lead analytic fluid



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: ""
Date: 22 Apr 2006 06:55:10 AM
Object: lead analytic fluid
i had a dream in which i was told
something got its power from a
"lead analytic fluid". does this make
any sense?
does lead have any anions?
.

User: "Mj"

Title: Re: lead analytic fluid 22 Apr 2006 07:14:42 AM
Well lead ions dont have any anions. they are charges 2+. so i dont
know what you were dreaming but there are no lead anions.
.
User: ""

Title: Re: lead analytic fluid 22 Apr 2006 04:09:29 PM
Perhaps it would help, were you to explain the difference between
anions and cations to the original poster. Certainly you would not
refute the point that there many lead electrolytic solutions, Car
batteries and solder plating tanks are obvious examples.
As you will recall, the ion naming convention has to do with whether
the ion is attracted to the positively charged anode (as anions are),
or the negatively charge cathode (as cations are).
I am more concerned about people who get their scientific insight from
dreams an not textbooks, but then I suppose dreams, not textbooks, are
what form the strange theories posted to sci.physics today by many
posters who have never cracked a textbook on physics in their entire
lives, and never want to because it would interfere with their
'creative processes'.
Curmudgeonly, Harry C.
.
User: ""

Title: Re: lead analytic fluid 22 Apr 2006 10:28:41 PM
actually, it was pronounced LEED in the dream.
i just thought it was LED
hhc314@yahoo.com wrote:

Perhaps it would help, were you to explain the difference between
anions and cations to the original poster. Certainly you would not
refute the point that there many lead electrolytic solutions, Car
batteries and solder plating tanks are obvious examples.

As you will recall, the ion naming convention has to do with whether
the ion is attracted to the positively charged anode (as anions are),
or the negatively charge cathode (as cations are).

I am more concerned about people who get their scientific insight from
dreams an not textbooks, but then I suppose dreams, not textbooks, are
what form the strange theories posted to sci.physics today by many
posters who have never cracked a textbook on physics in their entire
lives, and never want to because it would interfere with their
'creative processes'.

Curmudgeonly, Harry C.

.
User: "Entropy"

Title: Re: lead analytic fluid 22 Apr 2006 11:58:41 PM
<bob@coolgroups.com> wrote in message
news:1145762921.888949.121300@g10g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...

actually, it was pronounced LEED in the dream.


That's Scottish for Lead.
Tam
.





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