11 This is a fire test for determining values of flame propagation height for electrical and optical-fiber cables that are for installation vertically in shafts or in vertical runs that penetrate one or more floors.
This revision to ANSI/UL 1666 dated September 24, 2021 is being issued to update the title page to reflect the most recent designation as a Reaffirmed American National Standard (ANS). No technical changes have been made.
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Any creditor who fails to comply with the requirements of this section or section 1666a of this title forfeits any right to collect from the obligor the amount indicated by the obligor under paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of this section, and any finance charges thereon, except that the amount required to be forfeited under this subsection may not exceed $50.
A title card reveal late into the movie made me gasp in both shock and delight. That this element is so smoothly transitioned into the plot progression is damning evidence that the scripts for all three movies flow together seamlessly. My favorite aspect of 1666 is the emotionally resonant resolution that brings meaning for every life lost. No victim is too small, and none are forgotten entirely. Rarely does one film, let alone a series, recall its fallen victims with this amount of love and loyalty.
Go on trial with Sarah Fier and friends when Fear Street Part Three: 1666 debuts exclusively on Netflix, Friday, July 16th. Read the review for Fear Street Part One: 1994 here. Read the review for Fear Street Part Two: 1978 here.
Looking to purchase our first combine. Have a couple choices of a case IH 1660 or a case IH 1666. Both machines have close to the same hours. 1666 is close to $20k and the 1660 is only at $12k. I don't know squat about combines except changing belts and bearings are a pia. One has standard rotor and seives, concaves and the other has what they describe as large wire grates?? What does a guy need for a combine to come from their lot to my house without needing to change stuff out to harvest corn? We have a 963 corn head available to use.
I should add, we are not going for ultimate speed. Just an efficient machine that will do 150-200 acres of corn between milkings. We are getting tired of custom guys, by now, we could have owned a nice newer machine. Some years we don't have much to do, some years we have plenty left over. All depends on what we have for silage crop.
The main advice I would give though, buying any used combine... have an experienced person go through it with you. The inside of a combine is more expensive than the outside, if you don't know what to look for you could be making an expensive mistake. It only takes one small rock about 5 seconds & a little luck to turn a $50,000 combine into a $15,000 machine.
Should really have large and small wire concaves unless you will only ever do corn and beans. I have ran the 2 3 thousand dollar IH combines and it is surprising how dependable they are. If money is no object go for the 1666. If your on a shoe string budget that 1660 will serve you well. I was told by the auctioneer when I bought my first 1460 for $2000 that you no this is a salvage combine! It ran trouble free for many years.
I have had a friend talk to me about what to look for, but like I said, I'm totally green on these machines. I'd like it if he was available to see. Been waiting a couple days to see if he can look at one by him, but haven't heard back. He stays busy so I don't want to rush something that's free advice. He has a really nice new Holland that comes with two heads for half of the 1660 price we contemplated too. Only thing seems like there are no aftermarket parts for them.
Yes the engine was running close to same rpm as navistar one was and made them use oil. Dads would use a gallon every two days when pushed hard. Slowed them down by regearing the pto by the 66 series.
Not completely the same but my cousin prefers his 1688 over his other combine which is a 8230. No joke. I've heard from a lot the 66/88 was the most bullet proof AF made before and especially since. They run that 1688 along side the 8230 from start to finish every year.
Yes they were a simple good machine but 21,23 2588 and the 6088, 7088 and newer legacy are good machines. It is logistics though you can buy a fairly decent shape 8230 now with header under 200,000. A 1688 about 20,000. But if you have a 2000 or more acres the capacity of flagship combines is tremendous in soybeans and wheat. 40 ft Draper head 2 mph faster than a 88 30 ft auger head.that speed and capacity means a lot.
Only guys around here that run one combine cut about 1000 acres or less. You can't screw around with small grains and malt barley getting rained on. The 1688 more often then not makes it through the harvest without breaking down vs the 8230. Right now the 8230 is in the shop getting the CVT drive worked on. I would say out of the other combines, the 2388 was the best of the lot. The 21s had some teething issues and a neighbor of mine who we seed for has had more trouble with his 2588 then the 2388 it replaced. Only one 7088 in the neighborhood and its been a good combine.
Ended up going with the 1666. Has nearly new rasps, bars, and concaves. Almost all the chains are new on it. Tech is friends with a guy who rents our beef cow pasture. The tech said that's the best one we had on our lot. They test all the heads they work on with it because everything works on the machine. It has a little damage on the back panels and miss matched main front tires, but drives good and all fluids checked out good after we got it home. I'm totally green with these things, but after a good run through of the manual, it doesn't seem as complicated as I initially thought. Anyway, here it is.
My mother's original ancestor to America, William Throop, came around 1666 and lived in Bristol, Rhode Island. He was probably a stone mason. We did see his gravestone(and many relatives) in a cemetery in Bristol RI. Spelling can vary as Throope, Troop, Thorpe. Many of William Throop's family did live in Bristol, RI. I did find out much information about the family in a book by Ralph Troop about male descendants of William Throop. (I can get the exact title) Are they any books about the English who came over to America in the 1600's. I did read somewhere there was a surge of immigration in the 1660s. Thank you for any ideas.
William Throope arrived in Bristol, RI with his Mother Mary Waller Scrope in early 1660.I believe they were on the ship, The 'Mary Grace'
William Throope's birth name was Adrian Scrope, Jr. son of Colonel Adrian Scrope.
He changed his name from Adrian Scrope, Jr to William Throope, because 'bloodhounds' (Assassins) working for King Charles II
were hunting down and killing all direct descendants of the members of Parliament / Army who put King Charles I
William Throope was a surveyor, and I believe lived out the rest of his life in Massachusetts, after briefly living in Bristol, RI.
I am a direct descendent of WIlliam Throop, traced all his direct descendants thru to my mother, via her father, last name
Throop.
Many of William Throope's descendants served as officers in the Revolutionary War, some with quite a bit of distinction,
and I know of one (being my Great-great-Great-great, etc grandfather, received a land grant for 160 acres of land in lieu
of backpay, signed by Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of the Interior under G. Washington President.
Many Throops don't realize, or won't admit that William Throope, top of the family chain in America is really the son
of colonel Adrian Scrope, because he was one of the 'regicides' of 1647, and executed in Oct. 1660.
Since Adrian Scrope is such a historical figure, his family was minor royalty, ancestors of Adrian Scrope family mentioned in 5 of Shakespeares
Plays (Might be under name Scroope or Scroop. The family traces their ancestry back to the Norman invasion of 1066 and a long line of Normans in France, . Because of the way the English kept records on these nobles, there's a lot of ancestry data available on them online.
You can start with Colonel Adrian Scrope and go backwards father to father to father until you reach Henry Le Scroope.of Normandy,year 976.
The survival story of the Patawomeck Tribe of Virginia has been remembered within the tribe for generations, but the massacre of Patawomeck men and the enslavement of women and children by land hungry colonists in 1666 has been mostly unknown outside of the tribe until now. Author Lora Chilton, a member of the tribe through the lineage of her father, has created this powerful fictional retelling of the survival of the tribe through the lives of three women.
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