• EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      13 days ago

      That actually depends entirely on where you’re at. That would be positively tropical to someone in Minnesota, but to someone in Arizona I almost can guarantee you that would be freezing.

      • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        Rain is not necessarily cold by the time it lands, it has a certain ability to sap and dissipate heat as it evaporates. The ceramic tiles in your house aren’t really “colder” than you, but they feel cold because they are very good and transfering heat away from you.

        If youre into pedantic debates about properties of molecules, I suggest looking into why water is not wet, and the fan base

        • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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          13 days ago

          The ceramic tiles in your house aren’t really “colder” than you

          Yes they are; they’re not warm blooded mammals, and they’re at the lowest level in the house, where the coldest air is.

          they are very good and transfering heat

          Ceramics generally have poor thermal conductivity. Metal is a good conductor of heat.

          • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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            13 days ago

            They have poor thermal conductivity compared to something like metal, but still much better than fabrics or wood. They also have a high thermal mass.

            Tiles are a bit cooler not because they are lower in the room, but because they easily lose heat to the air. They aren’t that much cooler though, and a piece of wood the same temp would feel much warmer.

            • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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              13 days ago

              You can hold a ceramic tile in your hand and apply a blowtorch to the other side. They’re better insulators than conductors. That’s why you see ceramics used for insulating hot food bowls from wooden tables, or a more extreme example, ceramic tiles on re-entry vehicles. Ceramic is not a good conductor of heat.

              Wood is about 0.1 W/mK, ceramics about 1 W/mK, and copper is about 400 W/mK.

              The ceramic tiles in your house aren’t really “colder” than you

              Yes, quite literally they are colder. You can measure this with a thermometer. A more apt comparison would be ceramic floor vs wood flooring, or ceramic vs air temp, not ceramic vs skin temp. Your skin is absolutely warmer than a ceramic floor tile.

              Tiles do not feel cooler because they “easily lose heat to the air”. They are the same temperature as the other flooring in your house. They feel cooler because of thermal mass, which you’ve identified. Your body can warm the low mass of fabric or wood faster than it can ceramic, thus those materials feel less cold when you step on them.

              If you’re going to be pedantic, at least do it right.

              • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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                13 days ago

                I cannot discern the difference between my arguments and yours. You just used more words? We’re saying the same thing, except I was making a joke about pedantry.

                • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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                  13 days ago

                  You’re correctly identifying thermal mass as why they feel cooler to the touch, but this is mixed up in some incorrect and contradictory statements. You seem to keep changing your reasoning behind why tiles feel cooler to the touch.

                  The ceramic tiles in your house aren’t really “colder” than you

                  This is incorrect, and why I replied to begin with.

                  Flooring is colder than your skin, regardless of the material, unless your floor temp is above 92℉ (33.5℃). You can measure this with a thermometer. If something is the same temperature as your skin you won’t feel anything - there’s no heat transfer. You could have a copper floor if it was the same temperature as your skin, you wouldn’t feel a thing.

                  [Ceramic tiles] also have a high thermal mass … they easily lose heat to the air.

                  These two statements are directly contradicting one another. High thermal mass means it takes a longer time to lose heat to the air. Given identical conditions, ceramic will take longer to change temperature than fabric. For example, if you opened a window and it was 40℉ outside, the carpet would drop in temperature faster than the ceramic tile. It wouldn’t feel this way to your skin, but it could be measured with a thermometer.

                  That thermal mass is why tiles feel cooler than carpet. Your body has no issue warming the fibers in carpet next to your skin to the same temperature as your skin, it’s harder to warm up the tile because of the thermal mass.

  • YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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    13 days ago

    One of my neighbours sometimes hoses down her driveway in the pouring rain. Who knows why neighbours do the things they do.

    • hddsx@lemmy.ca
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      13 days ago

      Are they ex military? Are they an ASVAB waiver? Did they used to get told to mop up the rain too?

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      Yeah we saw one of our neighbors watering the storm drain. But also recently she drove from her driveway to ours - literally got in her car, backed out the driveway then immediate turn into ours, to come ask a question. Then got back in her car, backed out of our driveway and immediate turn into hers. So I think she is just crazy.

    • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      I once inquired about this very practice. I’ve been told it’s because:

      • Water restrictions are generally lifted when it rains
      • Easy rinse/prepped surface

      That all make sense to me if these idiots had a pressure washer, but its always a normal hose with a nozzle…

  • FoxyFerengi@lemm.ee
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    13 days ago

    My neighbor will blow them into my driveway (which is higher than his so it’s a never ending battle) and then he’ll walk between my house and the house on his other side blowing leaves to the other side of the street. He wastes so much gas every day, I would find it funny if it weren’t infuriating. Like, who the heck even buys gas leaf blowers anymore?

    • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      who the heck even buys gas leaf blowers anymore

      Gas blowers are about half the purchase price. And in this ‘first thing I looked up’ match up, are slightly better speced and higher rated.

      • SnausagesinaBlanket@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        The issue I have with these is the parts and batteries are are awful for recycling. An engine is all metal and once the oil is drained there are no hazardous to nature parts. Plastic is made from oil so are these environmentally friendly? Especially if the batteries only last a few years?

        • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          I just get corded electric. Never have to worry about it running out of juice that way. Though, it does mean there are limits to what you can get.

        • enbyecho@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          You are overlooking the pollution the emit while running, which is considerable, especially 2-stroke ones. A gas leaf blower used for an hour emits the same air pollution as driving 1,100 miles (source).

          And the fact that that oil has to be changed periodically. They also have many plastic parts AND small engines have a notoriously high failure rate when used with ethanol fuels.

          Meanwhile, the electric motors in battery ones basically run forever and properly cared for the batteries last many years, after which they can be recycled.

      • FoxyFerengi@lemm.ee
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        13 days ago

        I’ll take the one with less maintenance anyway. I wouldn’t even need to buy the battery for this because that’s the same one my lawnmower uses

  • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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    13 days ago

    blowing around wet leaves with a leaf blower.

    One does not simply blow wet leaves with a leaf blower. It is folly.

    • paysrenttobirds@sh.itjust.works
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      13 days ago

      I once thought so, but in my experience with maples and fir needles it works really well. Much easier than raking for wet stuff. Of course, the correct way is to wait until all of the leaves have fallen (enjoy Autumn to its fullest) and then round them up once for the whole season. Every week or two is why everyone hates leaf blowers.

  • RedWeasel@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Are you in IL? I just saw my neighbor doing that, but he has dementia. I think there are to many people who want a manicured lawn. Personally I don’t see why so many people like that.

    • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      12 days ago

      For a while I had retired neighbors on two sides of the house who insisted on mowing multiple times a week. Their grass would be so freaking dead and brown by late summer even with watering, meanwhile my lawn which I mow every 2-3 weeks depending on the season (late summer it grows slower so I give it longer) never needed a lick of extra water and is still green today

    • stinerman [Ohio]@midwest.social
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      12 days ago

      I find this is often the case. People want to make noise because they want other people to notice them or because they have oppositional defiant disorder and like to piss off people.

  • EndOfLine@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    You’re having a rough day. Seems like everybody wants a piece of you and they aren’t kind about it. So you put on some ear protection, grab your leaf blower and step outside. Nobody bothers you out there. The leaf blower yells nonstop the way you wish you could and even though you aren’t doing the yelling, there is still something cathartic about the noise. It creates a bubble where you are left alone. As the minutes pass and the debris collects into neat little piles, you can slowly regain your calm. The urge to explode, unleashing your anger and frustration, in an irreparable way ebbs and you feel like you can hold your shit together for a little while longer.

    Or they are in a feud with their neighbors and are trying to piss them off.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      Huh…apperently I have natural leaf blower bubble going on.

      See, the trick is, other people try to push me around, and try to tske their anger out on me, and I look them dead in their eyes, with my cold dead inside eyes, and I say…

      “You could die tomorrow and I wouldn’t even notice that you left”.

      See, the trick to life is to not cause hassle for others, but otherwise not give a shit about anyone or anything. To truely become at peace with the idea that none of this matters. Your life, others lives, the elections, the results of things, none of it matters. People don’t matter. Media doesn’t matter. Life doesn’t matter. And once people realize that you are an unfeeling, uncaring, enempathetic to anything miserable piece of shit who wouldn’t feel a thing if an atomic bomb went off, they generally tend to leave you alone. Because you don’t want to piss off the guy who doesn’t feel anything, with nothing left to lose, and nothing to gain. I am the Milton of my universe, and one wrong move could cause me to burn this tinderbox to the ground. Then walk away without remorse.

      • ReadMoreBooks@lemmy.zip
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        12 days ago

        There’s a “black hole”, humanity’s beyond the event horizon, and barely anyone even acknowledges the existence of any of it.

        But, no matter how hard one tries to sink into the void they cannot deny the human paradigm. Complex communication of the hypothetical us all that defines our species from the other animals. A human’s meaning-of-life is, at the root, the same as everyone else’s.

        Above:

        Ecclesiastes by King Solomon

        “All we need to do is make sure we keep talking” by Stephen Hawking, British Telecom advertisement (1993)

        Continuing:

        Revolutionary Suicide by Huey P. Newton

        Interstellar directed by Christopher Nolan

        If any of this resonates with you then I’d be happy to have a conversation. This account should be active until March-ish.

      • Krudler@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        Help is available. I mean it and I will help you find more help. You don’t deserve to suffer in the way you’ve described.

  • glimse@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    “why is my neighbor doing [something]” is a question better suited for the neighbor than Lemmy. But if you must, asklemmy would be a significantly more appropriate community to be asking.

    • Agrivar@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      This is the perfect sub for such a question! Perhaps YOU would be better off on some other site? Or, outside touching grass?

  • litchralee@sh.itjust.works
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    13 days ago

    As it happens, it’s about 10 C (50 F) near me, and I did actually think about using my leaf blower for a very specific purpose in the rain: blowing the leaves clear of the gutters.

    I saw outside my window that the autumn leaves formed a dam in the gutter, impounding an amount of water which started diverting onto the asphalt and the sidewalk. From what little I know about road construction, water intrusion is the greater enemy so I didn’t want to let the small pond sit there.

    In the end, I just picked the leaves up by hand to remove the obstruction. But if I had a lot more gutter, leaf blower would be the first tool to come to mind.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    13 days ago

    I’ve considered getting an electric one to blow all the dust out of my shop/warehouse, but I can’t justify the cost. I need a good shop/push broom and Japan doesn’t seem to like those (at least anywhere that I’ve looked).

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    If a genie told me I could erase all land-mines or two-stroke leaf-blowers, I’d choose landmines, but the silence while I considered would be uncomfortably long.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    What is with the leaf blower hate around here? Must be a Yankee thing, never hear them around here.

    And if you live in an apartment complex, they have to clear the leaves. They get slippery. You do the math.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      13 days ago

      If you live in the suburbs, during the fall, you can’t have a peaceful weekend because there will always be at least one person using a leaf blower nearby. And they’re loud and bad for the environment.

      • undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch
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        12 days ago

        Where I live, gas ones are illegal but that doesn’t stop all the leaf blowers choking the air with gas fumes. I literally have to turn on an air purifier to get rid of the smell.

        Granted my apartment isn’t exactly a commercial workspace, but nothing is more infuriating than having to close all the doors/windows to my apartment when I’m in the middle of some huge programming problem. It instantly breaks apart the 10 things going on in my mental queue.