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Harbor Freight Tools won a declassification of the class action; that is, the court found that all the individual situations were not similar enough to be judged as a single class, and that their claims would require an individual-by-individual inquiry, so the case could not be handled on a class basis.
An upholstery regulator is an upholstery tool that smooths irregularities in the stuffing beneath the coverings. While it looks similar to a needle, it is heavier. Like needles, the regulator comes in various gauges and lengths. Upholsterers use it to poke through the multiple layers to adjust the stuffing before putting the final cover in place.
Both types of regulator use feedback of the regulated pressure as input to the control mechanism, and are commonly actuated by a spring loaded diaphragm or piston reacting to changes in the feedback pressure to control the valve opening, and in both cases the valve should be opened only enough to maintain the set regulated pressure.
A typical graph produced when testing the breathing performance of a diving regulator. The breathing performance of regulators is a measure of the ability of a breathing gas regulator to meet the demands placed on it at varying ambient pressures and temperatures, and under varying breathing loads, for the range of breathing gases it may be expected to deliver.
A T set of the late 1980s was 3,000 mm (9 ft 10.1 in) wide. Track centres from Penrith to Mount Victoria and Gosford and Wyong have been gradually widened to suit. The D set intercity sets are however 3,100 mm (10 ft 2.0 in) wide, so further, costly modification was required beyond Springwood, [48] which was completed in 2020. [49]
The tool's design is based on a dental impactor, [6] a device that taps dental amalgam into cavities in teeth. [4] Activator I was patented by Activator Methods International on September 26, 1978. [4] [7] [8] Activator II was released, with an added "impedance head", in 1994. [4]