

BRP was separate from Bombardier since 2003.
BRP was separate from Bombardier since 2003.
Just looked it up, BRP was sold off from Bombardier in 2003…
This Bombardier doesn’t have dealerships.
They made aircrafts and they haven’t had anything to do with BRP for like 12 years 23 years and sold off the transportation (rail) division about 5 years ago.
I dislike this vehicle as much as the rest.
But gluing panels one is normal. Windshields have been glued in for forever.
Panels on LRVs and Buses are glued on.
There is nothing wrong with the concept of gluing panels on.
So return it if you bought a TV like that.
Buy these things with a credit card. If the store refuses a return or demands a restocking fee, credit card dispute. Visa doesn’t fuck around with this stuff.
I have had a SV08 for a few weeks. Had a K1 Max for the same time period. I had 2 or two failed prints on the SV08 and about 3 dozen failed prints.
I returned the K1 Max (with huge struggles with support)
Previously I had a Labist ET4 that only worked for a out 5 prints total before giving up on it.
I will agree with your statement. If you are willing to put in a bit of research on YouTube and GITHUB and swap a few parts and spend a few hours you’ll have a hilarious large printer that just spits out almost anything you throw at it, besides ABS and ASA… For now…
But a 135 QR 29er wheel isn’t that special, so finding one that wasn’t either a junk hub or $600 hub shouldn’t have been an issue. Even finding TA non boost wheels is becoming difficult.
I ended up finding a lightly used Nukeproof wheel for around $100.
Thankfully the fork on that same bike is just using off the shelf SRAM parts.
Except if they change BB or axle spacing standards, which seems to be happening every few years.
I struggled to find a half decent 135 QR 29er wheel last year for my Trek Xcaliber. A nearly $2000CDN bike from 2016 with nothing wrong except the free hub, and everywhere told me to just get a new bike.
I like my bikes, but I really hate the people running the industry.
That was the Nexus 6P. Nexus 6 was made by Motorola and overall an amazing phone
I run multiple pinholes using keepalived. Then I only use one DNS in my DHCP server. Second pihole will seemlessly take over if the first one goes down whilst using the original DNS address.
Work quite well. I had to learn the hard way that only using a single pihole was just asking for my partner to be mad when it didn’t work / when I was doing server maintenance. Now I have multiple and they can all seemlessly take over if any my server nodes are down
I’ll die before I give up my automatic wipers! Thankfully my 2004 and 2013 VWs have it and don’t lock me out of features like new cars.
How is your Plex install so big? My library is like 6x larger and my Plex install lives in a 24GB VM
I am all for heat pumps, in fact 6 years ago when we had AC installed (in Ontario Canada) at a house we just took ownership of, I had asked for a heat pump and basically all installers said not available. Now they are all the rage.
Anyways. Electric heat is 99.9% efficient. I know that heat pumps aren’t making heat like electric heat does, but I can’t see how at those temperatures you get more than 2 watts of heat for every 1 watt of heat you put in. Especially when you consider the defrost mode on most units just puts the heat pump into cooling mode for a moment, just long enough to produce heat on the outdoor coil, which in turn will provide cooling inside.
I am not saying that they don’t work. I just don’t buy this twice as efficient bullshit.
I am sure I am in the minority, but avoid AAC multi channel encodes as much as possible. It really makes no sense for anyone. Most home theater equipment does not support it. AC3 or eAC3 are supported by nearly every device natively. AAC does not work over SPDIF or HDMI ARC without reencoding. All that for a slightly lower bitrate? No thanks. Plus most are likely encoded from a AC3 or eAC3 so they will sound worse than the native version.
A heat pump isn’t any more efficient than a AC only unit of the same SEER rating. They are literally the same system with the heat pump having a couple extra valves and parts to reverse the flow of the refrigerator.
“Modern Device” aka Apple TV, AndroidTV, iOS or MacOS. No app for Android phones.
The core technologies that UTDC (then Bombardier, now Alstom) took from this is still being used all over the world. The new Vancouver SkyTrain is still using Linear Induction Motors.
A lot of light rail uses resilient wheels and heavy rail does not.
Wheel profiles (the shape of the part that actually touches the rail) are also very different between different categories.
Tailscale is Canadian
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailscale