Answer:
Both technicians are right, to be able to make a threaded joint you need to use the external thread on one part of the rod using the tap and die set, and on the other side of the rod you need to have an internal thread using the thread repair insert kit
The frequency, f, of a wave is the number of waves passing a point in a certain time. We normally use a time of one second, so this gives frequency the unit hertz (Hz), since one hertz is equal to one wave per second.
The question is somewhat ambiguous.
-- It's hard to tell whether it's asking about '3 cubic meters'
or (3m)³ which is actually 27 cubic meters.
-- It's hard to tell whether it's asking about '100 cubic feet'
or (100 ft)³ which is actually 1 million cubic feet.
I'm going to make an assumption, and then proceed to
answer the question that I have invented.
I'm going to assume that the question is referring to
'three cubic meters' and 'one hundred cubic feet' .
OK. We'll obviously need to convert some units here.
I've decided to convert the meters into feet.
For 1 meter, I always use 3.28084 feet.
Then (1 meter)³ = 1 cubic meter = (3.28084 ft)³ = 35.31 cubic feet.
So 3 cubic meters = (3 x 35.31 cubic feet) = 105.9 cubic feet.
That's more volume than 100 cubic feet.
s alluded to in the other answers, salt refers to any ionic compound that doesn't have “oxides” in it. Table salt is sodium chloride. Going down the periodic table, the first column contains lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium, and francium. This group (alkali metals) of atoms (and their corresponding positive ions) gets larger in the order shown above. Therefore, their ionic bonds with chloride (or any nonmetal) gets smaller. The trend of their corresponding compounds is a decreasing hardness, decreasing melting point, decreasing boiling point, and decreasing thermal stability. These are the major periodic trends of these corresponding compounds. Other metal ions generally have higher positive charges on them. This makes the ionic bonds considerably larger and you can probably surmise most of their corresponding properties listed above. However, the details of their lattice structures may cause the overall trend to vary.