On startup you will see a promt that says hit F11 to start LG recovery, do this, and it will bring you to a screen after a small wait. Click the recovery option, choos ethe factory image that should be in your laptop, as it is hidden in thez drive (a safe location) then click restore, this will wipe your laptop clean, and you will need to set it all back up *THIS WILL REMOVE ALL DATA AND FILES, SO BACK IMPORTANT FILES UP*
1948-54 Jaguar x120 Drophead coupe.
5 x 4.75 or 5 x120, atleast that's what it is on an '88 caprice
80' * 120' = 9600 sq ft = 0.220 acres (to 3 dp)
266.66 cubic yards ( not square yards)
14,400 square miles, because 120 X120 _____ 000 2,400 +12,000 _______ 14,400
27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yard60-ft x 120-ft x 12-in = 60-ft x 120-ft x 1-ft = 7,200 cubic feet = 2662/3cubic yards
lets calculate the volume of the cylinder vol. of cylinder= (pi)r2 h = 3.142x(302)x120 cm3 =3.142x900x120 cm3 =339336 cm3 convert cm3 in litres , 1000cm3 = 1litre therefore 1cm3 = 1/1000litre now multiply 339336 with 1/1000 finally the volume of cylinder=339.336 l
Answer: 30 bfExplanation: 1 bf = 12"x12"x1" OR 144 cubic inches OR 144 in3The oak beam = 6"x6"x10' OR 6"x6"x120" OR 4320 in3Therefore, to divide the beam up in to board feet (bf):4320 in3 / 144in3 = 30 bf
35% is the same as 35/100. 42 is to the total capacity (x) as 35% is to 100%. 42/x = 35/100. Now that you have the equation, solve for the total capacity.42/x = 35/10042 = x(35/100)42/(35/100) = x42*(100/35) = x4200/35 = x120 = xThe coffee pot holds 120 ounces when it is full.
A 30-A outlet would be for a specialized installation, such as for a welder or other high-wattage device. You would typically have a single outlet, although you could certainly have multiple outlets for convenience, as long as there were procedures to prohibit use of more than one at a time.Under no circumstances should any HOUSEHOLD receptacles (15 or 20-Amp) be installed on any branch protected by a 30-amp breaker, as this would cause a fire and electrocution hazard.
Large Format printing is printing using a device that uses media that is larger than standard desktop formats such as 8.5"x11", A3 and similar. Large format printers may include printers ranging from 12" wide to several yards. Common sizes for which media is available include 24", 36", 44" & 60" widths. The media comes in both sheets and rolls with rolls most common in 50' and 100' lengths. On many of these devices smaller widths can also be printed. For example a 44" printer may also allow printing on 42", 36" 24" and even 8.5"x11" sizes of media. Media types may be limited due to specifications of a given printer as to it's ink type and maximum material thickness, but may include photo paper stocks (gloss or matte finish as well as fine art paper types), plastic or vinyl, canvas and even rigid substrates such as metal sheets. These devices were originally marketed to make blue prints and design plots and were in fact called "Plotters". Early models either printed a single color only or used the 4 color standard used in offset printing (CMYK). Modern versions of these devices may use a dozen or more inks and produce fade resistant archive prints suitable for gallery display or in other cases stripes to be mounted as sections of a temporary billboard or display. More ink colors generally allows a wider color gamut to be reproduced and may include several tones of grey, both gloss and matte versions of black and/or coating inks to reduce "bronzing". Most devices use either a dye based or pigment based inks. Subject matter, substrates, longevity requirements and costs dictate the better type for a given project, but for the most part devices are limited to one type or the other. Some specialty large format printers may include cutters and outline trimmers allowing peel off free form shapes for point-of-purchase displays, fold and assemble displays and vehicle graphics. The maximum printable width only limits the maximum size printable on the short dimension. A 36" printer can be used to output 30x40 prints for example. If that device is capable of printing to the edge of the media it may be able to out put 36"x48", 36"x60" or larger depending on the maximum length permitted by the driver software. Generally mounting materials may limit the maximum panel size as common substrates are limited to 48"x96" or in some cases 60"x120". Free hanging banners are not restricted by this limitation. Common uses of Large Format printers today include wrap-around vehicle graphics, window displays, vertical banners, trade show backgrounds, large murals for corporate lobbies, music and sporting venues. One-off or limited run art posters and displays are practical using a large format printer. Of course these are also useful for making fine quality photographic prints of all sizes within the range for a given device. John Lacy proshooter.com John Lacy is a Michigan based commercial photographer. He owns an HP 44" 12 ink large format printer.