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Search result for: WA 0859 3970 0884 Bengkel Fabrikasi Pagar Rumah Modern Stainless Steel Gunungpati Semarang
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| # | Post Title | Result Info | Date | User | Forum |
| RE: Impact of relative ball size? | 1 Relevance | 6 years ago | Bruce | Table Customization | |
| ... start to stick to one another due to van der WAals forces. This is why powders don't behave exactly like sands do. I have used pure baking soda - it works, and produces great detail - but just doesn't look as nice (IMO). This particle size boundary limits smooth rolling of smaller balls (ball:particle size ratio is too low - the ball gets "stuck" and deflected by the particles). Again, it's not a functional limitation - I have used ~1/8" diam. BB's, and they "work" just fine - but they move jerkily. If your goal is to to a picture of a completed track that ... | |||||
| RE: Track corruption on restore -- please add Backup/Restore | 1 Relevance | 4 years ago | Patti | Table Usage | |
| I couldn't resist the lure of the limited edition Stainless table so my current one is about to go to a new home. Thus I would love to back up my existing tracks and playlists and restore them on the new table when it arrives. A search turned up this post. I'm enough of a nerd that I can probably work it out based on the description in this post, but are the backup/restore instructions posted somewhere? It sounds like the process is: - Back up the content directory on the old table to another computer- On the new table, restore the files to a temp directory- Kill the server process- (Back up the content folder, because paranoia)- Replace the existing content folder with my backup- Do something to restart the process, which I'm sure I can work out but if not I can just restart the table Is that correct? | |||||
| Solution to berm concerns | 1 Relevance | 5 years ago | adambrower | Table Usage | |
| If occasionally the field seems thin toward the berm, rather than trying to craft a rho>1 track that returns some sand to the field, and instead of wrestling with the glass on the 36" table, simply place a small bit of Stainless bar stock on the cloth, and use a ~25lb magnet to manually plow some sand back to the field. I cover the magnet with cheescloth to avoid scratches. (Don't forget to pull the bar stock well clear of the berm when you're done). It only took me 3 months to figure that out! | |||||
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