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Question:

Getting used to an hour commute in a rural area?

I will be taking a job in a rural county, which is looks to be an hour to get from where I will be living (the only place around with apartments for me to start out with) to the place where I will be working. I was told by my new employer that there are a lot of snow days. I already made a 'mock' drive from the town to the place I will be working using a route that takes 45 minutes to drive. This route has a lot of winding roads, passes through a national park, and does look like it gets closed during the winter. There is another road that will take me a full hour to get to work.I was told a lot of employees live in the town where I plan to move to. What are your experiences with a commute like this one? I'm thinking about it because my current route takes me 25 minutes and its from one suburban town to the next one over. I'm going to be new at this! :)Thanks ahead of time!

Answer:

properly, electric modern-day is led to by using voltage, so voltage is greater risky. in case you think approximately electrical energy as water, voltage is like tension, and modern-day is rather like the quantity of water flowing. you pick tension to make the water circulate, no rely how plenty water you have.
Slammed cars are great (sitting 4 1/2 inches from the ground 3rd gen TL (STATIC)) so im not as low as you but i almost sit the middle of my car on speed bumps and cant get into up into some driveways cause that little bump thing haha so i can almost imagine what your going through. There is this one Nissan S14 slammed to the point where its is literally on the ground and guy lays planks every morning to get out of his own driveway. All i can say is bags, having to set up ramps for a speed bump not even your own driveway is pretty ridiculous. but just my 2 cents
Yes. A perfect mirror could in principle exist, but in practice, there isn't any known material that could suffice to make a 100% reflective mirror. All mirrors absorb a tiny fraction of the incident light.

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