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#fiberglas
misforgotten2 · 8 months
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Ironically the best environment for using Fiberglas, sunny and warm, is also the worst place for it if you are hoping not having to replace it every 5 years.
Better Homes and Gardens August 1954
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lisamarie-vee · 8 days
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eteilytech · 2 years
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massivebreadshark · 2 years
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Fiberglas-Baumwolle-Marktbericht wird eine umfassende Analyse der globalen und regionalen Marktgröße und der Marktgröße auf Länderebene, des Segmentierungsmarktanteils und der Segmentgröße, des Marktwettbewerbs, der Verkaufsanalyse, der Auswirkungen regionaler und globaler Marktteilnehmer sowie der Optimierung der Wertschöpfungskette/Lieferkette umfassen , Handelsgesetze, wichtige Unternehmensstrategien, Analysen von Wachstumschancen, Produkteinführungen, Erweiterung des Gebietsmarktes und technologische Innovationen.
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stargazer-sims · 8 months
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Journal Entry #55 (part one)
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Journal Entry #54 // STORY INDEX
Victor
Let me tell you, I think I've had enough stress for this week.
Okay, so I know it's only been a few days since my last update, but stuff has happened. A lot of stuff, actually, and I need to unpack all of it somewhere, so here we are.
Exactly as I predicted, and probably to no one's surprise, Yuri did end up in the hospital again.
A healthy and fit person might be able to go a week or more without food, but somebody whose health is as fragile as Yuri's can't. His body has practically zero reserves, and after a handful of days without eating, it was obvious he was getting weaker and more unwell.
Believe me, I tried everything I could think of to get some nourishment into him, but he wasn't having it. I was getting really worried, and when he woke up the day before yesterday with a fever, it might not be overstating it to say I panicked. I suggested that we should go back to the hospital because I didn't know what else I could do for him, and what really scared me was that he agreed without a debate.
At the urgent care clinic, the doctor who saw him was the same one who'd taken care of him last time, Dr. Shibazaki. She remembered him, and after taking one look at his medical records on the computer, decided on the spot that she'd admit him.
By some weird coincidence, his room turned out to be the same one he'd occupied during his previous stay. It wasn't bad, as far as hospital rooms go. The colour of the walls reminded me of a clear September sky, and there was a window so we could look out at the real sky if we wanted to. During Yuri's last stay, we'd kept the curtain closed most of the time, but I opened it this time to let some sunlight in.
"I'm glad I'm in this room again," Yuri commented as he sat on the bed and changed into pyjamas. "Not really glad, but... you know. I like familiarity."
"I know what you mean," I said. "I'd rather you didn't need to be here, but it is a comfortable room."
"As comfortable as hospital rooms get," he said. "Sorry I'm being so much trouble. Again."
I wanted to tell him he didn't need to apologize, but instead I just said, "Never mind. You're worth the trouble."
I did my best to tuck him into bed with my one good arm, and then I climbed up to snuggle with him. That, at least, was a vast improvement from before. He'd been connected to too much stuff and I'd had both arms encased in Fiberglas, so awkward hospital bed cuddles had been totally off the agenda.
Yuri had only been settled in his room for about half an hour when his specialist turned up. I'm sure we've mentioned her before, but just in case you don't recall, her name is Espérance Kasongo and she's a Canadian like me, but I don't think Canada is her country of origin. Her first language is French, so she has an interesting accent when she speaks Japanese. She speaks English too, though, and that's the language she seems to prefer using with Yuri and me.
Dr. Kasongo is a gastroenterologist — a digestive system doctor, for those of you who don't like big words — and she's been seeing Yuri for about five years now. He likes her a lot more than he liked his previous gastroenterologist, probably because she's gentle with him and treats him with empathy, like a whole person instead of just a vessel for a diseased body part.
Dr. Kasongo is usually gentle with me as well, but at the hospital the other day, I wasn't feeling it. The empathy was still there, but I recognize tough love when I see it, and she definitely wasn't going easy on me.
To be fair to her, she wasn't wrong. She made valid points, and I have no problem acknowledging I needed her to draw my attention to some things. I mean, most of what she said was stuff I already knew but didn't put into perspective until somebody else said it aloud.
After examining Yuri and reviewing the notes Dr. Shibazaki had made, Dr. Kasongo's conclusion was that he was showing all the signs of malnutrition. That didn't really shock me at all. I'm not a medical professional yet, but I'd kinda suspected it for a while.
The doctor said she was going to request bloodwork and some other tests. Yuri didn't seem thrilled about it, but he didn't comment on it like he usually does. He just nodded and said it was fine. I think that worried me more than anything, as strange as it may sound.
Once she'd finished poking and prodding him, Dr. Kasongo sat us both down for a serious talk. She didn't ease into it, either
She led with, "This is very concerning, Yuri. I discharged you on the understanding that you were going to follow the food plan the nutritionist gave you. Now, here you are, back again."
"Here I am," Yuri echoed lamely.
"Can you tell me about what you've been eating?"
He glanced at me, and his expression was one of desperation. Taking pity on him, I said, "We started off okay, but the food plan was a lot, and—"
"Excuse me." The doctor cut me off with a stern look. "I have questions later for you. Right now, I'm asking Yuri."
"I... haven't really been eating much," Yuri told her. "Water. Soy milk. I think I had grape juice yesterday or the day before."
She shook her head. "That is not eating. When was the last time you had solid food?"
"Maybe four days ago?"
"And what was it?"
"Rice."
"Were you having trouble keeping food down?" she asked. "Or was it something else?"
"Something else," Yuri said.
"Do you think you can tell me about it?"
"One of our friends was helping us," he said. "He kept making me feed myself."
The doctor made a noncommittal humming sound. "I see."
"It was stressful," Yuri went on. "I told him I couldn't do it, that it was giving me a lot of anxiety. I don't like eating. I don't like touching food, and sometimes I don't even like looking at food. Having to feed myself while somebody sat there watching to make sure I did it was too much."
"I see," she said again. "If your friend was encouraging you to feed yourself, am I to infer that you were not feeding yourself before?”
“Yes,” he said.
“Somebody else was feeding you?"
"Yes.”
Dr. Kasongo shifted her attention to me. "Victor, were you feeding him?"
"Yeah," I confessed. "I mean, not too much lately, because of my arms, but..." I gestured vaguely with the hand that still had a cast on it. "But... yeah. Me and his parents. It's just easier for everyone that way."
"And how is it easier?" she inquired.
"Because he needs to eat, and it's too hard to watch him struggle with it, especially when he's really sick,"
"So, I'm hearing that it's easier for you if you feed him."
"I... guess so?" I said. "But, it's easier for him too."
"Is it?" she asked. "Yuri, how do you feel when someone feeds you? Does that make it easier for you to eat?"
Yuri fidgeted with the edge of his blanket and looked as though he was attempting to decide on the best way to answer. After several seconds, he ventured, "I suppose it does, in a way. There's less to think about if I don't have to handle the utensils myself, but I still don't like eating."
"Does it produce less anxiety when someone feeds you?" the doctor inquired.
"Anxiety about eating? Yes, a little less, but then I’m anxious about creating too much work for Victor or my mother."
"So, clearly that is not the solution." Dr. Kasongo leaned back in her chair, and seemed to ponder for a moment before she continued. "I may have a better one. Yuri, how would you feel about doing something called nutrition rehabilitation?"
"What's that?" I hadn't meant to speak before Yuri got the chance to answer, but the phrase itself intrigued me and I was immediately curious.
"It's a kind of therapy," the doctor said. "Patients work closely with their doctor and a nutritionist and sometimes a psychologist or psychiarist to develop better nutrition and eating strategies, and to help them have a healthier relationship with food. We use it a lot with patients who have eating disorders, mental health concerns that affect their eating, and of course patients with long-term and chronic illnesses."
Yuri didn't seem happy about this suggestion. "You want me to see a therapist?"
"I want to get you back to where you were last summer," she told him. "I'd like to see you at a healthy weight, with a proper sleep schedule and meal routine, and with enough energy to exercise and work and enjoy your life."
"That'd be great, wouldn't it?" I added. "We had a lot of fun last summer. Remember the rock climbing?"
"Yeah," Yuri said.
“What was your favourite thing about last summer?”
“Going to the Festival of Snow with your mother,” he said. “We were out all day.”
“Ideally, I would like to see you be able to have full days out this summer as well,” said the doctor. "Is that a goal you'd be willing to work toward? Eating independently and stabilizing your routine, and getting back some stamina?"
"I suppose so," he said.
I recalled the conversation between Yuri and his mother. She'd talked about goals too. Yuri hadn't been particularly amenable to goal-setting that day, but now it seemed he might be coming around to it.
"You will have to participate too, Victor," Dr. Kasongo said. "I recognize that you want to help, and I know you've already established some good habits, but there are more changes needed."
“Like what?” I asked.
She looked me straight in the eyes. "No more feeding, for a start. I'm quite serious about that. There can be no exceptions. It may be a difficult adjustment for you, but I think you can see that it isn't helpful to Yuri's recovery."
"Yes, I think I'm seeing that now," I said.
"And no more empty carbohydrates. I take it you are the one who prepares the meals?"
"Yeah."
"You know grape juice is not a meal."
"I know," I said.
"Protein. Healthy fats. Low-fibre fruit and vegetables. Good carbohydrates. I know you know about all those things," she said. "We need to get back on track, and you'll play an important role in that."
"I'll do my best," I promised.
"Excellent," said the doctor. "I think it would also be a good idea for you to attend some sessions with the nutritionist along with Yuri. With your background, you may be more well-informed about health and nutrition than most caregivers, but there's still quite a lot you can learn about the topic in general and, I dare say, about Yuri's needs in particular."
I nodded. "Okay."
"Yuri, you will need to be accountable for yourself as well," she continued. "Just because Victor has the responsibility of planning and preparing meals, that doesn't mean you can let him manage everything. The nutritionist will work with you and teach you how to make good decisions about eating, and I expect you to participate in the meal planning and take control of your own food intake at some point."
"Are you going to check up on me?" Yuri asked, and it was difficult to determine from his tone if he wanted her to or if he didn't. It could've been, 'I'm scared I'll mess it up without support' or it could have been, 'I won't be able to get away with anything if you're monitoring me'. I couldn't tell. I hoped it was the first one, but I feared it was the second.
"Of course I'll be checking on you," she said. "And I've already referred you to an excellent colleague of mine, Dr. Daniel Kim at Willow Creek Regional Hospital. So, after you move, there'll be someone to check your progress straight away when you get there."
I hadn't realized she'd already made a referral. I hadn't told her we were moving, so I had to assume Yuri's parents had told her during his previous hospital stay. It was a good thing somebody had mentioned it, because I'll admit I'd been too preoccupied to think of lining up new doctors for Yuri back home.
"I didn't know international referrals were even a thing," I said.
"I'm not sure they are," said Dr. Kasongo. "Daniel and I were in medical school together, and we both chose the same specialty. We've been great friends for a long time and naturally we keep in touch. I asked him for a favour, and fortunately for you, he was glad to do it." She gave me a conspiratorial little grin. "Something for a fellow resident of the Creek."
I stared for a second. "You're from Willow Creek?"
"Not originally, but when my family immigrated to Canada and settled there, I was too young to remember living anywhere else before that. I always say I had my humble beginnings in the Willow Creek Trailer Park. Not doing so bad for myself now, am I?"
"If you don't mind my asking, how long have you been in Japan?"
"About fifteen years," she said. "A few more than you, I think."
"I've been here for two, but it's time to go home."
"I understand. You must follow the path that's right for you." She looked thoughtful for a few seconds, but quickly got back to business. "Do you have any questions about what we've discussed so far?"
"I do have one," I said. "I agree with the plan. It sounds like a good idea to me, but how long do you think it'll take? Like, this isn't an immediate solution to the problem of Yuri not being able to eat."
"How long it takes will depend largely on Yuri, and also on you," she replied. "You will need to support him throughout the process, regardless of how difficult it is or how long it may take. And Yuri, I want you to understand that no one expects you to get better within days or even a few weeks. If you make quick progress, that's good, but slow, steady progress is equally good, and no one will judge you for setbacks. This may not be a strictly linear process, and I want you both to be prepared for that."
"I understand," Yuri said. "But, I don't think you really answered Victor's question."
"About an immediate solution?" she said.
"Yeah," I said. "What are we supposed to do until this nutrition rehabilitation therapy kicks in and we start seeing results? Like, he's literally starving right now, and... yeah. Sorry. You don't need me to point that out, but..." I trailed off, stopping just short of telling her how freaked out I was about the way-too-real possibility of Yuri starving himself to death.
Yuri put a hand to his mouth, as if he were feeling nauseous. His voice came out slightly strained. "Please don't say meal replacement drinks."
"No meal replacement drinks today," the doctor assured him. "Because of your overall health at the moment, I think we should begin a nutrient infusion today, and once I have all the results from the tests we're going to do, we might discuss some form of enteral nutrition after that."
I felt my heart sink at hearing her words. "You mean a feeding tube."
That was the thing I'd hoped we could avoid. I know Yuri's parents were not entirely in favour of it either, and thought it was a drastic measure.
"Yes," she said. "Yuri, unless you're willing to start drinking meal replacements or eating some soft foods within the next few days, then that would be my recommendation."
Yuri shook his head. "I... I can't. Putting anything in my mouth right now is... I just can't."
"All right," Dr. Kasongo conceded. "Perhaps you'll feel differently about it tomorrow."
"I don't think so," Yuri said.
"I'll ask you in the morning," she told him. "For now, we'll get started with your bloodwork and antibody tests, and I'll do my best to arrange an imaging test for you for this afternoon so we can see what's going on inside you. Once we have all that, we can talk about next steps. Does that sound acceptable?"
"Yes," Yuri said.
"Victor?"
I could barely breathe around the lump that'd suddenly formed in my throat, but somehow I got out a strained, "Uh… yeah."
There wasn't any other suitable response I could give anyway.
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zhalfirin-binds · 2 years
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Design inspirations for my binding of
Diplomatic Relations by maldoror_chant
For this one I started out drawing inspiriation for the colour scheme from the two main protagonists and ended up using quite a bit more.  I had the red leather in mind first as it’s close to how Gaara’s hair is shown mostly and decided for the tsumugi for covering for purely aesthetic reasons. Only later I noticed it’s actually a good fit with the rest of Gaara’s colours. The inlay had been planned pretty early on with the kanji in mind too. I wanted to use sand veneer as it’s closer to the whole desert setting and with Gaara manipulating sand, but turned out the sand veneer was too thick and I also liked slate veneer colours better (it’s actually translucent too). The first idea had been to have it visible of both sides of the front cover. So if you opened the book the paste down side of the cover would show the backside of the cut out. Sadly, I could not figure a way to make it look good on both sides. Partly because the fiberglas carrier layer is not that awesome to look at.   (Here’s a picture with the veneer on a white surface and held against the light I do like the effect, but as I said, I couldn’t figure a way to make it work, perhaps another time... ) 
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The headbands are inspired by Rock Lee’s colours. I wanted to include him somehow in the design although his taste in colour combinations is....  questionable (but they do make a high-contrast headband).
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Last addition to the design was Shukaku’s eye on the spine in favour of a tooled title. Most of the time it’s depicted as a bright dot in the racoon/ tanuki mask of the Tailed-Beast, but there are a few pictures where the pupils are shown.
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shmorp-mcdurgen · 1 year
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i for one think fiberglas Insulation is better but people say thatll do “permanent damage to my mouth” and i’ll “bleed out”. very sad :(
Man………..
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arabellaflynn · 1 year
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I went down a few rabbit holes while researching the Advent Calendar last year, that didn't make it into the queue because they got too long or went too far afield. Here's one of them!
One thing you notice when you watch a bazillion videos about old games consoles is how the design of circuitry has evolved. If someone says 'circuit board' today, you think a light piece of leafy green board, filled with parallel lines of copper at 45° and 90° angles, dotted with lots of tiny inscrutable plastic and metal doodads. But it took a long, long time for them to get that way.
If you look at really old circuit boards -- and I mean really, really old circuit boards, like from the beginning of the transistor era, they look completely different. They're brownish, for one thing. And kind of... wiggly?
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Apologies for the transfer quality. It's not your connection, it just sucks. This piece appears to be some sort of promo-tainment thing from Tektronix themselves, from 1969. The rounded corners and bluish fuzz at the edges is an effect called 'vignetting', and it means this is originally from a 16mm film reel. There's no earthly reason for film to look this terrible. The uncentered picture means someone copied it by pointing a camera at a projection screen instead of bothering to get a proper kinescope setup, and the fact that it only goes up to 240p makes me feel like it was originally transferred over two decades ago for RealPlayer and nobody bothered to fix it for YouTube. VHS is about 240 lines, but if this were a crap transfer from a VHS tape you'd also see scanlines. It's possible there's a better copy at VintageTek, a museum dedicated to the history of Tektronix; they are an all-volunteer institution, and they probably have more important things to funnel funding to than updating their YouTube channel.
Point being, it looks like porridge and I'm sorry, but at least the content is interesting.
The brownish color, which is actually from an evolutionary stage earlier than what's covered here, is because many early boards were milled of bakelite rather than electrodeposited onto a glass or fiberglas backplane. If you want to see some of what that might have been like, you can hop over to Usagi Electric. He uses CAD to mill boards, rather than the photochemical process described by Tektronix, but it's pretty much the same idea. He does a lot of it in pursuit of his mad obsession with building a vacuum tube computer here. (If you're curious, his logo says うさぎ電気, "Usagi Denki". "Usagi" is Japanese for rabbit or bunny -- there is one who appears at the end of some videos -- and the spelling of "denki" here specifically means electrics, as opposed to 電機, which is usually rendered electronics. It still pops up in the names of some engineering or technology firms, but generally only the really old ones.)
The wiggly nature of early boards is neatly explained by watching the drafting process, starting about three minutes into the video. It was originally done by hand. The rest of the half-hour video goes through the whole multi-stage process, but the gist is that when you lay out the board, you draw dark lines where you want the conductive traces to be on the final product. To get a consistent size, tape is used for "holes" and tape lines are uses for the traces. If you've ever used stripe tape in nail art, it was apparently something like that -- vinyl tape with a bit of stretch, so you could curve it around. It was a methodical sort of art form. Ever solved one of those "connect the same-color dots without crossing lines" puzzles? It's basically that. If you can't find a topologically-appropriate solution on a single plane, you can produce boards with traces on both the front and the back, as Tektronix does here, and these days you can actually bury traces in internal layers as well. It's just a pain and makes the cost go up exponentially. 
The mention of "holes" is interesting. Early circuit boards were nothing but holes. Everything had legs and was soldered on from the underside. Today these are known as "through-hole mounted" components; the alternatives are "surface-mount" components, which are generally smaller and fiddlier to solder on by hand, but considerably easier to lay down and solder in place by machine. Surface-mount technology has been around since before this Tektronix piece, but remained NASA-grade esoterica until the automated assembly process became cost-effective in the 1990s. Today the conductive holes are referred to as "vias" and the little medal dots surface-mount things are soldered to are "pads".
I'll also note that they show the automatic soldering process for these boards late in the video. It involves skimming the boards across the surface of a pool of molten solder. Solder in the 1960s contained a lot of lead. I would not personally like to be in that room. Today a machine places little surface-mount doojiggers in place along with solder beads, and then melts it all very gently in a very hot oven until it all melds together, not unlike a pan of slightly too-runny cookies. If you do it right, the surface tension of the solder keeps it on the pads and out of the traces. This is particularly useful for placing CPUs, whose myriad tiny pins in a tight grid would be far too difficult to solder by hand, and the origin of "reflow" repairs for electronics that are exhibiting symptoms of flaky solder joints.
The "silkscreening" process here does not use silk, but originally it did -- it was invented in Asia, logically enough. The gist of it is that you take a piece of finely woven mesh, traditionally light silk but in modern times also metal or synthetic fiber, and you plug up all of the little holes in it in the areas where you don't want ink to get through it, usually with some sort of water-repellent substance. In the days of yore, you painted on some kind of sap or wax, but nowadays it's usually a light-sensitive plastic that's scraped across the whole mesh, topped with a stencil that is opaque where you want ink to flow, and exposed to UV light that sets the substance. The unset areas that were in shadow are rinsed clean, leaving the mesh permeable in those places. The ink emulsion is then applied to the printing surface beneath in the reverse process: Ink is spread across the mesh, then squeegeed through with enough force to push it through the holes in the weave and onto the surface beneath. The dots of ink bleed just enough to flow into one another, producing a solid area of pigment. The circuit board designs were originally drafted in black on a white background, then photographed and reduced to 1/4 their original size, and the film used as the stencil for the silkscreen.
Holes are drilled mostly by hand(!) in this clip, which is an error-prone process, as you can see from the Usagi Electrics guy. The worker uses what's called a pantograph drill. A pantograph is a device that translates motion from one place to another, often with a change in scale. Typically pantographs are mechanical in nature, based on the complimentary motion of opposite corners of a parallelogram, but you could make a pretty good argument that modern systems that accept movement inputs from a user and translate them elsewhere by computer are also members of the class. Robot-assisted surgery comes to mind. If you cared to have an even longer argument, you could also consider systems that scan items with laser photons in order to reproduce them on a lathe or CNC machine pantographs in spirit, if not in fact. 
A visual or optical comparator is just a device that projects a magnified view of something up on a screen, along with a point, grid, or profile it needs to match, not unlike a microfiche viewer with a targeting reticule. They're still used in some areas, although software image processing is steadily gaining ground. 
You'd be amazed at how many things still need a look-over by a human with a brain. The lack of human brains is how we got the sharply-angled board traces we have today, in fact. Computer-aided drafting was developed to a usable level in the 1980s, and predictably the people using it were mostly engineers. The kind of route-finding you do in those connect-the-dots puzzles, and that the electronics engineers did when drafting the boards, is one of those very slippery human things. You want to find the shortest path, to save on the precious metals you use as conductors, but the absolute shortest path (with reasonable tolerances) is often a very snaky curve that would require a large number of points to define. It's much simpler to work on a grid, hence the 45° and 90° angles -- this ensures that all trace paths can be defined exclusively by where their corners lie on a square coordinate system, and is much less calculation-intensive. This was a lot of what early graphics tablets (or digitizers) were used for, and some light pen systems. 
Having watched my father do a lot of this as a kid, I gather that at least in modern CAD software, you can just pick things up and put them wherever you want, but that the autopathing gets very confused if you do it too much -- mostly it's better to let the computer figure out where the traces go and tell you if you want something impossible in 3D space. And if you screw up anyway, there's always blue wire.
Circuit boards don't have to be the ubiquitous green, either. That's just the color of the solder mask, a lacquer painted all over the parts of the board you don't want solder to stick to. It's mostly tradition at this point, but you can get boards in pretty much any color you like -- the second most common I've see is a dark navy blue, probably because copper traces and white silkscreening stand out best on those two colors. You're welcome to get neon purple, if you can find anyone offering it.
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misforgotten2 · 9 months
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Fiberglas, good enough for the construction of buildings that are to be torn down after the fair is over.
1964 New York World’s Fair Guide Book
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shopofsomewhatwonders · 10 months
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Wally Darling eats all your fibreglass insulation
NOOO NOT MY FIBERGLA- Actually let him fucking eat it anything to get him out of my damn walls at this point.
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tempe-corals · 1 year
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Mariele Neudecker, 400 thousand generations, 2009.
Mixed media, Stahl, Fiberglas, Wasser, Salz
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bartinpolyester · 11 months
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Bartın Polyester 0541 866 40 41 Ürünler Bartın Polyesterci Bartın Kompozit Fiberglass Firmaları Oğullar Kopozit Polyester
BARTIN POLYESTER KOMPOZİT ÜRÜNLER OĞULLAR KOMPOZT POLYESTER BARTIN 0541 866 40 41
Bartın polyester Bartın Kompozit Ürünler Polyester Fiberglass Ürünler Hazır Mezar Üretimi Bartın Polyester Kompozit Ürünler Oğullar Kompozt Polyester Bartın 0541 866 40 41 Polyester üretimleri, Polyester kalıp yapımı ,Polyester Parça Dökümü, Polyester ürünleri, Polyester Uygulama,Fiberglass Saksı, Dekoratif Saksı, Polyester Saksı, Ctp Saksı, İmalattan Özel Saksı.polyester firmaları,polyester havuz,polyester kubbe,polyester ürünler,
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Hazır Mezar
Sizin için uzun yıllar parçalanma yapmadan sağlamlığını koruyabilen mezarlarlar ürettik. Oldukça ekonomik olan mezarlarımız hakkında bilgi almak için mutlaka bizi arayın. 
Fiberglas mezar nedir?
Fiberglas/kompozit malzemenin genleşme katsayısı çok düşük olmasından dolayı, tüm çevresel baskılara dayanabilecek kadar sert ve dayanıklıdır. Kompozit/fiberglas hazır mezarlarımız portatif yapısı sayesinde kolay kurulum avantajı sağlar. Fiber mezarlarımızın ağırlıkları modeline göre 40-50 kg arasındadır.Fiberglas/kompozit malzeme ile üretilen hazır mezarlarımızın fiyatları, mermer, granit ya da taş kullanılarak imal edilen mezarlara göre daha uygundur.Polyester mezar, fiber mezar, kompozit mezar, hazır mezar, bahçe havuzu, süs havuzu, bahçe havuzları ve fiber mezar üretiyoruz.Firmamız, halen fiberglas hazır mezar, fiberglas portatif süs havuzları, polyester saksılar, akrilik abdest alma üniteleri üretmektedir.
UZUN ÖMÜR
Mermer mezarlarda toprağa ağırlık yapınca,çökünce yapışma yerlerinde kopmalar ve ayrılmalar olabiliyor fiber mezarda asla çökme dökülme olmaz Polyester mezar türüne teknolojik olarak verilen ömür100 yıl dır.Bartın Ve Zonguldak'ın her ilçesine her mahallesine her köyüne mezar kurulumu yapıyoruz.  
BARTIN POLYESTER KOMPOZİT ÜRÜNLER OĞULLAR KOMPOZT POLYESTER BARTIN 0541 866 40 41
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sg-kosmetik · 12 days
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Ausbildung zum Naildesigner - m/w/d Starte Deine Ausbildung ! Die Ausbildung Ausbildung zum Naildesigner - m/w/d beginnt am 21.05.2024 . Lass dich jetzt beraten unter Tel.: 030 / 2162626 https://sg-kosmetikacademy.de/naildesigner-ausbildung Der Beruf als Naildesigner hat heute einen hohen Stellenwert auf dem Arbeitsmarkt. Somit ermöglicht diese Naildesigner Ausbildung nicht nur erfahrende Nailmodellist/in sondern auch Neu- und Wiedereinsteiger einen guten Start auf dem ersten Arbeitsmarkt oder in die Selbständigkeit. Ein wesentlicher Bestandteil dieser Naildesigner Ausbildung ist hier die Manicüre und die Nagelmodellage mit den wichtigsten Nagelmodellage-Techniken, wie die: • Gel-Technik • Acryl-Technik • Fiberglas-Technik • Frech-Technik • Tip-Technik • Schablonen-Technik • Naturnagelverstärkung. #berlin #kosmetik #needling #fußpflege #massage #hyaluronpen #wimpernverlängerung #nagelmodellage #microblading #germany #beauty #microneedling #wellness #hyaluron #lashes #nageldesign #makeup #nails #travel #relax
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teknolojihaber · 1 month
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Modern yelkenler ile gemiler günde üç tona kadar yakıt tasarrufu yapabiliyor
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BAR Technologies, gemileri daha çevre dostu ve nakliyeyi daha uygun fiyatlı hale getirebilecek, gemiler için yenilikçi yelkenler tasarladı. Böyle bir yelken Pyxis Ocean gemisine zaten kurulmuş ve hatta altı aylık bir dizi deniz denemesinden geçti. Hint ve Pasifik okyanuslarının, Kuzey ve Güney Atlantik'in geçildiği testler, fikrin geçerliliğini kanıtladı. Ancak bu teknolojik cihazlar, eski korsan filmlerinde görülen geleneksel yelkenlere hiçbir şekilde benzememektedir. Fiberglas ve çelikten yapılıyorlar ve güverteden 37,5 metre yükseğe konumlandırılıyorlar. Yönetimleri tamamen otomatik. Buradaki fikir, geminin rüzgar kuvvetinden dolayı hareket etmesi değil, rüzgar uygun olduğunda standart dizel motorlardaki yükün azaltılmasıdır. Bu sayede günde 3 tona kadar dizel yakıt tasarrufu sağlanıyor ve toplam yakıt tasarrufu 'e ulaşıyor. CEO John Cooper tarafından temsil edilen BAR Technologies, bu tür yelkenleri kargo gemilerine monte etmenin yalnızca yakıt tüketimini azaltmakla kalmayıp aynı zamanda toksik emisyon miktarını da önemli ölçüde azaltacağına dikkat çekiyor. Tipik bir kargo gemisinin üç yelkenle donatılmasının emisyonları bir buçuk kat azaltması bekleniyor. Ancak yaklaşımın uygulanması için çok fazla çalışma yapılması gerekecek; en az 250 büyük limanın yelkenli gemilerle uyumluluğunun sağlanması gerekecek. Read the full article
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lightspeedboffers · 2 months
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Commissioner plays a fire-elemental person, and requested claws with a fire theme and said go nuts, so I did a magma theme. Very happy with how it turned out!
(Weapons constructed from fiberglas spar, polyethene foam, duct tape, and friction tape for the grip.)
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aclmarts998 · 3 months
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