I recently got sick from a bladder issue that left me really nauseous these last several days. Now, my roommate tells me she is nauseous and thinks it may be carbon monoxide coming from the gas heat. This is my first home and I have only been here 2 years. (built in 1962). I have had plenty of health issues after I moved in and not sure what the heck is going on. Carbon monoxide, what are the symptoms? I have a detector downstairs but I need to check the batteries. In the meantime, could dizziness or nausea be a symptom?
not exactly a specific question but i'll try. there are a few different types of switch, one could have a thermometer type and react when the temp gets over its limit or it could have a thin strip of low melting point metal, such as solder across two charged points which would break the circuit then causing an alarm state. some fire alarms can be battery powered and need changing and testing every so often, some can be mains powered and battery backed up, some are standalone alarms, ie they work independently of each other, some can be hardwired into a complete alarm system for the house/building along with smoke detectors elsewhere and either activate an external sounder or send a signal to an alarm receiving center saying fire at this address etc. whew! hope that helps ya though.
they will not last long no matter what traction, somewhat reduced wle
You could wear the bright orange shirts that have 2 parallel lines on the front, and an X on the back. You can get those shirts anywhere, we were gonna use them for our baseball team's uniform until my dad showed us how hot they get in the sun.
Try the Schwalbe Snow Stud or Winter as it can be used all year round at about 60 psi, in winter it will run happily at about 30 psi for snow. As a tip, since the 'seventies use bicycle tyres that have a similar pattern to vehicle tyres marked with Mud + Snow i.e M + S on the sidewall. An example of this is the Town Country which in bicycle form is the City/Trekking tyre. The All-Terrain in bicycle form is All Surface and even All Terrain! There are websites that explain tread design. Would avoid using cable ties as it could damage your rims plus means taking rim brake blocks off, you still a certain amount of braking in snow to do a controlled slide, having one or no brakes is not a good idea. Also a tip picked up from my Land Rover magazine is fit wider rims than normal, this doubles the contact patch of the tyre hence my reason for buying double width Halo rims on my mountain bike. If you have the frame clearance on road bikes fit wider hybrid rims. If rubbish perished whitewall Camal Megadrives of a scrap girl's mountain bike [got them for free] work on my mountain bike during a really bad spell of snow ice see no reason for the cable ties, it boils down to cycling skills, tread type [studs are better] and rim width.