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Cross Bird – Gius-2 long range air search radar. A copy of British Type 291 radar. [1] Cross Dome – MR-352 Pozitiv, ... Pot Drum – surface search radar [1]
Gunite was originally a trademarked name that specifically referred to the dry-mix pneumatic cement application process. In the dry-mix process, the dry sand and cement mixture is blown through a hose using compressed air, with water being injected at the nozzle to hydrate the mixture, immediately before it is discharged onto the receiving surface.
cross-tube boiler: usually a vertical flued boiler with a small number of large water-carrying cross-tubes within the firebox. The term is also applied to vertical boilers with other arrangements of tubes, such as those with horizontal fire-tubes. Crosti boiler: section through a Cornish boiler Vertical flue cross-tube boiler
Gunite may refer to: Shotcrete#Shotcrete vs. gunite, concrete or mortar conveyed through a hose; Gunite (horse), an American Thoroughbred race horse
The drums are linked by straight watertubes, allowing easy tube-cleaning. This does, however, mean that the tubes enter the drums at varying angles, a more difficult joint to caulk. Outside the firebox, a pair of cold-leg pipes between each drum act as downcomers. [14] Due to its three drums, the Yarrow boiler has a greater water capacity.
k = 0.107 m/s (when the drum includes a de-entraining mesh pad) Then the cross-sectional area of the drum can be found from: = ˙ where ˙ is the vapor volumetric flow rate in m 3 /s A is the cross-sectional area of the drum. And the drum diameter is:
Cross Stick: X notehead in the snare drum part. Rim Shot: diagonal slash through note head. Brush sweep: horizontal-line notehead, with a slur mark added to show that the brush is not lifted. (Together, the horizontal-line notehead and its stem look rather like a long "T" or a long inverted "T", depending which way the stem is going.)
The second is the "ping shot", where the bead is struck about one inch (2.5 cm) from the rim. This produces a high-pitched sound. The third is a "gock" (also spelled gawk), which is produced by hitting the bead of the drum stick at the center of the drum while the rim is percussed with the distal shaft of the stick (near the hand). This makes a ...