134a Refrigerant
#2871
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message news:42D22F7E.91AF70FE@***.net...
> Stephen Cowell wrote:
> >
> > Bill, Bill, Bill.... why do you torment yourself so?
> > If God wanted a hurricane to do what you suggest,
> > I'm sure that He could arrange it.
> >
> > Now answer the question... can air one foot
> > north of the equator mix with air one foot
> > south of the equator? It's a simple question,
> > Bill... why won't you answer it?
> Stevie, I can't believe you can ask such a stupid question over, and
> over again! Of course YOU may hold your breath and carry it over, to
> ever how many feet you want to transport that breath, BUT no natural
> storm will aid you because, everyone knows except apparently you the
> winds blow away from the equator to the west, west, north in our
> northern hemisphere and just the opposite on the other side of the
> equator, to the east, east, south. This proves all bleeding heart
> liberals are liars, for overlooking that fact, in their attempt to blame
> American's chlorofluorocarbons for the ozone holes in the southern
> hemisphere. Physically impossible!
So something magically stops the air one foot north
of the equator from mixing with the air one foot
south of the equator? Can you tell me what would
be able to do that?
__
Steve
..
#2872
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message news:42D22F7E.91AF70FE@***.net...
> Stephen Cowell wrote:
> >
> > Bill, Bill, Bill.... why do you torment yourself so?
> > If God wanted a hurricane to do what you suggest,
> > I'm sure that He could arrange it.
> >
> > Now answer the question... can air one foot
> > north of the equator mix with air one foot
> > south of the equator? It's a simple question,
> > Bill... why won't you answer it?
> Stevie, I can't believe you can ask such a stupid question over, and
> over again! Of course YOU may hold your breath and carry it over, to
> ever how many feet you want to transport that breath, BUT no natural
> storm will aid you because, everyone knows except apparently you the
> winds blow away from the equator to the west, west, north in our
> northern hemisphere and just the opposite on the other side of the
> equator, to the east, east, south. This proves all bleeding heart
> liberals are liars, for overlooking that fact, in their attempt to blame
> American's chlorofluorocarbons for the ozone holes in the southern
> hemisphere. Physically impossible!
So something magically stops the air one foot north
of the equator from mixing with the air one foot
south of the equator? Can you tell me what would
be able to do that?
__
Steve
..
#2873
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message news:42D22F7E.91AF70FE@***.net...
> Stephen Cowell wrote:
> >
> > Bill, Bill, Bill.... why do you torment yourself so?
> > If God wanted a hurricane to do what you suggest,
> > I'm sure that He could arrange it.
> >
> > Now answer the question... can air one foot
> > north of the equator mix with air one foot
> > south of the equator? It's a simple question,
> > Bill... why won't you answer it?
> Stevie, I can't believe you can ask such a stupid question over, and
> over again! Of course YOU may hold your breath and carry it over, to
> ever how many feet you want to transport that breath, BUT no natural
> storm will aid you because, everyone knows except apparently you the
> winds blow away from the equator to the west, west, north in our
> northern hemisphere and just the opposite on the other side of the
> equator, to the east, east, south. This proves all bleeding heart
> liberals are liars, for overlooking that fact, in their attempt to blame
> American's chlorofluorocarbons for the ozone holes in the southern
> hemisphere. Physically impossible!
So something magically stops the air one foot north
of the equator from mixing with the air one foot
south of the equator? Can you tell me what would
be able to do that?
__
Steve
..
#2874
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
If I remember chem class, if you mix water and alcohol, the mixture has
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#2875
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
If I remember chem class, if you mix water and alcohol, the mixture has
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#2876
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
If I remember chem class, if you mix water and alcohol, the mixture has
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#2877
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
If I remember chem class, if you mix water and alcohol, the mixture has
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
less volume than the total of both contributants, so that would make it
slightly heavier by unit volume, and a waste of good scotch.
Matt Macchiarolo proclaimed:
> Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
> compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
> per unit volume?
>
> "Nathan W. Collier" <MontanaJeeper@aol.com> wrote in message
> news:11d43p89854a1ae@corp.supernews.com...
>
>>"Stephen Cowell" <scowell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
>>news:aymAe.350$zw4.217@newssvr12.news.prodigy.co m...
>>
>>
>>>Who said anything about adding stuff? All we were talking
>>>about was mixing!
>>
>>yeah no ----! refrigerant is a compound, a MIXTURE and when you add up
>>all the components they are heavier than the individual components.
>>
>>
>>
>>>You're the one saying that the gas gets heavier when it's mixed.
>>
>>EXACTLY! to "mix" something is to combine it with something else. to
>>quote dictionary.com :
>> 1.. To combine or blend into one mass or mixture.
>> 2.. To create or form by combining ingredients: mix a drink; mix cement.
>> 3.. To add (an ingredient or element) to another: mix an egg into batter.
>>what youre describing is simply shaking something and thats NOT what we're
>>discussing. you dont even understand what "mix" means yet youre going to
>>attempt to explain ozone depletion? BUWHAHAHA!
>>
>>sheesh, you really ARE that stupid!
>>
>>--
>>Nathan W. Collier
>>http://InlineDiesel.com
>>http://7SlotGrille.com
>>http://UtilityOffRoad.com
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#2878
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Stephen Cowell proclaimed:
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.
#2879
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Stephen Cowell proclaimed:
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.
#2880
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Stephen Cowell proclaimed:
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.
> "Matt Macchiarolo" <matt@nospamplease.com> wrote in message news:lOadnaNtQYvNbU_fRVn-hA@comcast.com...
>
>>Nathan, quick question...if you mix two compounds, the sum of the two
>>compounds by definition would be heavier, but would the mixture be heavier
>>per unit volume?
>
>
> Heavier than the components summed individually?
> Perhaps you can tell us where the extra weight
> comes from!
Conversion of baryonic mass to muons. Check your string theory for
details.