Sentences with phrase «hit the gas again»

Fortunately, I happened upon the method (release the gas, tap the brake, then hit the gas again as you turn, if you were wondering).

Not exact matches

Morgan Stanley also noted that oil and gas exports account for nearly 16 percent of Malaysia's gross domestic product (GDP), and the sector has been hard hit by crude prices falling below $ 50 a barrel again.
Oil was up about 3 percent on the day, but natural gas got hit again.
Basic premise (aging terribly, so thank heavens the details are behind a paywall): lower gas prices aren't really stimulative in Canada because the concurrent decline in the terms of trade is detrimental to gross domestic income, thereby crimping purchasing power, and is likely accompanied by a hit to employment (wrong again, so far!).
In 2007, when natural gas prices were still near $ 6 and Devon shares hit the $ 90 mark, Mr. Nichols again received $ 1.2 million in salary and a $ 2.6 million bonus.
It's unclear where she's headed, but following a brief gas station stop she hits the road again continually distracted by Ben's incessant attempts to convince her to return.
Victor M. Morales and his trusty Nissan pickup truck have hit the Texas campaign trail again — and this time, the high school geography teacher hopes he'll have enough gas to get to Washington.
Now I don't have power steering when the car is on a cold idle, it only kicks in (again, with a thunk) when I hit the gas for the first time.
I do nt think those buyers will go for it... and you wont find a single Prius C at that price once gas hits $ 4 a gallon again.
NEVER HIT A GAS STATION AGAIN!!!! WO N'T LAST AT THIS PRICE SO BE SMART AND HURRY!!!
When I was getting started I felt like I was hitting the gas, then the brakes, over and over again.
We can't rush to propose action when gas prices are high and then hit the snooze button when they fall again.
Orders for GE's newest, large gas - fired turbines have fallen 35 percent in the two years since the deal closed, and industry estimates show demand for conventional plants is unlikely to hit 2017 levels again for at least a decade.
My point is that the gas is doing work on itself (and in that sense the expansion isn't «free»), and that the directed radial motion that results is not thermal energy; this KE would contribute to the gas's temperature again if the expansion were reversed isentropically, or the gas hit a wall and randomised it irreversibly, but not if it were instead extracted from the bulk flow by eg turbines or pistons.
The molecule will first use the heat energy in expansion and on cooling will again condense and sink because heavier, and it will cool when its heat expanded volume flows to colder air which absorbs the heat, the internal kinetic energy of vibration, which if strong enough will pass that heat to another colder (which is why visible light is not a thermal energy, it is not powerful enough to move a molecule of matter into vibration, it takes the bigger heat wave, longwave infrared, aka thermal infrared called that because it is the wavelength of heat)-- that is how convective heating warms the fluid gas air in a room, by circulation, in the rise and fall of molecules as they expand and condense, not by heat energy propelling molecules to hit other molecules..
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