Monday, December 26, 2011

Gold Mining Equipment - Use a Gold Dredge on Your Gold Mining Claims and Reap The Rewards

!±8± Gold Mining Equipment - Use a Gold Dredge on Your Gold Mining Claims and Reap The Rewards

Gold mining equipment comes in so many shapes and sizes that selecting the right type becomes a real challenge.

Many gold prospectors today are electing to go with the portable dredge. If you are considering doing so you need to choose between the dredge you employ to extract gold from between the rocks and gravel lying on the river bed or electing to do the high banking method.

Hi banking simply means that the dredge need not be floating on the surface of the creek. As a rule, the machine is set up near the water supply. Depending upon the size of the intake hose, from one to three people will feed the gravel into the box where it mixes with the water.

The machines are fitted with a removable hopper to allow it to be operated simply as a dredge without it, or with it attached it will allow the larger rocks and roots and debris to be screened out before falling into the sluice. Fitted inside the hopper there are two or three or more rods called the grizzly that help to direct the big stuff. The hopper will be fitted with spray bars that direct a high volume of water at the roots and rocks thus washing off any clay bearing gold that may be adhering to it.

Some of the machines come equipped with up to 5.5 horsepower Honda motors which are very efficient and very reliable. Since the machines are fitted with 5 inch hoses they will handle large volumes of gravel continually.

When the gravel passes through the hopper it will fall down into the sluice box that is fitted with riffles that are underlain with carpet or miners moss. This part of the process is exactly the same idea as used for many decades when the old time prospectors chopped down trees at the side of the creek and built a sluice box by hand.

People who are engaged in Colorado gold mining are no different than those folks from Alaska gold mining areas. They all work their gold mining claims with similar methods. Of course the brokers who push gold mining stocks keep up to date with the latest machinery to better inform their buyers.

Differences in riffles, spray bars, carpets, miner's moss, engine-pump combinations, hose and frames all contribute to a seemingly infinite selection of high bankers. We suggest you consider purchasing the largest High Banker-Dredge combination you can easily handle and can afford.

While you search out the various pieces of gold mining equipment you must consider the weight of the various parts and the crew who will work with you to get everything to your work area. Some equipment comes fitted with backpacks or pack boards for ease of carrying.


Gold Mining Equipment - Use a Gold Dredge on Your Gold Mining Claims and Reap The Rewards

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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Eva Dry Dehumidifier protects guns, shotguns, and cameras.

www.deansafe.com Eva Dry for you gun safes. Dehumidifier protects guns, shotguns, and cameras from moisture damage. It can handle the worst kinds of humidity problems to make your gun safe the perfect environment for storing valuable firearms. Your firearms will be continuously protected from rust and mildew Would you like more Info on this and other products call 800-827-7534 9:00 to 5:30 MF, 10:00 to 2:00 pacific time

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Friday, December 9, 2011

The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

!±8± The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

Air conditioner compressors usually fail due to one of two conditions: time and hours of operation (wear out), or abuse. There are some failures that can occur elsewhere in the system that will cause a compressor failure, but these are less common unless the system has been substantially abused.

Usually abuse is a result of extended running with improper freon charge, or as a consequence of improper service along the way. This improper service can include overcharging, undercharging, installing the wrong starter capacitor as a replacement, removing (rather than repairing/replacing) the thermal limiter, insufficient oil, mixing incompatible oil types, or wrong oil, installing the compressor on a system that had a major burnout without taking proper steps to remove the acid from the system, installing the wrong compressor (too small) for the system, or installing a new compressor on a system that had some other failure that was never diagnosed.

The compressor can fail in only a handful of different ways. It can fail open, fail shorted, experience a bearing failure, or a piston failure (throw a rod), or experience a valve failure. That is pretty much the entire list.

When a compressor fails open, a wire inside the compressor breaks. This is unserviceable and the symptom is that the compressor does not run, though it may hum. If the compressor fails open, and following the steps here does not fix it, then the system may be a good candidate for a new compressor. This failure causes no further failures and won't damage the rest of the system; if the rest of the system is not decrepit then it would be cost effective to just put a new compressor in.

Testing for a failed open compressor is easy. Pop the electrical cover for the compressor off, and remove the wires and the thermal limiter. Using an ohmmeter, measure the impedance from one terminal to another across all three terminals of the compressor. Also measure the impedance to the case of the compressor for all three terminals.

You should read low impedance values for all terminal to terminal connections (a few hundred ohms or less) and you should have a high impedance (several kilo-ohms or greater) for all terminals to the case (which is ground). If any of the terminal to terminal connections is a very high impedance, you have a failed open compressor. In very rare cases, a failed open compressor may show a low impedance to ground from one terminal (which will be one of the terminals associated with the failed open). In this case, the broken wire has moved and is contacting the case. This condition - which is quite rare but not impossible - could cause a breaker to trip and could result in a misdiagnosis of failed short. Be careful here; do an acid test of the contents of the lines before deciding how to proceed with repair.

When a compressor fails short, what happens is that insulation on the wires has worn off or burned off or broken inside the compressor. This allows a wire on a motor winding to touch something it should not touch - most commonly itself a turn or two further along on the motor winding. This results in a "shorted winding" which will stop the compressor immediately and cause it to heat up and burn internally.

Bad bearings can cause a failed short. Either the rotor wobbles enough to contact the stator, resulting in insulation damage that shorts the rotor either to ground or to the stator, or end bearing wear can allow the stator to shift down over time until it begins to rub against the stator ends or the housing.

Usually when one of these shorts occur, it is not immediately a hard short - meaning that initially the contact is intermittent and comes and goes. Every time the short occurs, the compressor torque drops sharply, the compressor may shudder a bit visibly as a result, and this shudder shakes the winding enough to separate the short. While the short is in place, the current through the shorted winding shoots up and a lot of heat is produced. Also, usually the short will blow some sparks - which produces acid inside the air conditioner system by decomposing the freon into a mixture of hydrochloric and hydrofluoric acid.

Over time (possibly a couple of weeks, usually less) the shuddering and the sparking and the heat and the acid cause insulation to fail rapidly on the winding. Ultimately, the winding loses enough insulation that the inside of the compressor is literally burning. This will only go on for a few minutes but in that time the compressor destroys itself and fills the system with acid. Then the compressor stops. It may at that time melt a wire loose and short to the housing (which can trip your house main breaker) or it may not. If the initial cause of the failure was bad bearings causing the rotor to rub, then usually when the thing finally dies it will be shorted to the housing.

If it shorts to the housing, it will blow fuses and/or breakers and your ohmmeter will show a very low impedance from one or more windings to ground. If it does not short to the housing, then it will just stop. You still establish the type of failure using an ohmmeter.

You cannot directly diagnose a failed short with an ohmmeter unless it shorts to the housing - a shorted winding won't show up with an ohmmeter though it would with an inductance meter (but who has one of those?) Instead, you have to infer the failed short. You do this by establishing the the ohmmeter gives normal readings, the starter capacitor is good, power is arriving at the compressor, AND an acid test of the freon shows acid present.

With a failed short, just give up. Change everything, including the lines if possible. It is not worth fixing; it is full of acid and therefore is all junk. Further, a failed short could have been initially induced by some other failure in the system that caused a compressor overload; by replacing the whole system you also will get rid of that potential other problem.

Less commonly, a compressor will have a bearing failure, piston failure or a valve failure. These mechanical failures usually just signal wear out but could signal abuse (low lubricant levels, thermal limiter removed so compressor overheats, chronic low freon condition due to un-repaired leaks). More rarely, they can signal another failure in the system such as a reversing valve problem or an expansion valve problem that winds up letting liquid freon get into the suction side of the compressor.

If a bearing fails, usually you will know because the compressor will sound like a motor with a bad bearing, or it will lock up and refuse to run. In the worst case, the rotor will wobble, the windings will rub on the stator, and you will wind up with a failed short.

If the compressor locks up mechanically and fails to run, you will know because it will buzz very loudly for a few seconds and may shudder (just like any stalled motor) until the thermal limiter cuts it off. When you do your electrical checks, you will find no evidence of failed open or failed short. The acid test will show no acid. In this case, you might try a hard-start kit but if the compressor has failed mechanically the hard-start kit won't get the compressor to start. In this case, replacing the compressor is a good plan so long as the rest of the system is not decrepit. After replacing the compressor, you must carefully analyze the performance of the entire system to determine whether the compressor problem was induced by something else.

Rarely, the compressor will experience a valve failure. In this case, it will either sit there and appear to run happily but will pump no fluid (valve won't close), or it will lock up due to an inability to move the fluid out of the compression chamber (valve won't open). If it is running happily, then once you have established that there is indeed plenty of freon in the system, but nothing is moving, then you have no choice but to change the compressor. Again, a system with a compressor that has had a valve failure is a good candidate for a new compressor.

Now, if the compressor is mechanically locked up it could be because of a couple of things. If the compressor is on a heat pump, make sure the reversing valve is not stuck half way. Also make sure the expansion valve is working; if it is blocked it can lock the compressor. Also make sure the filter is not clogged. I once saw a system that had a locked compressor due to liquid lock. Some idiot had "serviced" the system by adding freon, and adding freon, and adding freon until the thing was completely full of liquid. Trust me; that does not work.

Should diagnosis show a clogged filter, then this should be taken as positive evidence of some failure in the system OTHER than a compressor failure. Typically, it will be metal fragments out of the compressor that clogs the filter. This can only happen if something is causing the compressor to wear very rapidly, particularly in the pistons, the rings, the bores, and the bearings. Either the compressor has vastly insufficient lubrication OR (and more commonly) liquid freon is getting into the compressor on the suction line. This behavior must be stopped. Look at the expansion valve and at the reversing valve (for a heat pump).

Often an old system experiences enough mechanical wear internally that it is "worn in" and needs more torque to start against the system load than can be delivered. This system will sound just like one with a locked bearing; the compressor will buzz loudly for a few seconds then the thermal limiter will kill it. Occasionally, this system will start right up if you whack the compressor with a rubber mallet while it is buzzing. Such a system is a good candidate for a hard-start kit. This kit stores energy and, when the compressor is told to start, dumps extra current into the compressor for a second or so. This overloads the compressor, but gives some extra torque for a short time and is often enough to make that compressor run again. I have had hard-start kits give me an extra 8 or 9 years in some old units that otherwise I would have been replacing. Conversely, I have had them give only a few months. It is your call, but considering how cheap a hard-start kit is, it is worth trying when the symptoms are as described.

And this, in a nutshell, is what can happen to an air conditioner compressor and what you can do about it.


The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

Buyers Schwinn Airdyne Seats

Friday, December 2, 2011

How To Get Rid Of Sinus Congestion?

!±8± How To Get Rid Of Sinus Congestion?

One of the common symptoms of sinus is nasal congestion which is called sinus congestion. I personally have met many people suffering from sinus congestion who ask in expectancy the question ''how to get rid of sinus congestion?'' Now before we learn both the medical and home remedies of this sinus congestion it would fair to learn a little on this problem.

Why in sinus a person experiences nasal congestion. There are basically two reasons for it and in some cases some other happenings may be the cause. But we are not moving to such deep lengths. Lets find the common reasons. First in sinusitis your sinuses are attacked by bacteria which cause infection and natural debris come out making the natural mucus thick and less lubricated. As a result it blocks the nasal passage. And the other reason could be the growth of tissue or muscle which intrudes the sinuses and also block nasal passage. And all the day you fee something chocking inside.

Thus if you ask a doctor ''how to get rid of sinus congestion?'' he will answer you that it depends on your cause. If its due to infection the medications will follow. You will be prescribed antibiotics to kill the microbes, then analgesics to reduce pain if any and inflammation. He may prescribe you nasal sprays too. And in case of tissue or muscle growth if medications fail to stop their growth or shrink them, surgery is the best option. Doctors would perform a surgery to get rid of sinus congestion. These were medical applications to your question, ''how to get rid of sinus congestion?''

Now lets find out simple and effective methods which you can perform in your home on ''how to get rid of sinus congestion?''. If the causative agent are the microbes you need to go for nasal irrigation, good diet to improve immune system rich in vitamin C, minerals and other nutrients. You can also look for more home remedies in the web for sinus congestion. But on the other hand if its due to growth of tissue or muscle, Yoga is the best answer to your query. Yoga has been found to have the power to remove such growth and cure yours sinus congestion.

I expect that its now clear to you how to get rid of sinus congestion? You can try the above said methods. Learn the proper Yoga exercises from any Yoga school and perform them in your home.


How To Get Rid Of Sinus Congestion?

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