I have never complained about EU market interference (except I think small businesses do get hurt by the EU), or environmental, only political interference: defense, foreign policy, border control, fiscal union, majority voting, this sort of things.
the work is brilliant, but these things take a very long time in an industry as matured as energy.
The fundamental problem with Lithium battery is the metal intercalation process itself. When you move atoms/ions from one electrode to the other, you change the volume of the electrodes.
yes, I can see your problem.
Here is a picture of the Hayes lever:
I think you may have to fabricate an adapter to hold the magnet ring and attach it to the lever, just after the silver adjusting knob.
If you are truly stuck, let me know, I'll try to 3-D print an adapter for you.
A few manufacturers produce already solid state Lithium batteries, exploiting their extreme thinness but the capacity remains very low (0.1AH range).
We may have to wait until 2030s before the capacity of solid state Lithium cells get into the region of 3AH.
E-bikes don't really need solid state...
it still is a simple, principle question.
The rest will have to be dealt with by our intelligent, educated MPs after the next election.
I'd like to see Mrs May Groucho Marx moment.
http://www.politico.eu/article/brexit-faces-groucho-marx-moment/
Nothing to do with that.
This whole saga started with one simple question.
There is no way one can predict how long it will take to negotiate a new relationship with the EU but I think we can agree that it's more than 2 years.
Let's see this leaving the EU sorted then a future government will...
I would have thought that Mrs May wanted to start with a low expectation, which is hard brexit. Refuse to pay a hefty bill, this sort of things.
Further negotiation after brexit will soften brexit.
I think most people will not care for the likes of Rees who.
Those idiots will always try to say something inflammatory to make themselves look interesting.
There will be fresh election from now to the UK exiting the EU or very shortly after that, you can always use your vote to register your...
but not connected to brexit though.
Reduction in smoking is much more of a WHO than EU project and taxes on cigarettes are higher in the UK than the other side of the Channel.
Yes, but there is a lot of identity left to preserve.
Why is it so wrong to attempt to reduce political interference getting too much into trade and cooperation?
I still remember road signs in different shape, size, colour. You could instantly recognize in which country they were used. Now, roads, towns, cities look the same, people wear the same sort of clothes. Even restaurants get uniformized. Sad or I am too old?
I merely want too attract your attention to what was good then, what's worth protecting from being absorbed, uniformized into a superstate, or left out or becoming unimportant or all of it.