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I Didn,t know that Deisels had injectors
even
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, May 16, 2002 1:20
PM
Subject: Re: Puzzler of the week
I don't know enough about diesels...
It's
either fuel, air or mechanical. There's not much mechanical to go wrong. The
air is getting in. Was the fuel old and sludgy?
Maybe the starter hung
up?
Bad rings, leading to poor compression? Glow plug backed
out?
At 12:03 PM 5/16/2002, Jo & John MacLean wrote:
One thing I forgot to add
was the diesel engine would start but would not rev up very
fast.
At 10:57 AM 05/16/2002, Scott MacLean wrote:
It had run out of diesel
fuel?
At 09:48 AM 5/16/2002, Jo & John MacLean wrote:
Here is another puzzle. A
hospital uses a diesel generator as emergency back up electrical power
in case of a power failure. The generator stopped providing enough
electricity to energize the bus bar. The mechanic arrived, changed the
generator and it still did not work. He then suspected the diesel
engine. He changed all the fuel filters, the air intake filters, and the
fuel injectors. The problem persisted. He removed the exhaust manifold
and found only a slight amount of carbon. Finally an old time mechanic
who had worked on diesels for years told him what the problem was and he
was able to fix it. What was the
problem?
At 08:48 PM 05/07/2002, Don
& Tonie wrote:
NO WONDER I NEVER GOT BEYOND
GRADE 11. HEH. Don... Nice answer Dave......
- ----- Original Message -----
- From: Jo & John
MacLean
- To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2002 2:48 PM
- Subject: Re: Puzzler of the week
- Dave, that is easy for you to say, Ha.
John
- At 03:14 PM 05/07/2002, David L. Gomez wrote:
- Easy as pie (Pi?)
- The first step has already been done, which is to draw a chord
on the outer circle that is also tangent to the inner
circle.
- Draw a similar chord on the opposite side of the inner circle,
that is also tangent to the inner circle, and exactly parallel to
the first chord. (In case the dosey banana doesn t know how to draw
the two chords parallel to each other, he need only make sure that
the two end points of one chord are equidistant from the
corresponding end points of the other chord).
- Measure the perpendicular distance between the two chords. (Give
the dosey banana another dope slap upside the head if he doesn t
know how to be sure he s measuring the perpendicular distance). This
distance "d" will be the diameter of the inner circle.
- Measure the shortest distance "h" from a point on the inner
circle to a point on the outer circle. This would inevitably lie on
a radius line that is common to the two concentric circles
(otherwise it would not be the shortest distance -- another dope
slap).
- From the measurements obtained above, the diameter "D" of the
outer circle is determined to be equal to 2 x h + d.
- Finally, the area "A" of the annulus can be calculated from the
formula:
A = �/4 x (D2
d2)
- ----- Original Message -----
- From: Scott MacLean
- To: MacLean List ; Georgetown Crew Mailing List
- Sent: Monday, May 06, 2002 10:34 PM
- Subject: Puzzler of the week
- This week's puzzler:
- This puzzler is from the wonderful world of mathematics. Ed and
his two sons, Biff and Skip, have been hired to paint the floor of a
merry-go-round. They want to make sure they measure the floor area
exactly, because they don't want to buy any extra paint.
- The carousel, of course, is a circle.
- Here's the catch: In the middle of the carousel is a smaller
circle, which contains all the machinery for the carousel. An
annulus, in other words.
- Ed tells Biff, "We need to know the area of the carousel,
including the area of the big outer circle that we're going to paint
and the area of the inner circle where there's nothing but the
machinery.
- "Once we have the areas of both circles we can subtract the
inner circle from the other circle and we'll know how much paint we
need."
- Biff goes to the carousel and says to himself, "I can't do this.
All the machinery is in the middle. I can't get to the center to
measure the diameter." He thinks, "I'll cheat. The old man will
never know!" Biff measures a straight line from one edge of the
carousel to the other edge, not going through the center. In
other words he's going to make what's called a chord of the big
circle.
- Any line that goes from one edge of the circle to the other that
isn't a diameter is a chord. As luck would have it, the tape measure
touches the inner circle, or in geometric terms, is tangent to the
inner circle at one point.
- Biff returns to his dad and says, "I couldn't do what you wanted
me to do. I got this measurement and it's 70 feet." The old man
administers a swift dope slap. He says, "How the heck are we going
to figure this out. We don't know either diameter."
- The other brother Skip says "I think I can figure it out. "
- Can he or can't he?
- Last week's puzzler:
- I was on a holiday recently and my car was in need of petrol.
- I was on a secondary road, and I turned into a self-service gas
station. I pulled up to one of the minipumps, and absentmindedly
reached for the nozzle.
- I was just about to fill up my tank, when I happened to notice
that the gasoline was a little expensive.
- In fact, it was $4.59 a gallon. I said, "Whoa. What kind of
vehicle uses this stuff?"
- I looked around. There was a vehicle on the lift and I knew
immediately why this gasoline was $4.59 a gallon.
- Here's the question: What did I see?
- The answer:
- What I saw on the lift was a car that had numbers on it... a
racecar.
- Its doors were welded shut, and it had no glass. It was in fact
a racecar. And this guy must have been the local gas station where
all the racecar drivers -- there must have been a track nearby --
came to get their gas. This gas was 110 octane.
- _______________________
- Scott MacLean
- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- ICQ: 9184011
- http://www.nerosoft.com
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_______________________ Scott
MacLean [EMAIL PROTECTED] ICQ:
9184011 http://www.nerosoft.com
_______________________ Scott
MacLean [EMAIL PROTECTED] ICQ:
9184011 http://www.nerosoft.com
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