Former film student, reviewer, musician (Irish Traditional), US Coast Guard avionics tech and aircrewman (I got to play over the caribbean with a super expensive Westinghouse APG-66 F-16 radar system plus more), infopreneur, public radio producer, now software QA and BA, art museum volunteer, track performance driving enthusiast. Love gadgets, home theater tech, person-focused technology advances, hiking, cooking, eating, sleeping, dreaming. My income doesn't support my Criterion Collection aspirations. Things I don't love: technology that is faulty, gadgets with built-in guaranteed obsolescence, software that's poorly conceived or is hostile to the user, companies whose "business needs" outweigh their obligation of service to customers, bad food, selfish people. (I'd say I dislike egoistic, aggressive people, but sometimes I are one. We have seen the enemy....)
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Desmontagens analíticas (teardowns) nas quais trabalhei
Meus guias
Guias para os quais contribuí
Meus guias favoritos
Guias concluídos
Minhas Histórias
Oops ... be careful with your overflow tube
Toilet Tank Assembly
Agree. Updated Steps 17 and 21.
See Step 16.
Check the manual, Jose.
Out of scope for this DIY. Possibly in the fuel tank.
NO, do not work on the engine “while hot.” The metal may expand and make the drain plug and filter harder to unscrew. You can also burn yourself with any oil that splashes.
Check your manual.
Unfortunately, Li Ion and Li Poly batteries (like in cell phones) can swell up when they start deteriorating. I’ve had several in phones and tablets start to swell as they got old, bending the backs and in one case even deforming the touchscreen.
A little warmth is normal for Qi wireless charging. Wireless charging pads and the devices should be designed for this.
A. Don’t leave it on the charging stand non-stop, as the instructions say. If you don’t use it, give it a top-off charge a few times a year to keep the battery healthy.
B. Introducing a layer separating the device from the charging pad may do more harm than good. It can cause the charging circuit to “work harder.”
There are a number of clip-on battery bases made for the Google Home Mini (1gen) which plug into the micro-USB connector of that model. I imagine it’s only a matter of time before these firms retool to create a base for the Nest Mini.
I’ve been tempted by them myself for the following use cases … taking out to the patio … on the go (and connected to a phone’s hotstpot) … in a large room where you want to relocate a Mini close by (and the Mini is easier to manage than its larger Home sibling). I myself have an outlet charger/base unit in my bathroom’s outlet — works great.
Different model car? Check hour car’s manual, or your Toyota dealer. ;)
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