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01.19.10
Ring a Day Challenge
Day 19
19/365
I raided the bulk foods aisle today, so be prepared for a sweet, sour, and salty week.
Surfer(s): Gabriela
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I am a bit lazy today...I feel like doing nothing and I have an urge for eating large quantities of bread.. ermm
Made from a leftover flower from my previous ring
Made Feb 8
Meer informatie over dit project op onze website:
www.vvkh-architecten.nl/Site2006/Project.asp?Project=369&...
New Greenway that follows the French Broad River in the River Arts District of Asheville. Nearly complete.
Sterling silver, sandcast vintage plastic button. The button has been "laced" to the band with sterling wire.
Meer informatie over dit project op onze website:
www.vvkh-architecten.nl/Site2006/Project.asp?Project=369&...
Watercolor Paper Painted & Office Tape
Ring A Day project goal:
Make a ring out of ANYTHING every day of the year 2010!
sterling silver, the flower detail was sandcast from a small vintage glass bead.
I needed to make a "g" for an Etsy Metal project, so I decided to make it today's ring.
for the ring a day project- 2 versions of a prototype --hoping to make this in silver, one is stitched-- the other plain
Meer informatie over dit project op onze website:
www.vvkh-architecten.nl/Site2006/Project.asp?Project=369&...
RADS Theoretical Ratio:
RADS is actually a 'Gun Tackle' where the climber is both the weight AND the pulling power on the lift line.
So, by the weight balance method (ignoring friction); the climber only has to pull 1/3 the weight which results in a theoretical {frictionless} 3:1 mechanical advantage.
By the line measurement method; Line pulled passed the climber is 3 times the lift of the climber. Therefore, the climber experiences 1/3 the movement relative to the line moved by the climber - again, a 3:1 mechanical advantage.
Of course, actual {real world} mechanical advantage has to include friction which can be quite significant and greatly reduce the theoretical numbers we are discussing here.