typically a cylindrical shaped filter made of cloth or felt (most commonly polyester) designed to remove dust from air (clean air comes out after filtering, but dust is collected)
used as a primary pre-separator in a dust collection system
used to collect dust from multiple machines at once using a ductwork system
medium pressure dust collector with top load removal of filter media and round construction (only has 2 diaphragm valves)
flat metal sheet with holes for holding the filter media in place
the proportion of the volume of air to the cloth area of the filter media (cartridges typically are 3:1 or less and bags are typically 6:1 or less) (in this article it is called AIR TO MEDIA, but this is rarely called out like this)
air control pollution equipment used to remove nuisance dust from the process
Down
inlet located at the bag level of a filter which reduces the interstitial velocity thereby reducing the size of the filter required (used in low dust loading applications only); for high dust loading, precede with a cyclone to reduce dust loading
high pressure air created by an air compressor for cleaning filter media in pulse jet filters
cubic feet per minute
the velocity of the unfiltered air traveling upward between the bags (this velocity is important to consider so that the filter media can be effectively cleaned)
inlet located below the bag level, on the side of the filter and made to handle higher inlet loadings than a high entry inlet (40 gr/dscf and above)
a reactive substance that contains a great amount of potential energy that can produce an explosion if released suddenly, usually accompanied by the production of light, heat, sound, and pressure
a valve opened or closed by pressure of or against a diaphragm (used to let air pass through in filter cleaning operations)
self-cleaning filter using compressed air to clean the filter media, containing multiple diaphragm valves (common Schenk Process filters include: AVR, AVS, RT, ST, LST, & MSS)
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It looks weird when printed.
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When you hit the 'Arrange' button, our algorithm will try to arrange all your words on the grid, and will move words around to try to fit the most words.
This will get all the words on the grid about 90% of the time, depending on the word list. For the other 10%, you will get an alert explaining that the words that did not fit were added to the scratchpad.
It prints on two pages.
Big puzzles won’t always print on one page — the clues and grid are the smallest we could make them while keeping them readable for everyone.
That said, different browsers print in slightly different ways, so you could try using 'print preview' using a different browser (or try the PDF button) to see if you like how that looks better.
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