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(Concrete Engineering) A quantity of cement contained in a unit volume of concrete or mortar, ordinarily expressed as pounds, barrels, or bags per cubic yard.
(Concrete Engineering) A device used in determining time of setting of hydraulic cement, described in ASTM 0 266. Gradation The sizing of granular materials; for concrete materials, usually expressed in terms of cumulative percentages larger or smaller than each of a series of sieve openings or the percentages between certain ranges of sieve openings.
(Software Engineering) an informal measure of the degree to which a software component implements a single, focused function
(english) Oven use to bake a number of cores at one time.
(english) A primitive furnace used for direct reduction of ore to iron.
(Software Engineering) a group of people whose primary responsibility is software testing
(english) Wheels of a hard abrasive, such as Carborundum used for grinding.
(english) A mathematical entity having a magnitude and a direction in space.
(english) The flaring or tapering of a machined hole, usually made at the entrance end because of misalignment or spring of the cutting tool.
A powdery substance made by burning, at a high temperature, a mixture of clay and limestone producing lumps called “clinkers” which are ground into a fine powder consisting of hydraulic calcium silicates. For non-portland cements, see aluminous cement.
(Concrete Engineering) A unit of weight for cement: 376 Ibs net, equivalent to 4 US bags of portland cement. The designation presently used is tons of cement.
(english) A property of a body related to its ability to move a force through a distance opposite the force's direction; energy is the product of the magnitude of the force times the distance. Energy may take several forms: see kinetic energy, potential energy, and elastic energy.