Sentences with phrase «more thrust»

The hybrid, which we drove a couple years back and enjoyed very much, offers more thrust in every situation than the does the small turbo.
It got muddier on the city's steeper hills, where the slushy transmission response had us re-positioning the throttle several times as we fished for more thrust.
Sport trims come only with the Accord's four - cylinder engine; if you wanted more thrust, you'd shop higher on the Accord scale for the EX-L V - 6.
The only time one might wish for a larger engine is in some situations where a bit more thrust is desired for a hill or an on - ramp.
For around $ 68k after the tax credit, you have an impractical coupe with slightly more thrust than a Volt with a similar electric range.
Want even more thrust?
Out on track, I never thought the GS F too slow or needed more thrust.
Tap the shifter paddle, there's a satisfying blip as second gear engages, more thrust, still more thrust as the turbocharger kicks in, and before you know it, you've topped out at 40 mph in the parking lot of BMW's New Jersey headquarters and with a German engineer riding shotgun.
As launched, to the general view that it drove like a big Elise with massively more thrust, the M12 had 310bhp with the help of its pair of Garrett T25 turbos.
Those who want more thrust can opt for the 244 - hp turbocharged four with a starting price of $ 26,550.
Things start strong, though the story perhaps could have benefited from slightly more thrust.
The fuels have successfully passed all trials — even delivering more thrust per gallon — and have now entered regular commercial use in the U.S. and Europe, promising to cut CO2 emissions by 80 percent, albeit at a premium price.
«If a swimmer registers how the flow pressure changes by hearing, he can better judge, for instance, how he can produce more thrust at similar energy costs.
As a result, the engines produce 20 percent more thrust per gallon of fuel than do the Saturn V engines developed for Apollo.
Although that first sailship was a modest one, the Benfords made a surprising discovery: The sail's acceleration was much higher than expected because carbon monoxide trapped in the fibers rapidly boiled off, providing more thrust that turned the diminutive object into a virtual rocket.
I would argue, however, that Jack did give the Gunners a lot more thrust and attacking impetus.
Both share a certain ease in handling, and it is no secret that the pilots of both aircraft would appreciate a bit more thrust from the engine.

Not exact matches

The combination of cheaper goods from China and the 11 signing members is likely to thrust U.S. manufacturers into a more competitive pricing situation selling at home.
That's no longer the case, as social movements like Black Lives Matter and #MeToo have thrust the power dynamics that she highlights in her own New York City classroom onto a cultural main stage, and made her work more accessible and understandable.
He adds that ultimately this way of doing business is much richer and more satisfying than the current model because it thrusts together highly talented people for shorter periods of time «-- and holds out loftier goals and richer rewards.
If we wanted to, we could actually add two more side boosters and make it Falcon Super Heavy... I think we can crank up thrust and probably get upwards of 9 million pounds of thrust,» Musk said on the press call.
The derivatives contracts should thrust bitcoin more squarely into the realm of regulators, banks and institutional investors.
This thrust back into the public eye could make it more difficult for Chapo Isidro to continue operating freely in Sinaloa's explosive criminal landscape.
Science website Ars Technica reports that the New Glenn will produce 3.85 million pounds of thrust at launch — far more than the most powerful rocket currently in operation, United Launch Alliance's Delta IV Heavy, which has a launch thrust of about 2.1 million pounds.
They should instead re-examine their practices that might have led to traces of, for example, diesel turning up in the Wyoming groundwater and come up with standards that would make leaks along the well bore impossible before less appropriate and more costly rules are thrust upon them at a time when natural gas prices are hitting 10 - year lows.
The problem at that point is that once the required minimum distribution starts, they end up being forced to take more money than what they necessarily need at that point, and they get thrust into a higher tax rate,» explain Plessl and Houser.
With more than 5 million pounds of thrust at liftoff — equal to approximately eighteen 747 aircraft at full power — Falcon Heavy will be the most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two.
«With more than 5 million pounds of thrust at liftoff — equal to approximately eighteen 747 aircraft at full power — Falcon Heavy will be the most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two,» SpaceX tweeted on Tuesday night.
The key thrust of Jarret's arguments in various articles on this topic seem to be «people who have much more experience in this than Musk have already proved this doesn't work.»
It probably won't make Wynne any more popular in Harper's eyes, and will be one more reason for him to avoid meeting with her, but it could also be the first shot in a Supreme Court challenge of the legislation, which could conceivably be much faster - tracked than it would be if we had to wait for a Charter challenge the traditional way, which could conceivably help save lives, going back to the thrust of the Bedford decision in the first place.
When there is no disciplined methodology there can be no alignment; and that means that the more success you have in your lead generation and sales efforts, the more complexity that is thrust upon everyone, making the job of growing even more difficult.
(One's view of the relative merits of these different thrusts depends ultimately, of course, on one's view of the world more generally.)
The question is presented as part of a larger discussion on the nature of philosophical and imperial authority, yet it is clear that the imperial part of the argument is not necessary to its main thrust, as a result standing out all the more.
The passage itself embodies a strongly christological thrust in the phrase «you did it to me,» which makes Jesus in some sense the referent of all the deeds of mercy done in the world.3 More importantly, Matthew attaches the pericope to a series of exhortations obviously intended to encourage the Christian community to persevere until the final judgment; 4 thus the deeds of mercy inculcated are direct responses to the Christian proclamation (7:794).
I prefer to use «reign» or even «realm» because I believe they more fully embody the basic thrust of Jesus» teaching.
Furthermore, the more we sin collectively in the vast impersonalities of modern warfare and industrialism, the more we get used to it, and the more inevitable seem the forces that thrust us in that direction.
We need to work out a set of social expectations and conventions in which the proper regulation of sexual activity will be assisted rather than made more difficult by being thrust largely on the individual, as it is at present.
Some took it as inevitable that more troops would be needed, but others thought the thrust of the new approach was to send over scores more diplomats and reconstruction experts.
There is an outreach thrust in Assagioli's thought which I find refreshing: «Inner experience is not an end in itself but a means to a deeper, more dynamic and effective involvement with and service to humanity.»
Today, the 75 - year - old cardinal heads the island's Roman Catholic Church, thrust into the spotlight perhaps more than ever with Pope Benedict XVI's visit this week to Cuba.
But I sense an even more heartening cause for rejoicing as I hear some of the young theologians talk here in the Southwest who recognize a significant thrust toward a new focus of theological thinking in what their colleague, Schubert Ogden, has done.
In Aristotelian / Thomistic philosophy, the ideas of formal causation and substantial form have a teleological thrust that is largely missing from the physicist's conception of form, which corresponds more to Lonergan's broader idea of form as «intelligible structure».
Or didI I?Was I just more convicted in my views so I just went forward as a believer and thrust my beliefs on others without thinking about it as much as I do now.
Unsoeld is more correctly in line for saying that in the free act the agent would be responding to the thrust of his true inner self.
One might argue (as does Vischer) that the more specific intent of the text is to point out how the original fall or original sin gives rise to a primal murder, though it is impossible to ascertain what is genuinely historical in this saga, nor should this even be attempted if we are to remain true to the central thrust of this passage.
But the «career» of His love in His dealing with the world involves a continual sifting of the evil from the good, a creative thrust toward a more complete exemplification of His good in existence, and, it is possible to believe, a treasuring for all time of the good which does come to be.
This creation contains a thrust toward more complex, richer orders.
Your response is no better as its main thrust is to «turn the tables» and nothing more
Rather, I mean the subjectivist thrust of the late 20th Century, particularly implicating language and, consequently, the objectivity of ethics and truth claims more generally.
Like many of his more positive studies, the present book devotes a heavy proportion of its space to exploring oppressive factors and forces in the area under investigation, but its main thrust is not negative.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z