Had one blow through Nashville a few weeks back. It was insane. Imagine a 300 mile wide storm come straight through at 70-80 mph. No swirling winds. Just a super strong storm that races through. It was over in 15 minutes.
A channel will provide you with x watts of power. A channel will control the volume of the speakers hooked up to it. You could have 1 speaker or 10 hooked up to a single channel (if you are careful). All speakers on a channel will usually play at the same volume. Usually, the more speakers...
More channels the merrier. It will give you more flexibility if you have more to work with. You could run a bathroom off of 1 channel and a gym off of another and a kitchen with a third and so on. You do want to keep an eye on the impedance you put on the amp, but honestly unless you are...
If you coil/loop the wire from the panel x times and then put the clamp around the coil/loop you will see x time higher amperage. Could be useful just to get enough amperage for the meter to register. Even still, your are only going to get 100 watts max out of the panel at around 18v. So that...
Here is my take. The internet Isn’t going to make most people smarter. The internet is kind of like a huge library except all of the books are just strewn about on the ground in no meaningful way. The successful users are the ones that know how to search for what they need and when they need...
So...stupid question...why is an I/o faster for a given amount of hp? Is there more propulsion related drag on a v-drive setup, or is an I/o just more capable of getting the hull out of the water? I know it will be all of the above, but looking for some insight
Never ever ever ever again Samsung. Absolute trash. They cannot make an ice maker that works (google Samsung ice maker ) and their warranty is only 1 year.
Just find a creature that lives at waters edge whose habitat is being destroyed by the wakes and then let them go to town saving said creature. Probably some weird hybrid scorpion-tarantula of which there are like 3 left in the world. :rolleyes:
How do the plates attach to the bottom of the boat? I am assuming that a 1/4” -ish recess is made in the hull and then the plates are through bolted. If this is the case...is the hull thickened up to account for the recess?