Olympus E30 12.3MP Digital SLR with Image Stabilization (Body Only)
Photography (Olympus)


Olympus

List Price: $999.99
Price: $2,449.00


  • Dual card slot; compatible with UDMA-Type I, Type II, MicroDrive and xD Media Cards (not included)
  • Body only; lenses sold separately
  • 270-degree Swivel 2.7-inch HyperCrystal II LCD; Autofocus Live View with Face Detection
  • 6 Art Filters; enjoy photographs that ordinarily require the use of special lenses, add-on filters, or the use of complex processing techniques

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FLIR E30 thermal imaging camera Utility Products

Portland, Ore.—FLIR Systems announces the new FLIR E30 compact thermal imaging camera . The newest addition to the successful FLIR E-Series delivers powerful infrared diagnostics coupled with productivity-enhancing features including a wide 3.5” touchscreen, built-in 2.0MP visual camera, and additional premium capabilities previously unavailable in the $2,495 segment.

Leveraging global leadership in infrared technology in the popular E-Series platform, the FLIR E30 redefines expectations about the entry point of the compact professional thermal camera market:
•    Robust Thermal Imaging – 19,200 pixels (160 × 120) IR resolution coupled with 2 percent accuracy, <0.10C thermal sensitivity ensure crisply detailed infrared images. A wide -20 to 350C (-4 to 662F) temperature range and a responsive 60 Hz refresh rate make the E30 indispensable in a wide range of mechanical and electrical applications.
•    2.0MP Digital Camera – A bright, built-in LED lamp, laser pointer and convenient integrated visual camera with 2.0 megapixel resolution capture visible light images even in poorly-lit sites.
•    Wide 3.5” Full-View Touchscreen – The E30’s wide touchscreen LCD displays images employing the entire screen, with no cropping, while offering the industry’s most intuitive and easy-to-use interface. A movable measurement spot and box area on the display simplifies precise measurements and analysis.

For identifying electrical and mechanical problems, the affordable FLIR E30 camera quickly pays for itself by revealing problems, before a failure, worker hazard, or expensive tear-down occurs. FLIR E30 thermal imagers are available at local FLIR-authorized distributors. (Pricing is U.S. dollars, for U.S. market sales.)

For more information on FLIR Systems or other thermal imaging cameras, click here to go to Utility Products' Buyers Guide .

Sony SEL30M35 30mm f/3.5 e-mount Macro Lens
Photography (Sony)


Sony

List Price: $249.99
Price: $248.00
You Save: $1.99 (1%)

  • Exceptionally portable and versatile for everyday use
  • Minimum working distance of only 2.4cm with 1.1 magnification
  • High-quality aluminum alloy construction for maximum durability
  • Internal stepping motor and Rear-focusing design for video capture

Read more about Sony SEL30M35 30mm f/3.5 e-mount Macro Lens


SoundMAGIC E30 Noise Isolating In-Ear Monitor Earphones (Grey/Black)
CE (SoundMAGIC)


SoundMAGIC

List Price: $49.95
Price: $35.99
You Save: $13.96 (28%)

  • Wide and spacious soundstage, accurage positioning
  • Comfortable for extended wear, sound-isolating ear tips reduce noise by 20dB
  • Blanced and neutral, with layers of detail and rich tone reproduction
  • In-ear earphones, ergonomical shape with removable ear hooks.

Read more about SoundMAGIC E30 Noise Isolating In-Ear Monitor Earphones (Grey/Black)


e-30 ankara

e-30 ankara

How much maple syrup can be made from a single mature (i.e 30 year old) maple tree?

I run a nonprofit group called Kitchen Gardeners International - http://www.kitchengardeners.org - and would like to write something later this winter in our newsletter about home-production of maple syrup. Thanks.


First you must ensure that your maple is a sugar maple. Although all maples will produce sap, all is not edible. There is no way of knowing exactly how much sap your maple will produce but one that size and age will probably produce at least 4 or 5 gallons of sap. Remember, it takes approximately 40 times the amount of sap to produce syrup. e.g. 40 gal of sap will produce 1 gal of syrup. Your best bet is to visit a local facility and I'm sure they would be only to happy to help or you could probable get help on the net.


about a quart

Can we consider the BMW E-30 as a budget muscle car?

I have a black E-30 with a Vortech Supercharger and with an output of nearly 500 hp.It can run 180mph(now i wanna make it 200 for real).I had to confess that i've once beaten a fully modded Ford Boss in a drag track a year ago.Am i having a good stuff here or what?


with all the mod done, i dont think its budget anymore

Can I run E-30 for fuel in a standard gasoline vehicle? If so, how much would this save on fuel mileage?

We've all heard of E85, 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline. Some states currently run E10, most recently California. Minnesota passed an E20 mandate but has yet to get the ok from the EPA. I've heard a person gets the best mileage with E30. If so, why not mandate E30 eventually? If I were to pump 20 total gallons into my fuel tank, 13 gal. gasoline & 7 gal. E85 to make E30, adjusting the equation in states currently blending ethanol, how would that effect my vehicle mileage, engine mechanics, and performance? Is the EPA testing for E20 and E30?


I have been runing E30 in my non-flex fuel Ford Focus for 2 years with no issues. I usually pump about 6-7 gallons of gas in it and then 3-4 gallons of E85. It runs great on it. You'll accelerate better and your engine will stay cooler. In addition you'll be using 30% less foreign oil.


Actually, ethanol has fewer btu's per unit than gasoline. It doesn't give better mileage, just cheaper fuel and less previously-sequestered CO2 injected into the atmosphere.


No, because thats the whole reason they make 'hybrid' cars. They have special engines that know how to burn that kind of fuel. The gas companies make that combo because thats what can burn in standard cars. Anything else would have to have a different engine. As for different states, not only are their laws different, but fuel might burn different ways in different climates (temperatures).

When I'm old enough to get a car, I'm going to get a vw 'hippie van' or an el camino. Although they have old engines, I will save up money to get an ethenol engine to replace it.


Any amount of E-xx will not increase mileage as u get less BTU per gallon than just regular gasoline. The ethanol is very good to clean out your fuel system.


No, because higher percentages of ethanol could cause rust in the gasoline systems as well as degrade gaskets that weren't meant to be run with alcohol.

10% they say doesn't have an effect on all those parts but they aren't willing to guarantee that a higher percentage will not have an effect.

And the drop in gas mileage is about 3% for every 10 behind the E.

E10--(3% drop in fuel mileage)
E85--(25% drop in fuel mileage)

And E100 is impossible, you'll get a couple percent water.


Thanks again for demonstrating little most people know about ethanol. It costs about 5% less and you burn 20-25% more, so where is the savings? You likely burn MORE gas using that product increasing the demand for oil. Especially E-85, it's 15% ethanol and you burn 20% more, so you actually use MORE petroleum instead of less, do the math.

Ethanol also costs more to produce than the energy it releases..


DON'T read Bob's post below, it's full of bad information.

Top Fuel Cars both Dragster and Funny Cars run on nitromethane, NOT E85. E85 is garbage. Even the NHRA cars don't run on that, they run pure, or as close to pure ethanol as you can get. Same with INDY etc.

Nitromethane also cost about 10X more than E85 per gallon.

I don't know of a single form of racing that uses E85.

Man people here are ignorant of the facts. No wonder Mr. Gore has no problems burning through $2-$3K a month in utility bills while convincing you dopes to buy carbon offsets, that make him millions!!!

Ethanol is a WASTE! You can't run it pure in any car off the assembly line. It costs too much to produce and it's NOT efficient.

So what's the benefit to it?


no you can not run E30 in a standard gasoling engine. E85 is also known as racing feul in top feul funny cars and top feul dragster in the NHRA. These engines have such a high compression rate that if they were to use standard gasoline as feul it would be unstable to use and would probably blow every one up when they turned over the engine. And the cost alone wiould drive every one bankrupt after the first race.


More ethanol in gasoline will reduce your mileage, and increase performance slightly. It will generally only affect the mechanics if your car can't compensate for the leaner fuel mixture or the fuel system isn't resistant to ethanol.

At the local drag strip, e-85 is replacing high octane racing fuel in many of the cars & it appears to be equal in performance at a much lower cost.

The local circle dirt tracks have banned e85 outright. Their reasoning is that it gives some racers an unfair advantage over cars burning 102 octane racing gas. (but then the tracks all sell racing gas for a little over $6.00 a gallon)

Can I put E-20 or E-30 fuel in my car?

I didn't even know these existed until I saw them a few days ago--I thought it was only Regular, 10% ethanol and E-85.

I use 10% ethanol usually. If I can use the 20 or 30% would it really affect my gas mileage? And how much?

It's a Dodge Neon if it makes a difference. Thanks for your answers.


You should check your owners manual and see what it says about ethanol blended fuels. Most of time they say you can use up to 10% blended as being ok. Ethanol reduces gas mileage a bit because it has less energy compared to straight gasoline. You'll notice that for cars and trucks that can use E85 (Flexible Fueled vehicles), the rating for E85 is less in terms of gas mileage. The reason ethanol is added is to burn cleaner to reduce emissions. But I would not run E85 in a vehicle that is not designed for it.


If the vehicle is not sold as a flex fuel vehicle, it is not rated for higher than e-10. There are no Dodge Neons on the list.
http://www.agriculture.state.ia.us/e85vehicles.html

can any1 tell me how to work out the fraction of the circle to represent a number i.e. 30 people?

sorry didn't know wot catagory to put it in


First draw a circle w/ the centerpoint well defined (e.g. use a compass). Then use a protractor, with the circle center at your protractor center, to create the angle you want.

If you want to divide the circle equally for 30 people, then you take 360 degree/30. Then you need 30 angles of 12 degrees. Create these w/ your protractor and extend to the circumference of the circle.

Keep in mind, that spreadsheet programs like excel will let you form pie-charts, which are basically this same thing only done much easier.


Circles work better for percents rather than exact numbers.
You need to somehow indicate what a complete circle represents (100 people, 1000 people, whatever...) then divide 30 by that number and multiply the result by 360 to get the number of degrees which will represent 30 people.


ok, if you are making a pie chart, which is what it sounds like, you have to figure a few things before you go to drawing it.

First, find what percentage fo the whole that 30 people respresents.
Ex. if there are 100 people total then that is 30%

Then multiply 360 (number of degrees in a circle) times the percentage you found after converting the percentage to a decimal by moving the decimal point 2 spaces to the left.
Ex. 360 x .3 = 108

Then measure that number in degrees on the circle. Draw one line horizontal and then measure out the degree measurement.
Ex. in our hypothetical problem it would be 108 degrees.

Draw the ending line at the degree measurement and you have the proper size piece of the circle to represent the number you had.


any circle contains 360 degrees. divide 30 into 360 ...you get 12. So 12 degrees of arc for each person. Use a protractor to make your pie chart and to measure the degrees.

If I'm making $47,000 a year, what is my tax percentage? (i.e. 30%) ?

Trying to figure out a budget and how much rent I can afford


Try this link: http://www.paycheckcity.com/netpaycalc/netpaycalculator.asp

It's a paycheck calculator link and after you put in your salary and a your number of exemptions and allowances, ect., it will tell you exactly how much will come out of your check for taxes--State and Federal taxes per pay period.

That should be able to help you figure out how much rent you can afford too!

How do you work out percentages with and without a calculator i.e. 30% of 60?



3 times 6 equals 18 so the answer is 18


xxx vici

The American High School Mathematics Examination A.H.S.M.E. 30 multiple choice test problem how2 score a 99?

The American High School Mathematics Examination A.H.S.M.E. 30 multiple choice test problem how2 score a 99?
The test consists of 30 multiple choice questions. You receive 5 for a correct answer and 2 for an unanswered question and 0 for an incorrect answer. To be listed on the honor roll you must score a 100. Show all the ways you can get a 99. ["there are many possibilities to this, help me out with this one"]


Unless I'm missing something it's pretty straightforward. Let C be the number of correct answers, U be the number of unanswered questions, and I be the number of incorrect answers. C + U + I must equal 30 (the total number of questions). To score points only correct and unanswered questions will count.

5 times the correct answers (5C) plus 2 times the unanswered questions (2U) must therefore equal 99.

5C + 2U = 99

Since we are only using whole positive numbers C must be between 0 and 19 (more would score more than 100points). However, 2U will always be a even number so when added to 5C to get 99, 5C must be an odd number meaning that C must be odd. Trying all the possible combinations:
C=1 then U would be 47 (not enough questions for this to be right because C+U can't be more than 30)
C=3 then U would be 40 (not enough questions for this to be right)
C=5 then U would be 37 (nope)
C=7 then U would be 32 (nope)
C=9 then U would be 27 (nope)
C=11 then U would be 22 (close but still no good)
C=13 then U would be 17 (works with no incorrrect ie I=0 )
C=15 then U would be 12 and I would be 3
C=17 then U would be 7 and I would be 6
C=19 then U would be 2 and I would 9
Those are the only possible solutions.

The above proposed answer will potentially yield negative and non-whole numbered solutions.

i Have a Big Stomach Twice the size of People of My age i.e. 30 yrs how can i reduce it?


Is anyone familiar with this code? A=6 B=12 C=18 D=24 E=30 all the way to z?

c o m p u t e r
18 90 78 96 126 120 30 108 = 666


yeah I've heard that before.