Boat Motors
Motor boats and boat motors, design, construction, operation and repair
Albert Clark Leitch (Paperback) RareBooksClub.com 2012-03-06
Price:
$22.35
Answers
Figure out which Element each clue is referring to.
Questions
--------------
1. Half a dime
2. The Lone Ranger's horse
3. Opposite of fat
4. A distributor of traffic tickets
5. A water downed drink
6. What I do when I'm hungry
7. Male member of the Ganese tribe
8. What torpedo ships do
9. What the cowboy did with the bucking horse
10. Why she wears expensive perfume and skimpy dresses
11. What a doctor tries to do with his patients
12. A popular gift from your mom's sister
13. What you do with the dead
14. A big English theater
15. A storage space for cars (not a garage)
16. Foolish prisoner
17. Night messenger of Troy
18. Let's play cowboys and _______
19. Mickey's dog
20. Ancient God of Thunder
21. Where E.T. wants to go
22. Boat motor
23. Shocked speechless
24. To grab a guy
25. Police protection for our security
26. Mary nickname's blue jeans
27. Base of the house
28. A famous national laboratory/particle accelerator
29. Another famous national laboratory in the Chicago area
30. What some clases are
31. Donnie & Marrie
32. The kitchen in a ship
33. A heavy grave
34. Smooth out cloth
35. Blind
36. A gift that a man gets in trouble for
37. Household plant
38. When a person looses his hair he...
39. What you do to the calf at the rodeo
40. Someone who loves mp3 players, computers and cell phones
41. What you do to rippd jeans
42. Las Vegas lights
43. Extinct
44. Slang term used to tell your brother that something is yours
45. Nicholas the frie starter
46. Thespians do it in plays
47. Giants
48. Clark's home
49. Surrender's to all other elements
50. E=mc*2
Answers
------------
1. (a nickel) - Nickel
2. (High Ho Silver) - Silver
3. (thin) - Tin
4. (cop) - Copper
PLEASE ONLY POST YOUR ANSWERS IN THE ABOVE FORMAT
I now all of the answers except for one of them. This is just a collection of Element riddles for all to enjoy.
1. NICKEL = Half a dime
2. SILVER = The Lone Ranger's horse
3. TIN (thin) = Opposite of fat
4. COPPER = A distributor of traffic tickets
5. CHLORINE (water in a pool?) = A water downed drink
6. YTTRIUM (eat trium) = What I do when I'm hungry
7. MANGANESE (man ganese) = Male member of the Ganese tribe
8. ZINC (sicnk) = What torpedo ships do
9. RHODIUM (rode ium) = What the cowboy did with the bucking horse
10. TELLURIUM (to lure ium) or TANTALUM (tantalize 'em) = Why she wears expensive perfume and skimpy dresses
11. CURIUM (cure 'em) = What a doctor tries to do with his patients
12. ANTIMONY (auntie money) = A popular gift from your mom's sister
13. BARIUM (bury 'em) = What you do with the dead
14. PALADIUM = A big English theater
15. CARBON (car barn) = A storage space for cars (not a garage)
16. SILICON (silly con) = Foolish prisoner
17. NITROGEN (night Trojan) = Night messenger of Troy
18. INDIUM (Indians) = Let's play cowboys and _______
19. PUTONIUM (Pluto) = Mickey's dog
20. THORIUM (Thor) = Ancient God of Thunder
21. HOLMIUM (home ium) = Where E.T. wants to go
22. MERCURY = Boat motor
23. TUNGSTEN (tongue stun) = Shocked speechless
24. CESIUM (cease 'em) = To grab a guy
25. RADON (raid on) or RADIUM (raid 'em) = Police protection for our security
26. MOLYBDENUM (Molly denim) = Mary nickname's blue jeans
27. FLOURINE (flooring) = Base of the house
28. LAWRENCIUM = A famous national laboratory/particle accelerator
29. FERMIUM = Another famous national laboratory in the Chicago area
30. BOHRIUM (bore ium) or BORON (boring) = What some clases are
31. OSMIUM (Osmond) = Donnie & Marrie
32. GALLIUM (galley) = The kitchen in a ship
33. KRYPTON (crypt ton) = A heavy grave
34. IRON = Smooth out cloth
35. XENON (see none) = Blind
36. ZIRCONIUM = A gift that a man gets in trouble for
37. ERBIUM (herb ium) = Household plant
38. COBALT (go bald) = When a person looses his hair he...
39. EUROPIUM (you rope 'em) = What you do to the calf at the rodeo
40. TECHNITIUM (technician) = Someone who loves mp3 players, computers and cell phones
41. SODIUM (sew dem) = What you do to rippd jeans
42. NEON = Las Vegas lights
43. ARGON (are gone) = Extinct
44. BROMINE (Bro' mine) = Slang term used to tell your brother that something is yours
45. ARSENIC (arson Nic) = Nicholas the frie starter
46. ACTINIUM (act in 'em) = Thespians do it in plays
47. TITANIUM (titans) = Giants
48. KRYPTON = Clark's home
49. URANIUM (You reign ium) = Surrender's to all other elements
50. EINSTEINIUM = E=mc*2
with 2 blade bronze speed prop!! This boat was a Londonderry High School Woods Project ... TU9 TU-9 clark craft tunnel hull homemade boat lhs ...
OK so i have a 98 maxum boat. we paid a guy to winterize our boat and now its time to de-winterize it! all this guy did was take out 3 plugs. my boyfriend put the other two back knowing where they go, but he had one left called the block drain plug? our friend clark said it goes at the very bottom of the motor but we're not sure?
I dont want to take the boat out unless i know everything is where its suppose to!
anyone with a Maxum or knows about Maxum boats help!!
I'd start the engine on a flush attachment or in the water, and look for where water is running out. Without knowing the specific engine, and if it's freshwater or raw-water cooled, ec. it would be very difficult to tell you where to look. On some Mercruiser engines there is a single drain point. But, things like the water system, air conditioner etc have drain plugs also....there are just to many things to guess which plugs where removed.
Price:
$43.95
$31.95
Grade: Near Mint
Packaged in custom sleeve w/ archival black board (great for display, gift-giving, and preservation)
Product Type: Original Print Ad; Black / White
question, and said Scotland was a couple of generations behind other European countries.Redirected from Scottish inventions)
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John Logie Baird, television pioneer.Scottish inventions and discoveries are objects, processes or techniques which owe their existence either partially or entirely to a person born in or descended from Scotland; in some cases, the invention's Scottishness is determined by the fact that they were brought into existence in Scotland (e.g. animal cloning), by non-Scots working in the country. Often, things which are discovered for the first time, are also called "inventions", and in many cases, there is no clear line between the two.
The Scots take enormous pride in the history of Scottish invention and discovery. There are many books devoted solely to the subject, as well as scores of websites listing Scottish inventions and discoveries with varying degrees of exhaustiveness and accuracy.
Even before the Industrial Revolution, Scots have been at the forefront of innovation and discovery across a wide range of spheres: the steam engine, the bicycle, tarmacadam roads, the telephone, television, the motion picture, penicillin, electromagnetics, radar, insulin and calculus are only a few of the most significant products of Scottish ingenuity.
The following is a list of inventions or discoveries often held to be in some way Scottish:
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Contents [hide]
1 Road Transport Innovations
2 Civil Engineering Innovations
2.1 Bridges
2.2 Canals & Docks
2.3 Lighthouses
3 Power Innovations
4 Shipbuilding Innovations
5 Heavy Industry Innovations
6 Agricultural Innovations
7 Communication Innovations
7.1 Some Scottish publishing firsts:
8 Scientific innovations
9 Sports innovations
10 Medical Innovations
11 Household Innovations
12 Weapons Innovations
13 Miscellaneous innovations
14 References
15 See also
16 External links
[edit] Road Transport Innovations
A gas powered things (gas mask) : James Gregory (1638-1675)
A steam car (steam engine): William Murdoch (1754-1839) [1]
Macadam roads: John Loudon McAdam (1756-1836) [1]
Driving on the left: Determined by a Scottish-inspired Act of Parliament in 1772
The pedal bicycle: Kirkpatrick Macmillan (1813-1878) [2]
The pneumatic tyre: Robert William Thomson and John Boyd Dunlop (1822-1873) [3]
The overhead valve engine: David Dunbar Buick (1854-1929)
The speedometer: Sir Keith Elphinstone (1864-1944)
The motor lorry: John Yule in 1870
The steam tricycle: Andrew Lawson in 1895
[edit] Civil Engineering Innovations
[edit] Bridges
Bridge design: Sir William Arrol (1838-1913), Thomas Telford (1757-1834) & John Rennie (1761-1821)
Suspension bridge improvements: Sir Samuel Brown (1776-1852)
Tubular steel: Sir William Fairbairn (1789-1874)
[edit] Canals & Docks
Falkirk Wheel: ??? (Opened 2002)
Canal design: Thomas Telford (1757-1834)
Dock design: John Rennie (1761-1821)
The patent slip for docking vessels: Thomas Morton (1781-1832)
Crane design: James Bremner (1784-1856)
[edit] Lighthouses
Lighthouse design: Robert Stevenson (1772-1850)
The Drummond Light: Thomas Drummond (1797-1840)
[edit] Power Innovations
Condensing steam engine & improvements: James Watt (1736-1819)
Coal-gas lighting: William Murdock (1754-1839)
The Stirling heat engine: Rev. Robert Stirling (1790-1878)
Electro-magnetic innovations: James Clerk Maxwell (1831-79)
Carbon brushes for dynamos: George Forbes (1849-1936)
The Clark cycle gas engine: Sir Dugald Clark (1854-1932)
Wireless transformer improvements: Sir James Swinburne (1858-1958)
Cloud chamber recording of atoms: Charles T. R. Wilson (1869-1959)
Wave-powered electricity generator: Stephen Salter in 1977
[edit] Shipbuilding Innovations
The steamship paddle wheel: Patrick Miller (1731-1815)
The steam boat: William Symington (1763-1831)
Europe's first passenger steamboat: Henry Bell (1767-1830)
The first iron-hulled steamship: Sir William Fairbairn (1789-1874)
The first practical screw propeller: Robert Wilson (1803-1882)
Marine engine innovations: James Howden (1832-1913)
[edit] Heavy Industry Innovations
The carronade cannon: Robert Melville (1723-1809)
Making cast steel from wrought iron: David Mushet (1772-1847)
Wrought iron sash bars for glass houses: John C. Loudon (1783-1865)
The hot blast oven: James Beaumont Neilson (1792-1865)
The steam hammer: James Nasmyth (1808-1890)
Wire rope: Robert Stirling Newall (1812-1889)
Steam engine improvements: William Mcnaught (1831-1881)
The Fairlie, a narrow gauge, double-bogey railway engine: Robert Francis Fairlie (1831-1885)
Cordite - Sir James Dewar, Sir Frederick Abel
[edit] Agricultural Innovations
Threshing machine improvements: James Meikle (c.1690-c.1780) & Andrew Meikle (1719-1811)
Hollow pipe drainage: Sir Hugh Dalrymple, Lord Drummore (1700-1753)
The Scotch Plough: James Anderson of Hermiston (1739-1808)
Deanstonisation soil-drainage system: James Smith (1789-1850)
The mechanical reaping machine: Rev. Patrick Bell (1799-1869)
The Fresno Scraper: James Porteous (1848-1922)
The Tuley tree shelter: Graham Tuley in 1979
[edit] Communication Innovations
Print stereotyping: William Ged (1690-1749)
The balloon post: John Anderson (1726-1796)
The adhesive postage stamp and the postmark: James Chalmers (1782-1853)
The post office
The mail-van service
Universal Standard Time: Sir Sandford Fleming (1827-1915)
Light signalling between ships: Admiral Philip H. Colomb (1831-1899)
The telephone: Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922) [ debated ]
The teleprinter: Frederick G. Creed (1871-1957)
The television: John Logie Baird (1888-1946)
Radar: Robert Watson-Watt (1892-1973)
Fax Machine - Alexander Bain
Radio (underlying principles) - James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879)
[edit] Some Scottish publishing firsts:
The first book translated from English into a foreign language
The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1768-81)
The first English textbook on surgery (1597)
The first modern pharmacopaedia, the Materia Medica Catalogue (1776)
The first textbook on Newtonian science
The first colour newspaper advertisement
The first postcards and picture postcards in the UK
[edit] Scientific innovations
Logarithms: John Napier (1550-1617)
Popularising the decimal point: John Napier (1550-1617)
The Gregorian telescope: James Gregory (1638-1675)
The concept of latent heat: Joseph Black (1728-1799)
The pyroscope, atmometer and aethrioscope scientific instruments: Sir John Leslie (1766-1832)
Identifying the nucleus in living cells: Robert Brown (1773-1858)
Hypnosis: James Braid (1795-1860)
Colloid chemistry: Thomas Graham (1805-1869)
The kelvin SI unit of temperature: William Thompson, Lord Kelvin (1824-1907)
Devising the diagramatic system of representing chemical bonds: Alexander Crum Brown (1838-1922)
Criminal fingerprinting: Henry Faulds (1843-1930)
The noble gases: Sir William Ramsay (1852-1916)
The Cloud chamber: Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869-1959)
Pioneering work on nutrition and poverty: John Boyd Orr (1880-1971)
The ultrasound scanner: Ian Donald (1910-1987)
Ferrocene synthetic substances: Peter Ludwig Pauson in 1955
The MRI body scanner: John Mallard in 1980
The first cloned mammal (Dolly the Sheep): The Roslin Institute research centre in 1996
Seismometer - James David Forbes
[edit] Sports innovations
Main article: Sport in Scotland
Scots have been instrumental in the invention and early development of several sports:
several modern athletics events, notably the shot put and the hammer throw, derive from Highland Games events
Curling
Cycling, invention of the pedal-cycle
Golf
Mountaineering
Shinty
Basketball (see James Naismith)
[edit] Medical Innovations
Devising the cure for scurvy: James Lind (1716-1794)
Discovering quinine as the cure for malaria: George Cleghorn (1716-1794)
Pioneering the use of surgical anaesthesia with Chloroform: Sir James Young Simpson (1811-1870)
The hypodermic syringe: Alexander Wood (1817-1884)
Pioneering the use of antiseptics: Joseph Lister (1827-1912)
Identifying the mosquito as the carrier of malaria: Sir Ronald Ross (1857-1932)
Identifying the cause of brucellosis: Sir David Bruce (1855-1931)
Discovering the vaccine for typhoid fever: Sir William B. Leishman (1865-1926)
Discovering insulin: John J R Macleod (1876-1935) with others
Penicillin: Sir Alexander Fleming (1881-1955)
Discovering an effective tuberculosis treatment: Sir John Crofton in the 1950s
Primary creator of the artificial kidney (Professor Kenneth Lowe - Later Queen's physician in Scotland)
Developing the first beta-blocker drugs: Sir James W. Black in 1964
Glasgow Coma Scale: Graham Teasdale and Bryan J. Jennett (1974)
[edit] Household Innovations
The Dewar Flask: Sir James Dewar (1847-1932)
The piano with footpedals: John Broadwood (1732-1812)
The waterproof macintosh: Charles Macintosh (1766-1843)
The kaleidoscope: Sir David Brewster (1781-1868)
The modern lawnmower: Alexander Shanks (1801-1845)
The Lucifer friction match: Sir Isaac Holden (1807-1897){
Paraffin: James Young (1811-1883)
The fountain pen: Robert Thomson (1822-1873)
Cotton-reel thread: J & J Clark of Paisley
Lime Cordial: Lachlan Rose in 1867
Bovril beef extract: John Lawson Johnston in 1874
The life ring, or personal flotation device: Captain Ward in 1854
Electric clock - Alexander Bain
[edit] Weapons Innovations
The Ferguson rifle: Patrick Ferguson in 1770 or 1776
The Lee bolt system as used in the Lee-Metford and Lee-Enfield series rifles: James Paris Lee
The Ghillie suit
Economist Adam Smith; Smith was born in 1723, hailing from Kirkaldy, a Scottish town north of Edinburgh; the 18th century Scot considered to be the father of modern economics; Smith's ``An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, which argued that minimal government interference in commerce would promote human welfare and alleviate poverty, was published in 1776. He is the first Scotsman to appear on the central bank's currency in England, replacing Elgar's image in the next few years on as many as 1 billion notes.
[edit] Miscellaneous innovations
The digestive biscuit, invented by McVitie's in Edinburgh in 1892 by Alexander Grant.
Boys' Brigade
Bank of England
Bank of Scotland
Bank of France
Colour photography: the first known permanent colour photograph was taken by James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879)
Susie, Be proud that you are five years behind the other lot.
Do you really want to go where they are?
You know your very beautiful country and its achievements
Your very brave fighting men
The wonderful bagpipes ( I defy anyone not to have their heart in their mouths and tears in their eyes when listening to them)
I could go on and on - Do I need to, the people who matter know!!!! The rest are just ignoramus's
Price:
$42.95
$30.95
Authentication: Dual Serial-Numbered Certificates of Authenticity w/ Full Provenance
Grade: Near Mint
Packaged in custom sleeve w/ archival black board (great for display, gift-giving, and preservation)
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Bass Boat Crash Accident Motor

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