When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Barrelhead Root Beer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrelhead_Root_Beer

    Barrelhead Root Beer is a brand of root beer that used to be manufactured by Dr Pepper Snapple Group, but the Barrelhead name was re-launched in September 2016 as a new product by Barrelhead Ventures LLC, a Pennsylvania-based company, but no connection with the original name and formula and company.

  3. Hogshead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogshead

    A tobacco hogshead was used in British and American colonial times to transport and store tobacco. It was a very large wooden barrel. A standardized hogshead measured 48 inches (1.22 m) long and 30 inches (76.20 cm) in diameter at the head (at least 550 L or 121 imp gal or 145 US gal, depending on the width in the middle).

  4. Headspace (firearms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headspace_(firearms)

    Headspace positioning of rimless, rimmed, belted and straight cartridges Several different rimmed, .22 rimfire cartridges, which have a uniform forward diameter, and which have headspace on the rim, allowing any length of cartridge shorter than the maximum size to be used in the same firearm Firearms chambered for tapered rimmed cartridges like this .303 British cannot safely fire shorter ...

  5. Barrel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrel

    An American barrel features six hoops, from top to center: head-or chime hoop, quarter hoop and bilge hoop (times two), while a French barrel features eight, including a so-called French hoop, located between the quarter- and bilge hoops (see "wine barrel parts" illustration).

  6. Drum (container) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drum_(container)

    The measure of 42 US or wine gallons corresponds to a wine tierce (third-pipe). A wine barrel, or 1 ⁄ 8 tun, measures 31.5 US gallons (26.2 imp gal; 119.2 L). Applicable standards include: ISO 15750-1:2002. Packaging — Steel drums — Part 1: Removable head (open head) drums with a minimum total capacity of 208 L, 210 L, and 216.5 L

  7. Ullage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ullage

    When calculating tax returns and the like, licensed premises owners, landlords or managers can factor in the duty on ullage, or unavoidable barrel wastage. [2] Ullage therefore has come to be used as a general term, in the licensed trade, for waste beer whether at the barrel or at the bar tap or pump. However, what customers leave in their ...

  8. Drumhead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drumhead

    Drumhead with coating on a snare drum Drumhead with coating on a tom drum Drumhead with coating on a bass drum Anatomy of a drumhead for drumming. A drumhead or drum skin is a membrane stretched over one or both of the open ends of a drum.

  9. Cylinder head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylinder_head

    In sidevalve engines the head is a simple plate of metal containing the spark plugs and possibly heat dissipation fins. In more modern overhead valve and overhead camshaft engines, the head is a more complicated metal block that also contains the inlet and exhaust passages, and often coolant passages, Valvetrain components, and fuel injectors.