Well here's da deal, I've done quite alot of research on this and i know that da XI2 is hands down best. but im a college student in north Dakota(were it snows and have ice like crazy!) i wana spend on this smartly. If i go with a set of generals im gona save like $130 but i want good traction too since i put a decent amount of time on the road and my car is lexus sc300 RWD (i know what u thinking but It's the only 1 i have and love it!). My concern is will a set of general STUDDABLES( altimax arctics without studs) will deliver what i want? i drive fast but since it started to snow couple of days ago im driving insanely slow and still i have problem since i have all season tires on it now. i want to drive in a decent pace in city and at least 70-80 on highway. Guys what do you think??? that extra $130 will be worth while spending to help my driving? or i can getaway with a set or cheap generals???
If you don't already know the answer to this question, then you should not be breeding your dog. Get her Spayed. She will be happier and healthier in the long run. Don't add to all the dogs, that are being Euthanized in shelters everyday, because there are not enough homes to go around and adopt them all! Breeding should only be done by those who are breeding for the right reasons and who know what they are doing. You breeding your dog, would be putting her life at risk, because of the fact that you have no experience breeding.
The best parental control is to have a non-deletable history. That would be the best way to go. One that saves to a spot on your hard drive somewhere not accessable by the user. Let the child go where they need to on the internet, and you can see what they're doing. It would be a better indication to what the child is interested in and where they go. It would be more useful than completely denying them from places. This way you don't control where the person goes at that moment, because lets face it, if you give a person a gun and say, don't kill with itthey're going to kill. If you say don't go across the street at this time, they're going across the street. Anything you produce can and will be broken. So if you just have a program of some kind that keeps a history somewhere un-detected that the user is unaware, you'll have a top selling product.
Yes; most residential water heaters, less than 100 gallons, can be connected to the hot and cold pipes with flexible water supply lines. However, this will require some modification to your current copper pipes - you will need to cut both pipes and weld on a couple male threaded fittings to which the flexible supply lines will be screwed-on to. If you don't have the tools or don't know how to solder copper pipe, I highly recommend calling a local, licensed plumber. It may look easy, but it can turn into a big headache real fast if you don't know what you're doing, and your neighborhood handyman may not be much better at it than you. (Water Damage is the 1 Home Owners' Insurance Claim better safe than sorry!)
some local codes require flexible attatchments and some forbid flexible attatchments. unless you find someone familiar with local code (a plumber) then you have to call your city mechanical inspector and ask him.