Re: Accy nori?
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Re: Accy nori?
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Re: Accy nori?
Jingle, caper, jingle, caper, prithee Sire ! :D
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Re: Accy nori?
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Re: Accy nori?
Is it true that if you soak one in Coca-Cola overnight, it will have completely dissolved by the morning?
Or is that a hen's tooth? |
Re: Accy nori?
No it becomes shiny G ;)
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Re: Accy nori?
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until my sencong attempt at drilling a hole didnt go through the cement and actualy hiut the brick. thats when the makita hammer drill came out of retirement as i burned the black and decker out lol |
Re: Accy nori?
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Retlaw. |
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My word ! Doth he not caper & jingle that fine fellow the fool in service of his liege! |
Re: Accy nori?
As I remember, 'U' value was how well or how badly a material transfers heat. A wooden handle on a hot pan transfers badly(so keeps cool), a metal handle-ouch. It was nothing to do with water resistance. Nori bricks are so dense they would transmit heat badly and I would guess they are waterproof also.I think 'U' values were used for engineering and building materials.e.g how well would a house wall keep heat in.
Nori- the only brick that needed a new masonary drill for each hole! |
Re: Accy nori?
Google it-Coefficient of Thermal Conductivity. i.e how well does a material conduct heat.
Expected conductivity of a brick wall-0.77W/M-K. Don't ask me to explain that(can't remember) but the lower the number the better. I would imagine Nori is lower than that but if you need to use a number quote 0.77. Why on earth do you need to know? Just interested. |
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A nine inch solid wall would be approx 2.00 |
Re: Accy nori?
So that explains why people build their houses of wood in places like Canada and Siberia.
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