I am not sure how to upload the video.... HOWEVER, some lady in Vermont (not near any commercial / industrial buildings) had her snow tested because her dogs were having trouble walking in the snow after awhile. The snow fell into her bowl and she sent the water to the lab for testing a few weeks ago and just got the results. The results came back: While there was also some sulfur detected the most eye opening result was the level of aluminum which was listed as 5x the “average reporting level”. This is a big deal for a few reasons:
- How is aluminum this small?
- Aluminum does a great job of cooling down. Could this have to do with temperature changes in Texas?
- I’m no water expert but I don’t think this matches the periodic table. H2O!
Note: there is a detection level and reporting level. Once the level hits reporting it is worth noticing in the results. So 5x reporting is really high...
I could see the DS wanting to manipulate weather to lessen the chances of states like TX from succeeding .
I encourage other Patriots to get their snow tested to confirm this. Let’s prove not everything is as it seems
Your degree is in "electrical engineering" but you were comically, completely ignorant of thermal equilibrium, thermal capacity, and thermal conductivity... and so in flailing response to learning of these basic foundational principles of physics.... you, uh, "looked on google of all places and one of the websites on the first page, is for a place that sells aluminum decking."
Ok, sure. ??
I'll leave you alone now to keep screeching nobody in the aluminum industry, knows about thermal handling by aluminum.
Hey ? show, once you dropped this gem, “aluminum is always the coolest material in a given room”, you proved you had absolutely no understanding of any of the basic principles of thermodynamics, or even basic common sense. Why you’ve continued to flail on is only known to you, but be aware, it’s completely ridiculous.
Your admission you've never worked in the field is accepted. Have a nice day, fren.
But, of course, I never said I did.
Because, unlike you, I'm not such an embarrassingly ignorant clown that I then needed to lie. You stated things that any competent 10th grader, much less a practicing engineer, would know are ridiculously wrong.
You're an absolute mess, jeb.
Step away.
Reassess.
Nope. When you're done you can go ahead and admit, that you've never worked in thermal management in materials, ever.
I looked on google for your sake.
And sure enough there's a long list of aluminum industry websites, verifying what I told you. Since you didn't know how to check for yourself.
I'm a industrial insulator and you are wrong. Google is stupid, don't use it. I use aluminum in.many applications and have handled it in many temperatures. I use laser thermometers and when I check a balanced rooms surfaces/ objects , with properly working h vac, they are all the same temperature unless they are touching a cold window