I'd guess it's a publicity stunt.Mercutio said:Actually, I'm incredibly impressed. The damn thing still works!
jtr1962 said:It's supposed to go down to 9°F this coming Wednesday.
jtr1962 said:You would be surprised how quickly the body acclimates itself. When fall starts, even 50°F feels chilly. By the time winter's over, 35°F actually feels warm. Winter is good in that you can always put more clothes on if it gets colder. Summer sucks. Once you're down to shorts and a T-short there's not much more you can do(at least without getting arrested for indecent exposure) short of going into an air-conditioned room.
That's true. I had a t-shirt and a light jacket on today, and I was sweating. Of course, I was shoveling the snow at the time, but it wasn't a whole lot of work. I can stand from about 0-110F without any problems, but I actually do prefer the heat to the cold. The only time the heat really bothered me was when I was in Mexico, and it was about 110F with 80% humidity.jtr1962 said:You would be surprised how quickly the body acclimates itself. When fall starts, even 50°F feels chilly. By the time winter's over, 35°F actually feels warm.
Mercutio said:Bikinis, shorts and tank tops. How can you not like summer?
Cliptin said:This page on the site claims 20 minutes at 400.
blakerwry said:They do mass produce 3 stage (off, low, high) A/C's ... or you could buy 2 small A/C's that would give you the same effect.
jtr1962 said:The types of females I prefer don't look right in bikinis or tank tops, so even that's not a plus for me.
That just means your AC is oversized for your application ...Instead, you alternate between sweating while the compressor is off to freezing after a while while the compressor's on.
Not to mention what the polarizers on the LCD would look like.blakerwry said:I'd have to agree that 20 minutes @ 400F seems impossible for a machine to boot...
water boils at ~212F ... 60% tin / 40% lead solder melts in the upper 300's...
personally, if she pre-heated, I think she'd have a pile of goop.
Having said that, I think state-of-the-art refrigerators are starting to use variable speed DC motors (the whole process being dubbed "inverter" technology). But this is only speculation on my part - I haven't researched it.