Sentences with phrase «heat does all of the work for»

The heat does all of the work for you, and the best thing you can do is nothing.

Not exact matches

For example, if a consumer walks into a store and buys a pair of third - party - branded goggles featuring its HUD tech and they don't work, who takes the heat and whose reputation is in jeopardy?
What are you working for if, regardless of what you do, the end result will always be the same: the heat death of the universe?
With just the two of us, our little toaster oven gets to do the work, unless I can capitalize on the residual heat if the oven happens to be on for something else.
This vegan muesli began as an idea for granola, but when I realized we were working with a toaster oven that smoked every time we attempted to use it and another heat wave in Washington without an air conditioner or a fan (lots of people don't have AC because it's not normally as hot as it's been), I simplified further and decided muesli was a better option.
I brought it to work (with a little bag of crushed peanuts, I don't like them heated) for lunch and everyone raved about how wonderful it smelled!
It's easy and if you work fast peeling, and use heat resistant gloves when the potatoes come out of the boiling water (so you don't have to wait for them to cool to score them) it doesn't take a lot of prep time.
Olive oil is not a good oil for cooking (it doesn't hold up well under high heat), and it might change the flavor of the brownies a little, but it will work in the recipe.
Everything done by the recipe and unfortunately cooking on high heat didn't work for me, even with a good amount of vegan butter.
I do really want this recipe to work, because I am thinking next time to try baking powder instead of soda, and to reduce the heat to about 325 and bake it for more like an hour and 20 minutes, to see if that helps (reducing the heat while extending the baking time will help keep the crust from burning while the inside fully cooks).
Aside from a little roasting and scorching, you can get most of the work for these soups done in a blender, saving you the extra heat of the oven or stove.
I like beers that are brewed with a bit of spice, but the heat didn't work here for me.
I wanted to ask him if he was the first person who was ever be late for something, mostly because he is 20 years old, and in the same situation at his age most people are sleeping in beds without box springs, destroying microwaves by accidentally leaving forks in them while heating water for ramen, and discovering that things in your house stop working when you don't send strangers in businesses money in the form of checks.
It can be difficult for me to think of logical consequences in the heat of the moment, but whenever I take the time to do so, it simply seems to work better.
I do not microwave in plastic because of the risk of toxins getting into the food, actually don't care for microwaves that much so I started putting my hot things in glass containers, even small mason jars work for heating up if you'd like to use a microwave, or I heat them up at home, store them in glass, and keep it separate from the other foods.
«In short, Washington's message to those who can't afford heat at the dead of winter, those struggling to provide an education for their child; and to commuters forced to sit through hours of traffic on a daily commute to work is that they don't matter.
Nevertheless he did important work on the mathematics of heat diffusion and developed useful techniques for solving equations.
What makes The Ferment Friend Heater with Thermostat so special is how we can just set the temperature, place the probe on the outside of the vessel not in contact with the heat mat, and it does all the work for us, keeping the brew within a few degrees of optimum automatically.
I don't see any comments but i figure i'll leave my test results here — i found some of the questions hard to answer accurately because with things like climate tolerance, i have equal difficulty with cold, heat AND humidity lol so i selected all three — wasn't sure how it worked but i didn't feel selecting just one would be accurate... anyway — thanks for the articles — i've been feeling a little pull to this lately so... we'll see:)
of salt, stir, cover with a towel, leave 8 - 12 hours, then drain and place in a dehydrator for 24 hours or until dry and crisp (if you don't have a dehydrator, putting them on a cookie sheet in an oven on a very low heat setting should also work).
I feel for the work - goers who have to head out in this heat everyday wearing a suit of sorts — and I really feel for those who have to do this and ride the subway.
My slow cooker gets lots of use because not only does it cook a great meal without heating up the whole kitchen (or the whole house) but because the warm weather months are often the busiest on the homestead, I can work all day outside and come in to a meal waiting for me.
Principals in many schools, McCarty said, «would be wishing for things like file cabinets that aren't locked shut without keys or that the cracked old empty pool — now a safety hazard and a stark reminder of what the children do not have rather than an asset to the physical plant — would be magically filled in and planted with a tree; and that the air and heat worked
«In these schools,» McCarty said, «folks are wishing for things like file cabinets that aren't locked shut without keys; or that the cracked old empty pool — a stark reminder of what the children do not have rather than an asset to the physical plant — would be magically filled in and planted with a tree; and that the air and heat worked
I buy new cars about every 2 to 3 years, i get bored with them, i have had Lexus, BMW, Infiniti, Honda and Toyotas all good cars but nothing more, but the 2013 Azera had the look, paint color, nice looking wheels, plenty of leg room and back seat has a lot of room for adults not just kids, consistent mpg 21 city and 30 to 32 on interstate i normally set my cruise 5 above limit and leave it, a V6 with great passing power and merging is a breeze always has plenty of get up and go power very smooth six speed auto transmission never wanders looking for gears like my last Lexus did, the heated and cooled seats are great and work awesome also has rear heated seats that my kids love, what sold me on car was the Infinity car stereo plenty of bass and clear crisp music 550 watts sounds are amazing that come from this stereo satellite radio is works great unlike some past cars, and the quiet interior and great ride also surprised me, only thing that really bugged me is the fact that remote start is not on a $ 40,000 car, and have to pay over $ 300 a year for bluelink if i want remote start from a phone.
Climate control buttons border on small, but at least there are buttons here, one each for the heated seats and one for the steering wheel; and dual zone auto climate does the work most of the time.
It's based off the Audi RS 6's motor, but heavily revamped for Bentley and Lamborghini work, though exactly who did the revamping is a subject of heated and differing opinions between Lamborghini, Bentley and Audi Sport.
For example, if the house you purchased does not have a properly working heating and cooling system, replacing this unit should be one of your top priorities.
Now after two days he held his head up, stuck his tail up and by Tuesday he was moving around.I kept him on Clavamox for a week just in case he was getting a cold.I was also putting fluids under his skin several times a day.One week later Friday the 31 st.he was eating up to 5cc of milk.He only weighed 2 oz.on the vets scale and 4 oz.on my scale.Today November 16,2008 my husband has named him Beetle Bug and he is 6 weeks old Monday November 17,2008, and only weighs 5 oz.He walks, plays, pees and poops on his own.Why he even has his teeth coming in.I took him to show the vet and I saw a huge smile on his face.I just wanted to thank him for taking the time to show me how to tube feed a puppy his size as I felt more at ease now doing it.I was just afraid to try it.He told me he didn't think the puppy would make it, and told me I was the one who saved him, not him.I believe Jesus sent me to him that day for the vet to show me how to tube feed; for if I ever was in that situation ever again.And I believe it was Jesus working through me that saved that puppy.The part of this story and hopefully it might save a puppy out there someday is Never give up.Remember Heat is the most important factor.Get your puppy warm and it might save their life.
We enjoyed our vacations, I will suggest the trip better for couples since the pool (which is not heated or didn't work) is not that safe for kids considering that is on a cliff edge, so kind of nervous all the time.
Granted, not all of the fitness equipment works, the pool is tiny and the «hot tub» doesn't heat up, but the common rooftop deck above the ninth floor is still a great spot for relaxing and watching the city rush by from above.
Cold, claustrophobic room overseeing the graves of the Montmartre cemetery, just one accesible wall socket, the heating did nt work, i left there with a cold; very poor breakfast even for budget hotel standards
It's hard for me to give Murdoch credit for doing anything I agree with, so I'll wear 2 hats on this one: one of hope / wait - and - see, and two of expecting the blog to be nothing more than a «heat deflector», green spin, a token nod to being green while mostly working against green progress in other ways, even within the blog.
Actually, there is some interesting work being done by Matt Huber of Purdue, following up on some earlier ideas of Emanuel's, suggesting that the role of TCs in transporting heat from equator towards the poles may be more significant than previously thought — it also allows for some interesting, though admittedly somewhat exotic, mechanisms for explaining the «cool tropics paradox» and «equable climate problem» of the early Paleogene and Cretaceous periods, i.e. the problem of how to make the higher latitudes warm without warming the tropics much, something that appears to have happened during some past warm epochs in Earth's history.
After all, shipping containers are just big metal boxes with no openings for light or access except for huge doors on one end, and although the steel construction renders them rugged, they offer no insulation from heat or cold whatsoever, so a lot of work has to be done to make shipping containers truly livable year - round.
Dave H, your analogy works for a pan of water, but it doesn't work when the rate of heat being applied is itself influenced by features of a chaotic nature.
So now we have a whole generation, because it was deliberately introduced into the education system, who believe the idiotic fisics «that visible light is capable of heating the water in the oceans», when in the real world and real world physics, a) water is a transparent medium for visible light, it doesn't absorb visible light at all but transmits it through unchanged, and b) visible light in the real world works on the electronic transition level on meeting matter, this level is tiny, it isn't capable of moving whole molecules of matter into vibration which is what it takes to heat water.
You might come to realize that while gravitation can do a bit of work at first in a way that depends on the initial state and hence can differentially heat or cool local parts of the gas as it expands or compresses to achieve a self - supporting density / pressure profile such that throughout the gas column (condition for static force balance), once static force balance is achieved (which happens almost instantly, BTW) any bulk motion of the gas damps and gravitation can no longer heat or cool the gas.
Visible light is not thermal energy on the move, it can not heat water as thermal infrared can heat water, water is a transparent medium for it, it works on electronic transition level of effect on meeting matter, AND not vibrational resonance, i.e. moving the whole molecule, kinetic energy, which is the process of thermal infrared, etc. «Climate» science mangles all of these by giving the properties of one to another and then claiming visible light can do what it isn't physically possible for it to do.
I can't exactly say how, because I don't really know how refrigerators work, especially refrigerators that rely on pure radiation for rejection of heat during their cyclic operation and it all makes my head hurt to try to figure it out and explain it in a way that would actually convince somebody (you know, with algebra and Navier - Stokes and everything) but it really is fun to talk about it as if I did know.»
Heat transfers from one molecule to another continuously and we do not call that transfer of heat «perpetual motion» capable of being tapped for «doing work without an input of energy&raqHeat transfers from one molecule to another continuously and we do not call that transfer of heat «perpetual motion» capable of being tapped for «doing work without an input of energy&raqheat «perpetual motion» capable of being tapped for «doing work without an input of energy».
What we have just proven is that for any isolated gas, in the absence of a source of external work — note that I do not care in this proof how or why the initial state of the gas with some sort of thermal lapse came about, whether or not there is gravity present or absent, whether or not the gas is a mixture or pure — if we move a dollop of heat from where it is warmer (cooling it) to where it is cooler (warming it) we increase the entropy of the Universe and such a fluctuation in the state of the gas is irreversible.
Energy is the proper extensive property, and heat describes a quality of some of the internal energy in a system, namely its availability for doing work.
Given past work at attempting water bath stabilised temperatures in good laboratory surroundings, I'd hazard a guess that the best one can do, in the sense of all variation in a natural setting, as about + / -0.1 deg C for uses such as ocean heat content.
New York University, for example, may rank as a big emitter in New York, but a year ago it opened a co-generation facility that makes electricity and uses the waste heat to heat and cool buildings, thus doing far more work per pound of carbon dioxide emitted than most other sources.
Explains that pipes and pressure vessels inside nuclear power plants give off significant amounts of waste heat, with temperatures reaching up to 55C (131F)- not very comfortable for maintenance workers who are swathed in radiation protection gear and doing repair work.
He went on to refer to lawyers who bring post-trial motions for ineffective assistance of counsel as «backseat drivers» who «have never been in the heat of battle» and are «criticizing lawyers that actually are real lawyers that do the work, the dirty work, the down in the trenches work
After a few heated discussions over the course of several weeks, it became clear to me that he had no intention of taking any responsibility for the work he had done.
Looking at listing may not need full rehab, new roof and water heater done, 3br in neighbor run 900 to 1000, rehab for low maintenance, try to buy as low as you can, look at comps, probably could go in as low as 38 - 42 with good agent and stress as is, maybe a few agents here to help, get one to give you good numbers not listing agent numbers, street is a nice one for area, not much back yard or parking but nice front, before you close make sure vacant contingent, if numbers work I would do it, the are predicting an abundance of rentals avail next year with building craze but keeping expense low you should be safe, remember don't rehab as if you are living there, think durable and repaintable, number should go into systems and structure first, elect, heat, walls, windows, floors, plumbing, if you use a contractor go with one you know or work with someone in area to keep an eye on progress, good luck at least you know some of the history of the property
(This is not always the case, obviously, but it is a prevailing attitude in the collective mind - set of the public... I'm defending my choice of working within this industry all the time... I sometimes get into some heated exchanges with folks as I stand up for the fact that there are many good folks in this business; but I do have to concede that there are also those who don't belong here, especially to those folks who tell me why they think negatively of our industry; it always boils down to one or more personal negative experiences, and if not that, to stories that they have heard about same from other disillusioned consumers.
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