eisenberg1 wrote: » To the best of my knowledge, in the US, you pay state and federal taxes. State taxes vary, the better schools, street lighting , local police, fire service etc will tend to be in the areas with higher where higher taxes are paid. I think it is why some people opt to work in one state and live in another...possibly paying a lower tax and reaping the benefit of living just across the border in a more affluent state. I stand to be corrected on this...as I have never lived there.
Greybottle wrote: » The current to the relay that switches the light on and off is increased, in fact it's doubled as it only has one bulb to "feed", so it "breaks" a lot faster, thus making it blink faster.
Liam28 wrote: As the previous poster said, this can lead to a downward spiral in 'poor' areas not able to afford good schools and services, property prices falling, property tax decreasing, and the poor area getting poorer. Happening in inner cities like Detroit.
Pronto63 wrote: » I think it was the Ford Pinto. Flaw in design/location of the fuel tank caused it to burst into flames when the car was rear-ended!
b318isp wrote: » Nope, it's simply a change in the resistance of the circuit changing the on/off frequency. When a bulb fails, the net resistance of the circuit rises. In the flasher unit there is a main capacitor which charges up/discharges (to trigger the on/off process), the rate of charging being affected by the size of the capacitor, and some "drainage" of charge to the lamp circuit. With increased lamp circuit resistance, the capacitor is not drained so fast - so charges quicker, causing a quicker oscillation.
Cordell wrote: » More modern relays will have indeed a RC oscillator and a load sensing circuit that will change the frequency
Greybottle wrote: » IKEA sell more than 2,000,000 meatballs every single day.
Ipso wrote: » According to Alan Partridge, you should never put out a fat fire with water. Take your face off!
Tell me how wrote: » There seem to vast swathes of the US where people are close to or below the poverty line with all the associated problems of health, education, employment, amenities, criminal behavior and so on. This can be seen even within cities. Worked in Jacksonville for a couple months and there's streets and streets of trailer park type housing with gated communities in the middle of them. The disparity between the haves and have not is very evident there. Areas like California and the North Eastern seaboard are distorting the view of it being a wealthy country.
Mollyb60 wrote: » Tax discs were abolished in the UK just over 3 years ago so this definitely wouldn't apply there.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » The plan was to save £10m a year on the paper and handling. Tax evasion has gone from £35m a year to £107m a year.
368100 wrote: » You'd wonder why so many stopped taxing.....surely checking the database for tax is as quick these days as checking the windscreen
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Imagine if you to display a TV licence sticker in your living room window. Now imagine the shame of the neighbours seeing an out of date disk :eek: :pac:
mzungu wrote: » The plural of cul-de-sac is culs-de-sac.
Ipso wrote: » We've hit bag bottom.
Meleftone wrote: I bet you didn't know that the saying is "rock bottom" not bag bottom.
Ted_YNWA wrote: » And that cul-de-sac means bottom of the bag.
Meleftone wrote: I stand corrected. Thanks. I didn't know that actually.
mr chips wrote: » "Cul de sac" is not used in France to signify a dead-end street - they use "impasse" or "voie sans issue".