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  2. Pigging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigging

    A cleaning pig for a 710-millimetre (28 in) oil pipeline. The blue plastic disks seal against the inside of the pipe to propel the device and to remove loose sedimentation or scale buildup. The black rectangles at the top and the circular disks in the center are magnets to attract and remove any loose metal objects in the pipe.

  3. Hogging and sagging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogging_and_sagging

    Hogging is the stress a ship's hull or keel experiences that causes the center or the keel to bend upward. Sagging is the stress a ship's hull or keel is placed under when a wave is the same length as the ship and the ship is in the trough of two waves.

  4. English wine cask units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_wine_cask_units

    The butt (from the medieval French and Italian botte) or pipe was half a tun, or 105 imperial gallons (480 L). Tradition has it that George, Duke of Clarence, the brother of Edward IV of England, was drowned in a butt of malmsey on 18 February 1478. [2] [3] When James VI and I sailed to Norway in October 1589, his provisions included a pipe of ...

  5. ‘Juice this hog’: FTC cracks down on US’s largest landlord ...

    www.aol.com/finance/juice-hog-ftc-cracks-down...

    One email the release cited in the complaint “called on the senior vice president responsible for overseeing the company’s fee program to ‘juice this hog’ by making the smart home fee ...

  6. Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/off-grid-sally-breaks-down-060032639...

    HOGS (24A: Bogarts) Somehow in all of my many years, I have never heard this meaning of the word bogarts. ... PIPE (59D: Half-___ (skateboarding spot) A half-PIPE is a structure with two concave ...

  7. Butt (unit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butt_(unit)

    A butt approximately equated to 108 imperial gallons (130 US gallons; 491 litres) for ale or 105 imperial gallons (126 US gallons; 477 litres) for wine (also known as a pipe), although the Oxford English Dictionary notes that "these standards were not always precisely adhered to".