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  2. Dropped ceiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dropped_ceiling

    An older, less common type of dropped ceiling is the concealed grid system, which uses a method of interlocking panels into one another and the grid with the use of small strips of metal called 'splines', thus making it difficult to remove panels to gain access above the ceiling without damaging the installation or the panels. Normally, they ...

  3. List of adhesive tapes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_adhesive_tapes

    This tape has adhesive on both sides, and is used to stick two surfaces together. Duct tape Usually gray in color, this tape is backed with scrim, often coated with rubber or plastic. [1] Elastic therapeutic tape Also known as "K tape" and "kinesiology tape", it is an elastic-cotton strip backed with acrylic adhesive.

  4. Ames window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ames_window

    Ames window. The Ames trapezoid or Ames window is an image on, for example, a flat piece of cardboard that seems to be a rectangular window but is, in fact, a trapezoid.Both sides of the piece of cardboard have the same image.

  5. Duct tape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duct_tape

    Duct tape (historically and still occasionally referred to as duck tape) is cloth- or scrim-backed pressure-sensitive tape, often coated with polyethylene. There are a variety of constructions using different backings and adhesives, and the term "duct tape" has been genericized to refer to different cloth tapes with differing purposes.

  6. Punched tape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_tape

    The resulting paper tape, also called a "chain of cards", was stronger and simpler both to create and to repair. This led to the concept of communicating data not as a stream of individual cards, but as one "continuous card" (or tape). Paper tapes constructed from punched cards were widely used throughout the 19th century for controlling looms.