business and permissions inquires [email protected]
Hioki
CM4376: https://www.hioki.com/en/products/det...
RM3548: https://www.hioki.com/en/products/det...
/ hiokieecorporation
If an Bodgit And Leggit Garage, Video has helped you out please consider giving using "Patreon" to help support us. The videos take real time to create and pull us away from real work that pays our bills. CLICK HERE:
/ bodgitandleggitgarage
Customer complaints wipers not working and sometimes going very very slow when they do work
In this video we show you how to go through and diagnose a fault with the windscreen wipers with some very easy checks and no specialist tools you can find the problem and fix it
Don't be a part exchange it just go through your problem logically and you will find the answer
http://ko-fi.com/bodgitandleggitgarage
/ bodgitandleggitgarage
https://www.gofundme.com/antilagforco...
bodgit and leggit garage
tips and tricks inside this video hopefully help you
don't forget get your hands dirty
http://www.bodgitandleggitgarage.com/
http://bodgitandleggitforum.editboard...
http://bodgitandleggitgarage.spreadsh...
/ bodgitandleggitgarage
/ bodgitandleggitgarage
One of the earliest recorded patents for the windscreen wiper is by George J. Capewell of Hartford Connecticut, which was filed on August 6, 1896 [1]. His invention was for an automated , motorised, wiper for "cars, locomotives, and such land-vehicles".
Other early designs for the windscreen wiper are credited to Polish concert pianist Józef Hofmann, and Mills Munitions, Birmingham who also claimed to have been the first to patent windscreen wipers in England. At least three inventors patented windscreen cleaning devices at around the same time in 1903; Mary Anderson, Robert Douglass, and John Apjohn. In April 1911, a patent for windscreen wipers was registered by Sloan & Lloyd Barnes, patent agents of Liverpool, England, for Gladstone Adams of Whitley Bay.
Anderson's 1903 window cleaner design
American inventor Mary Anderson is popularly credited with devising the first operational windscreen wiper in 1903.[2][3] In Anderson's patent, she called her invention a "window cleaning device" for electric cars and other vehicles. Operated via a lever from inside a vehicle, her version of windscreen wipers closely resembles the windscreen wiper found on many early car models. Anderson had a model of her design manufactured, then filed a patent (US 743,801) on June 18, 1903 that was issued to her by the US Patent Office on November 10, 1903
Douglass's 1903 locomotive cab window cleaner
A similar device is recorded 3 months prior to Anderson's patent, with Robert A Douglass filing a patent for a "locomotive-cab-window cleaner" on 12 March 1903.[6]
Apjohn's 1903 window cleaning apparatus design
Irish born inventor James Henry Apjohn (1845–1914) patented an "Apparatus for Cleaning Carriage, Motor Car and other Windows" which was stated to use either brushes or wipers and could be either motor driven or hand driven. The brushes or wipers were intended to clean either both up and down or in just one direction on a vertical window. Apjohn's invention had a priority date in the UK of 9 October 1903.[7]
John R. Oishei (1886-1968) formed the Tri-Continental Corporation in 1917. This company introduced the first windscreen wiper, Rain Rubber, for the slotted, two-piece windscreens found on many of the automobiles of the time. Today Trico Products is one of the world's largest manufacturers of windscreen wipers.[citation needed] Bosch has the world's biggest windscreen wiper factory in Tienen, Belgium, which produces 350,000 wiper blades every day.[8] The first automatic electric wiper arms were patented in 1917 by Charlotte Bridgwood.[9]
Disclaimer:
Due to factors beyond the control of Bodgit And Leggit Garage, it cannot guarantee against unauthorized modifications of this information, or improper use of this information. Bodgit And Leggit Garage assumes no liability for property damage or injury incurred as a result of any of the information contained in this video. Bodgit And Leggit Garage recommends safe practices when working with power tools, automotive lifts, lifting tools, jack stands, electrical equipment, blunt instruments, chemicals, lubricants, or any other tools or equipment seen or implied in this video. Due to factors beyond the control of Bodgit And Leggit Garage, no information contained in this video shall create any express or implied warranty or guarantee of any particular result. Any injury, damage or loss that may result from improper use of these tools, equipment, or the information contained
Информация по комментариям в разработке