anywhere on the planet without everyone, everywhere > eventually having to breathe it in. |
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