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- Oct 13, 2013
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We had comps to see which one can sustain the flame the longestthe gas in the taps wasn't the deadliest gas in the room.
Anyone try the mentos in Coca Cola?
We had comps to see which one can sustain the flame the longestthe gas in the taps wasn't the deadliest gas in the room.
Its all good and fun until it isn't - I loved chemistry and used to run experiments learnt in class at home in dad's shed from materials I bought from a school chemistry supplies outlet..Burning asbestos mats and setting magnesium on fire. The good ole Chem lab days.
Not school, but in med school physiology practical, we had one student take a GTN tablet, one smoke a cigarette and one take an amyl nitrate popper to observe the effect of nitrates. Sure its not happening nowDoing experiments with cigarettes, burning them through a plunger and a filter paper to see how much cough went into your lungs.
And in an all boys school, the gas in the taps wasn't the deadliest gas in the room.
pph is %, for anyone who understands...The common expression is % (mg/ml) because we actually want to now how much of x is in the vial.
So if a vial is a 1% of something and the vial is 10ml, we automatically know it contains 100mg (unless you are a med student). PPH would just be unworkable
Yeah, I actually scored the makings for nitro glycine from chemistry class at school.Oh, for the good old days in the chemistry lab! Gas taps easily turn-onable and Bunsen burners to hand; conc HCl and H2SO4 was in the back of the fume cabinets, copper coil in the cupboard. Magnesium ribbon was locked away, but you could usually snaffle a bit extra during class and use it afterwards. Thankfully not silly enough to fool around with the phosphorus ...
Sure, but that is not the common nomenclature for the profession.pph is %,
Let me tell it from the patient’s point of view. I don’t give a rats bottom about the needle gauge (don’t they measure shotgun barrels in gauge?) I just know big is bad and small is better.Patients sometimes get worried - they think the 25gauge needle is bigger than the 16gauge
The other way round. The smaller the gauge the closer the needle to a shotgun barrel in size. .I just know big is bad and small is better.
The other way round. The smaller the gauge the closer the needle to a shotgun barrel in size. .
Wife noticed today that it's not sealing properly and one door closing causes other door to open slightly. Unbelievable.
Everyone knows the SI unit for weight is the elephant… “that tram weighs the same as five elephants”; “the new Range Rover weighs half an elephant”!
They also know the size for aquatic ‘acreage’ is the Sydney Harbour… “the introduction of water saving measures has reduced annual water consumption in our city by two Sydney harbours”
What’s the SI unit for going off topic?
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had no utility afterwardswhat I did at school.
Yes it's amazing how well they can calculate the warranties of car batteries isn't it! I'd still make a claim on the dealer / battery company.What cheeses me off is a flat battery in the car this morning.
Cheesing me off even more: the warranty on that battery ran out less than two months ago.
And not just car batteries - in recent times I've had a toaster expire 2 weeks out of warranty, a hairdryer expire 1 year out of warranty - which I know sounds bad, but I would be lucky to use it 3 times a year, so hardly heavy use, and an Aldi power tool give up the ghost a couple of months out of warranty. I tried on all of them - toaster was replaced, Aldi refunded on the power tool as they couldn't replace it which I thought was totally amazing, but hairdryer said no. I suppose technically fair enough, but really if a hairdryer carks it after no more than 5 uses, it is not really fit for purpose.Yes it's amazing how well they can calculate the warranties of car batteries isn't it! I'd still make a claim on the dealer / battery company.