134a Refrigerant
#4201
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
news:18KJe.219$Vt7.48@newssvr31.news.prodigy.com.. .
>> lol you really desperate to find ANY type of victory! :-) youre pitiful
>> stephen! :-) cryo has nothing to do with commercial refrigeration. you
>> find me ANY company in montana who handles cryo. you cant.
>
> What does that have to do with your knowlege?
cryo simply is not a part of commercial refrigeration. grasp boy! :-)
> you just said that the only
> thing you didn't know about refrigeration was
> geo.
LIAR. i said the only thing i wasnt _qualified_ in. and cryo isnt
commercial refrigeration. :-)
>> lol youve dont NOTHING more than mention the name! give me working
>> pressures. give me componentry. give me the PMB.
>
> I've given enough
TRANSLATION --> "i cant"
BUWHAHAHA! :-)
>> you dont know ANY of that, so run do a google and see if you can find
>> anything out.
>
> Why would I even bother?
TRANSLATION --> "i couldnt find anything on it"
BUWAHAHA! :-)
> You have a business on
> the line!
lol....yeah, my business is dependent upon this newsgroup! :-) <rolling
eyes>
> No, 'substitute' and 'bypass' are two different
> things
and your "solution" is still totally assinine and ridiculous. :-)
> you started screaming about
> 'low ambient', which was *never* a *limiting condition*
> in any post originating this challenge.
LIAR! it was clearly in my original post TO YOU because YOU were the only
ignorant fool who would actually attempt to debate something they know
NOTHING about.
> Because I'm right.. no low ambient
> means no head pressure control necessary
you really are ------- stupid arent you?
> you may
> have to remove refrigerant to make this work
lol and ------- ignorant too! your solution will NOT work because the load
continually changes. you need something to react with the changes in load
to regulate the working pressures. its a constant dynamic setting and
unless you want to stand there watching your gauges and adjusting your
ridiculously assinine "two valves and a pipe" (BUWHAHAH!!!!!) 24/7 then your
solution is a failure. try again.
> OK, here's the mistake I made on the valve thing
your mistake was speaking from PURE ignorance.
> there are no valves that are good enough.... notice the
> complete lack of same in any system. It has to be a sweat
> connection.
TOTALLY irrelevant. nice straw-man.
> This means that the entire system has to be
> evacuated in order to work on it, big PITA.
WRONG!!!!!!! you could pump it down into its own reciever and valve off the
cut point in less than 2 minutes. next? BUWAHAHA! :-)
> Even the injection
> points, the ones that use Schrader valves, have caps
> on them.
irrelevant.
>> > You don't have to have certs to work on cryo
>>
>> LIAR. try again.
>
> You don't.
LIAR.
> I maintained cryo systems for five years
sweeping the floors and wiping the dust off the system is NOT maintaining
cryo. if you truly maintained the systems you could tell me the PMB, the
working pressures, etc. nice try, LIAR.
> Keep saying it
LIAR :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:18KJe.219$Vt7.48@newssvr31.news.prodigy.com.. .
>> lol you really desperate to find ANY type of victory! :-) youre pitiful
>> stephen! :-) cryo has nothing to do with commercial refrigeration. you
>> find me ANY company in montana who handles cryo. you cant.
>
> What does that have to do with your knowlege?
cryo simply is not a part of commercial refrigeration. grasp boy! :-)
> you just said that the only
> thing you didn't know about refrigeration was
> geo.
LIAR. i said the only thing i wasnt _qualified_ in. and cryo isnt
commercial refrigeration. :-)
>> lol youve dont NOTHING more than mention the name! give me working
>> pressures. give me componentry. give me the PMB.
>
> I've given enough
TRANSLATION --> "i cant"
BUWHAHAHA! :-)
>> you dont know ANY of that, so run do a google and see if you can find
>> anything out.
>
> Why would I even bother?
TRANSLATION --> "i couldnt find anything on it"
BUWAHAHA! :-)
> You have a business on
> the line!
lol....yeah, my business is dependent upon this newsgroup! :-) <rolling
eyes>
> No, 'substitute' and 'bypass' are two different
> things
and your "solution" is still totally assinine and ridiculous. :-)
> you started screaming about
> 'low ambient', which was *never* a *limiting condition*
> in any post originating this challenge.
LIAR! it was clearly in my original post TO YOU because YOU were the only
ignorant fool who would actually attempt to debate something they know
NOTHING about.
> Because I'm right.. no low ambient
> means no head pressure control necessary
you really are ------- stupid arent you?
> you may
> have to remove refrigerant to make this work
lol and ------- ignorant too! your solution will NOT work because the load
continually changes. you need something to react with the changes in load
to regulate the working pressures. its a constant dynamic setting and
unless you want to stand there watching your gauges and adjusting your
ridiculously assinine "two valves and a pipe" (BUWHAHAH!!!!!) 24/7 then your
solution is a failure. try again.
> OK, here's the mistake I made on the valve thing
your mistake was speaking from PURE ignorance.
> there are no valves that are good enough.... notice the
> complete lack of same in any system. It has to be a sweat
> connection.
TOTALLY irrelevant. nice straw-man.
> This means that the entire system has to be
> evacuated in order to work on it, big PITA.
WRONG!!!!!!! you could pump it down into its own reciever and valve off the
cut point in less than 2 minutes. next? BUWAHAHA! :-)
> Even the injection
> points, the ones that use Schrader valves, have caps
> on them.
irrelevant.
>> > You don't have to have certs to work on cryo
>>
>> LIAR. try again.
>
> You don't.
LIAR.
> I maintained cryo systems for five years
sweeping the floors and wiping the dust off the system is NOT maintaining
cryo. if you truly maintained the systems you could tell me the PMB, the
working pressures, etc. nice try, LIAR.
> Keep saying it
LIAR :-)
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#4202
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#4203
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#4204
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#4205
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:_dOJe.266$7d.211@trnddc08...
> Would Air Liquide America in East Helena count?
no. air liquide is a gas distributor. you can buy the same gasses at most
any welding supply store.
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#4206
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
#4207
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
#4208
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
#4209
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
and tangent?
360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
360
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Stephen Cowell wrote:
>
> Let's look at what I posted:
> <>
> For the less-than-half full case:
> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
> of the pie wedge
>
> For the more-than-half-full case:
> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>
> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
> </>
>
> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
> interested in hearing whether you understood
> the decomposition of the equation.
>
> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
> you haven't a clue.
>
> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>
> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
> think *I've* done that?
>
> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
> skills that have served me well in later life.
> __
> Steve
> "i recognize my limitations and
> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
> .
#4210
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Bill, To complicate things I think his original question was about a
horizontal cylinder. He then made reference to sticking a fuel tank which
generally is a horizontal cylinder with convex semi-hemispherical endcaps.
Just which does he want the volume of?
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:42F7E3CE.55D467CA@***.net...
> You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
> have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
> via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
> sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
> and tangent?
> 360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
> ------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
> 360
> God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
>
> Stephen Cowell wrote:
>>
>> Let's look at what I posted:
>> <>
>> For the less-than-half full case:
>> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
>> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
>> of the pie wedge
>>
>> For the more-than-half-full case:
>> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
>> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>>
>> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
>> </>
>>
>> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
>> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
>> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
>> interested in hearing whether you understood
>> the decomposition of the equation.
>>
>> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
>> you haven't a clue.
>>
>> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
>> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
>> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
>> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>>
>> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
>> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
>> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
>> think *I've* done that?
>>
>> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
>> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
>> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
>> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
>> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
>> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
>> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
>> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
>> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
>> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
>> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
>> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
>> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
>> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
>> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
>> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
>> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
>> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
>> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
>> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
>> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
>> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
>> skills that have served me well in later life.
>> __
>> Steve
>> "i recognize my limitations and
>> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
>> .
horizontal cylinder. He then made reference to sticking a fuel tank which
generally is a horizontal cylinder with convex semi-hemispherical endcaps.
Just which does he want the volume of?
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:42F7E3CE.55D467CA@***.net...
> You're out of your rabbit a** mind! What does a area of a pie wedge
> have to with calculating the volume of a storage tank usually measured
> via the dip stick??????????? Which is the variable! Why do you think the
> sin of the arc was needed??????????? Remember why we used sin, cosine
> and tangent?
> 360 - 2(90 - arcsin [(r-h)/r])
> ------------------------------- (Pi)r^2 + (r-h)Sqrt (2rh - h^2)
> 360
> God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
>
> Stephen Cowell wrote:
>>
>> Let's look at what I posted:
>> <>
>> For the less-than-half full case:
>> Half he area of the circular face minus the quantity
>> twice the area of the triangle plus twice the area
>> of the pie wedge
>>
>> For the more-than-half-full case:
>> Half the area of the circular face, plus twice the area of
>> the triangle, plus twice the area of the pie wedge.
>>
>> Then times the length. Easy, wasn't it?
>> </>
>>
>> I mentioned the liquid level earlier... really the most
>> trivial part of the equation, we know we're
>> starting with a stick reading, don't we? I was most
>> interested in hearing whether you understood
>> the decomposition of the equation.
>>
>> When you mentioned 'logarithms' the answer was complete:
>> you haven't a clue.
>>
>> Bill, just because you can't read with comprehension
>> doesn't mean that my analysis was wrong. And if you
>> can find *anywhere* in your posted equation using
>> logs, I'll eat my hat.
>>
>> And once again, I have to blow your little expectations
>> away... didn't you get the hint when I said 'stick the
>> tanks, read the pumps'? How many times do you
>> think *I've* done that?
>>
>> I've worked at many service stations, I'm an
>> expert tire installer/repairman, I can do truck tires
>> as well as fuel/service/wash trucks. My first job
>> was at a Conoco in Lubbock... remember the five-
>> position mixer pumps? We had those... don't
>> remember the old man's name, but he had a class
>> act... only used SprayWay and blue towels on the
>> windshields. Busted my first tire on his manual
>> tire machine, really just a post bolted to the concrete
>> with a spin-down cone and a slip-on bead breaker.
>> Worked at a BF Goodrich tire dealer for a year...
>> I can run a Coats 4040a in my sleep. Hunter balancer.
>> Worked at a Gulf station in Austin for a year (my
>> parents were Gulf/Chevron jobbers). Worked for a year
>> at the Texaco truck stop, 183 and IH35... that's
>> where I learned truck tires and ran a service truck.
>> I'm leaving out some more SS jobs...
>> My last SS attendant job was at the Exxon in
>> Alpine, TX... just out of college, 1998. Did oil
>> change, lube, car wash... washing cars is good
>> exercise! Customer relations is perhaps the
>> most important part of the front/fueling operation...
>> skills that have served me well in later life.
>> __
>> Steve
>> "i recognize my limitations and
>> immediately own it (sic)."... Nate
>> .