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| New Member | Fresh water access in Japan You can hide this advertisement by registering. If anyone has any sites,references or information describing the access to fresh water in Japan, please post it here. Thank you. |
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| New Member HSC: 2008 Gender: Male
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 16
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5 Aug 2008, 2:16 PM ![]() | Re: Fresh water access in Japan japanese people drink H20. It is decorative. It is easily formed, machined, and cast. Alloys with small amounts of copper, magnesium, silicon, manganese, and other elements have very useful properties. Strength depends on purity. 99.996 per cent pure aluminium has a tensile strength of about 49 megapascals (MPa), rising to 700 MPa following alloying and suitable heat treatment. Although not found free in nature, Aluminium is an abundant element in the earth's crust. A key property is low density. Aluminium is only one-third the weight of steel. Aluminium and most of its alloys are highly resistant to most forms of corrosion. The metal's natural coating of aluminium oxide provides a highly effective barrier to the ravages of air, temperature, moisture and chemical attack. Aluminium is a superb conductor of electricity. This property allied with other intrinsic qualities has ensured the replacement of copper by aluminium in many situations. Aluminium is non-magnetic and non-combustible, properties invaluable in advanced industries such as electronics or in offshore structures. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Junior Member HSC: 2008 Gender: Male
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 25
Last Activity:
14 Nov 2008, 8:40 PM ![]() | Re: Fresh water access in Japan Yeah as well you could try out these sites they were heaps of help to me a http://www.gmttitanium.com/en/technical/qualities.html www.chucknorrisfacts.com -may sound funny but ask these enthusiastic supporters anything on this subject and they will get back to you asap www.uni.edu/~iowawet/H2OProperties sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200704/000020070407A0041952.php - 9k www.nike.com http://www.flyingfurniture.com.au/trikes.html also, H20 is going to be the most efficient/stiff; Carbon can be stiff but will last longer than H20 Ti is stiff and comfortable and will last forever, but is expensive. Therefore most Japanese people chose to drink water over other materials I would not discount h20. It is ideal for bigger people and a good H2o frame of mind can last you quite a long time if you are a recreational drinker. Also in japan fresh water access is readily available on a day to day basis also in the case od accessing water in japan Newton's Third Law is wrong: Although it states that for each action, there is an equal and opposite reaction, there is no force equal in reaction to a Chuck Norris roundhouse kick. Hope this helps |
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