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SteamyTea last won the day on January 3
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Wood Bark, and just a little nominative determinism
SteamyTea replied to SteamyTea's topic in Boffin's Corner
Quite a good thought. As it is a new discovery, maybe someone will work out the optimum trunk radius to timber mass, which should help identify the best species to plant and at the ideal density, for different regions. Would also be interesting how it affect other types of plant bark/skin. Totally unrelated, but maybe not, I noticed that the main types of trees that got blown down last night were conifers, which are not indigenous to this area at all. In fact, trees are not indigenous. -
Wood Bark, and just a little nominative determinism
SteamyTea replied to SteamyTea's topic in Boffin's Corner
Thankfully they are not submerged too often. What I found interesting is the surface area they cover. A good reason to not put them in a wood burner. Though it does raise questions about using timber in general. -
From this weeks comic. Tree bark microbiome has important overlooked role in climate Tree bark has a total surface area similar to all of the land area on Earth. It is home to a wide range of microbial species unknown to science, and they can either take up or emit gases that have a warming effect on the climate By James Woodford 8 January 2026 Melaleuca wetland forests in New South Wales, Australia, are hotspots for tree microbial life Luke Jeffrey / Southern Cross University The bark of a single tree can be home to trillions of bacteria, and these microbes may have an important but neglected role in controlling greenhouse gases in Earth’s atmosphere. The total surface area of tree bark on the planet is thought to be around 143 million square kilometres, nearly as much as the world’s total land surface area. This surface makes up an immense microbial habitat known as the caulosphere, but the microbes that live there have received little attention from scientists. “In a way it’s so obvious, but we have always overlooked tree bark,” says Bob Leung at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. “We never thought of microbes on tree bark, but it makes sense, because bacteria are everywhere, and if we can find microbes in soils, on tree leaves, then most likely there will be microbes on bark.” Leung and his colleagues began by studying a wetland species commonly known as paperbark (Melaleuca quinquenervia). They found that there were more than 6 trillion bacteria living in or on each square metre of bark, comparable to the volumes found in soil. Genetic analysis of 114 of these bacteria showed that they mostly came from three bacterial families – Acidobacteriaceae, Mycobacteriaceae and Acetobacteraceae – but all of the species were completely unknown to science. Remarkably, these microbes have one thing in common: they can use hydrogen, carbon monoxide and methane as fuel to survive. Hydrogen (H2) isn’t itself a greenhouse gas, but through reactions with other molecules it can increase the warming effect of methane in the atmosphere. The researchers then looked at the bark of another seven Australian tree species from a range of habitats, including casuarinas, gum trees and banksias, measuring, both in the field and in lab conditions, whether the bark of the different species absorbed or emitted greenhouse gases. They found that all barks consumed hydrogen, carbon monoxide and methane in aerobic conditions when oxygen is available. But when trees are submerged in water and oxygen is limited, such as in swamps, bark microbes switched to producing the same gases. The canopy of Melaleuca quinquenervia trees in an Australian forest Luke Jeffrey / Southern Cross University The team estimates that the total amount of hydrogen absorbed by bark microbes globally is between 0.6 and 1.6 billion kilograms each year, representing as much as 2 per cent of the total atmospheric hydrogen removed. This is the first time scientists have attempted to assess the contribution of tree bark to atmospheric hydrogen, says team member Luke Jeffrey at Southern Cross University in Lismore, Australia. “Discovering the hidden role of trees doing more than just capturing carbon dioxide in their wood is very important,” says Jeffrey. “They are active cyclers in other greenhouse gases. This is exciting, because H2 affects the lifetime of methane in our atmosphere, therefore H2 consumption in bark may help in reducing our growing methane problem.” However, the global picture is highly uncertain, as the team has only sampled eight tree species from eastern Australia. “A lot of work now needs to be done across various forest types, tree species, microbial communities and site conditions,” says Jeffrey. Brett Summerell at the Botanic Gardens of Sydney says the study highlights how little we know about the composition, diversity, abundance and role of microorganisms in bark. “How this might vary across a broader range of tree species, particularly in drier climates such as savannahs and woodlands, is interesting,” says Summerell. It will also be important to understand the interactions between fungi and bacteria in bark, he adds. Journal reference: Science DOI: 10.1126/science.adu2182
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Regardless of all the above, a good SSR does not make that horrible click/thump/buss that a contactor can. More specifically on safety, and as @ProDave mentioned, two contractors in series. Our sunbeds used contactors and they welded up on a regular basis (about 7 kW inductive loads). We initially rewired to have duel contacting, then changed over to SSRs. Newer solid state controllers came along and took the problem away in the early 1990s.
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Does aerobarrier negate need for airtightness detailing?
SteamyTea replied to SBMS's topic in Ventilation
Half a cubic metre per hour per square metre of exposed area is considered quite good. Has anyone managed that without filling the house up with glue? Seem to remember that someone got a 0.23 m3.h-1.m-2. -
Lived in Pennsylvania and they only had winter, very cold and dry, and summer, very hot and humid. Autumn in Halifax, Nova Scotia lasts about 4 hours, goes from 18°C to -18°C during that time. Currently quite warm here.
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Why. Slightly raised CO2 levels helps you sleep better.
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Recommend a thermometer gun thing.
SteamyTea replied to Russell griffiths's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
My cheap IR thermometer from Lidl is pretty good. As said above, the reflectivity of the object can change the reading. You can calibrate them easily with a photocopy grey scale card. -
How do you install Compriband _under_ windows?
SteamyTea replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Windows & Glazing
Does it make taking windows out harder as well? -
How do you install Compriband _under_ windows?
SteamyTea replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Windows & Glazing
It was probably integral skin PU. Car steering wheels and office chair arm rests are made from it. Made hundreds of different tools to mould in over the years. Can be tricky to mould right as it is very temperature sensitive to get the correct skin thickness and consistency. Extruding it would be pretty cheap, once the machinery and dies were made. -
TL;DR I am a fan of water based paints. Also makes cleaning up easy. A good palm sander (1/4 sheet) is useful and I have found that brushes and rollers can be very variable. I dislike using large brushes or rollers, but then I have tiny hands and tendonitis. Good quality dust sheets that are easily washable i.e. not so large it would overload your washing machine. Radio that you don't car if it gets splattered. Radio 4 is my station of choice, you want a constant 'beat' and apart from the news, not much to get the pulse racing.
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As the world transitions to more RE, future manufacturing will have a lower CO2e footprint. The easy way to compare is to find out where the kit is made, then look at that counties CO2e/GDP figures. Not perfect, but about as good as you will get.
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Premier Tech Ecoflow
SteamyTea replied to Dave and Helen's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Where will you buy the coconut husks from when the supplier has vanished. Get a STP with a separate air blower. Blowers built in can be noisy.
