Excellent for soups, smoothies, humus and much more, a blender is the one kitchen gadget that you must have. Our range of food blenders, from all top brands, offer you an extensive choice. From affordable single speed models that are all that many people need, through to high performance multi-speed models that will help you to create the latest recipes. Our top manufacturers include Bosch, Crux, Daewoo, Kenwood, Progress, Salter, Tefal and Wahl.
One of the best things about summer are the desserts. While I loved our birthday Grilled Doughnuts, a Choco Taco on the backyard patio while typing at night is also a favorite. Sometimes though, just sipping a cool drink on the porch while the dogs play around us and the kids are sleeping in their rooms is just what my husband and I need to relax and unwind after a long day.
While I'm not a big soda drinker, my husband loves the Sonic Blended Root Beer Floats. He loves that it gives you the perfect blend of root beer and ice cream in every sip. This homemade root beer float is top notch!
Sonic Drive In developed the classic blended root beer float taking vanilla ice cream and root beer and placing it in a blender until smooth and creamy. Classic root beer floats rarely have that consistency in flavor--that smooth root beer and ice cream mix in every sip that some want.
I'm always looking for new drinks, smoothies and shakes to make for the kids. This one is perfect for my oldest one who loves Root Beer! The road where our Sonic is at is under construction so no visit to sonic for now! Thanks for sharing! I came over to visit you from the I Gotta Create Party!
Lizy@
Hi, I'm Traci! Cooking hasn't always come easy. I'm the burnt pancake on one side and perfect on the other pancake person that serves it to you with the pretty side up. I've learned to cook and make it look easy to my family and others. I'm now helping you save time & money with easy simple recipes with five ingredients or less!
First, download the required tools and extract them. Open Blender and go to Edit > Preferences. Click on Add-ons, and then Install.... Browse to the FrontiersAnimDecompress folder, and install each of the 4 plugins in this directory, then minimise Blender.
Locate the pac file that contains the animations you want to change. For sonic's animations, look for raw\character\sonic.pac. First, make sure you create a copy of the pac file of your choice in a folder somewhere so you don't accidentally replace your game files. Drag and drop the pac file onto HedgeArcPack.exe to extract the file into a folder.
Open the newly created folder and find the animation you want to change. These animation files have the extension .anm.pxd. Drag and drop the .anm.pxd file onto FrontiersAnimDecompress.exe. This will create a new file with the extension .anm.pxd.outanim.
After importing, select the Armature and go to File > Import, and this time select Hedgehog Engine Compressed (.outanim), and browse for your .outanim file we created in the previous step. You should now see the animation within Blender!
When you have finished making your changes to the animation, go to File > Export and select Hedgehog Engine Compressed (.outanim), then browse for somewhere to save your file. You may overwrite the .outanim file you imported if you like. You may close Blender now.
Drag and drop the newly exported .outanim onto FrontiersAnimDecompress.exe to create a new .anm.pxd containing your animation. Rename this file to be exactly the same as the original file you decompressed. If you haven't already, place it back in it's pac folder, and replace the existing file.
Devices employing ultrasonic waves to homogenize samples, particularly cells/subcellular structures in suspension; also includes accessories and support devices such as power options, probes, sound enclosures, and more.
Sonication uses sound waves to disrupt substances. An electrical signal is converted into a vibration that can mix solutions, dissolve solids into liquids, and remove dissolved gas from liquids. When sound waves at ultrasonic frequencies (>20 kHz) are used, the process is called ultrasonification.
In the laboratory, sonication can be applied via an ultrasonic probe, also called a sonicator or sonic dismembrator. The probe creates sound waves that produce pressure, causing liquid streaming and rapid bubble formation. The bubbles are very small at the start, but grow and coalesce, vibrate violently, and then collapse in the process called cavitation.
The shear from the cavitation and the liquid eddying caused by the vibrating transducer (probe) can hasten chemical reactions and break intermolecular bonds. This speeds dissolution and can be used for samples that cannot easily be stirred. Sonication is also used to disrupt or deactivate biological materials. Cells release their contents when cell walls are disturbed (sonoporation) and DNA molecules can be reduced to smaller fragments.
Sonication is used in the pharmaceutical, food and pesticide, and cosmetic industries as well as for inks, paints, and coatings, wood and wood treatment, and metalworking. Other uses include: breaking up soil aggregates; nanoparticle, nanoemulsion, or nanocrystal production; wastewater purification; de-gassing; extracting seaweed polysaccharides, plant oils, anthocyanins, and antioxidant; biofuel production; de-sulfuring crude oils; and extracting microfossils from rock.
An innovator and pivotal influence on effect-laden guitar tones, Kevin Shields awakened iconic sonic walls of fuzz like the world had never heard as he defined the tone of alternative rock in the '80s and '90s. His tool of choice for fuzz laden chaos: an original Fender Blender effect pedal, prized for its dynamic response and gripping fuzz splatter. Now, through over four years of co-development Fender and Shields have resurrected this mythical 1970's fuzz and injected a subversive feature set, creating the all-new Fender Shields Blender.
At its core, the Fender Shields Blender echoes the tone of Shields' own vintage 1970s Fender Blender, thanks to carefully hand tracing the circuit from his personal fuzz box. Built around this vintage circuit are entirely new ways of controlling and blending the original fuzz voice, all crafted with performance in mind utilizing four easy-access footswitches. Two footswitchable channels of fuzz, each with dedicated level controls, offer the ability to blend the fuzz voice with your clean signal or to blend the fuzz voice with a beefy suboctave fuzz, while the sag footswitch introduces sputtering and ducking effects like never before heard, all controlled by the intensity of your playing dynamics.
Designed around Kevin Shields' original Fender Blender circuit, with his added tweaks, the Fender Shields Blender adds an Octave-Up push button to toggle the original octave-up fuzz voice on and off, unlocking all-new vintage fuzz tones.
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