Tag Archives: South Carolina

Ratios Galore: A Deep Look at ZF’s 9-speed Automatic

By K.C. Colwell

When is enough, enough? When it comes to transmissions, the available ratios from any trans maker are on a steady climb into two-digit territory. Take ZF’s newest for example: the 9HP. It’s a nine-speed transaxle for transverse applications sporting a 9.8 ratio spread (that’s good) and it promises 10-percent better fuel economy when compared to a six-speed slushbox. In a market that goes full frenzy by one-percent here and two-percent there, 10 can’t be ignored.

The trouble with engineering a transmission for a transverse application is packaging. The gearbox, along with the engine, has to fit between the shock towers. According to ZF, which announced it will initially supply the 9HP to the Jeep Cherokee and the Land Rover Range Rover Evoque with more customers to come, the maximum width for such a transmission is about 14.6 inches. It’s no surprise, then, that the 9HP is 14.4 inches wide. With four planetary gear sets and six shifting elements (brakes and clutches) that’s a very dense 14.4 inches.

Of those four planetary gearsets, two of them are nested. In this nested pair, the annulus, or ring gear, of the smaller planetary doubles as the sun gear of the larger set. This arrangement trims some width from the four-gearset tranny.

Simply adding ratios to a transmission might not make it a tool for greater efficiency, however. More ratios require more shifting elements and these add weight, complexity, and drag to the transmission. This is why ZF implemented two dog clutches in the 9HP. The beauty of a dog clutch is there’s little-to-no parasitic loss when they aren’t engaged, whereas a conventional friction clutch zaps some efficiency, and they’re relatively compact.

The tricky part of the canine clutch is how, or rather when, to engage them. Synchromesh helps dog clutches within a manual transmission from grinding away and easing gear changes. ZF relies on computers to anticipate the precise moment both halves of each dog clutch are spinning the exact same speed, and engagement happens without the slightest crunch, as proven by our short sample in an Evoque test mule.



Internal efficiencies aren’t the only source for the claimed fuel-economy improvement, either; the nine ratios play a part, too. Internal-combustion engines are most efficient in a relatively small rpm range and the biggest ratio step is just 1.65, between first and second. Having many small ratio steps in hand allows any engine coupled to a 9HP to operate in that ideal rpm window more of the time.

Oh yeah, one of the best parts of the 9HP: it’s 100 percent American made. Every 9HP installed worldwide will come out of the supplier’s Gray Court, South Carolina, plant, with the exception of the 9HPs Chrysler builds under license (just like the longitudinal 8HP) at its Kokomo, Indiana, transmission plant. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

Dusten Brown, Birth Father Of ‘Baby Girl’ Veronica, Asks Supreme Court To Block South Carolina Adoption Ruling

By The Huffington Post News Editors

WASHINGTON — The birth father of a girl of Cherokee heritage asked the Supreme Court Friday to stop a state-court ordered handover of his daughter to adoptive parents.

The filing by Dusten Brown is the latest legal maneuver in a drawn-out fight for custody of 3-year-old Veronica. She lived the first 27 months of her life with adoptive parents Matt and Melanie Capobianco in South Carolina and the past 18 months with Brown in Oklahoma.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Jonathan Willard, NFL Rookie, Saves Family, Dog From Burning Car

By The Huffington Post News Editors

An NFL rookie has been dubbed a hero after he rescued a family and their dog from a burning car this week.

Former Clemson University player Jonathan “Tig” Willard was driving from South Carolina to the Titans’ training camp in Tennessee Tuesday when he spotted a smoking car on the highway.

“I saw this car in front of me and it had all kinds of black smoke coming out of it,” Willard told TigerNet.com, a site that covers Clemson sports news.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

HUFFPOST HILL – World Learns ‘Royal Baby’ Isn’t A Line Of Velour Tracksuits

By The Huffington Post News Editors

People everywhere congratulated the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on the birth of their son, while Republicans vowed to rescue the child from Britain’s socialist health care system. The media’s coverage was a bit breathless, but thankfully the New York Post didn’t report the baby’s name as “Dick Gephardt.” And Mitch McConnell greeted his likely primary challenger by calling him “an East Coast con man” but stopped short of demanding he take his stagecoach full of elixirs back home. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Monday, July 22nd, 2013:

GOP ESTABLISHMENT RALLYING AROUND ENZI – Beleaguered folk hero Mike Enzi is getting some help from the little guy: Koch Industries. Politico: “Sen. Mike Enzi’s fundraising efforts have gotten off to a sluggish start this year, but he’s received support from Republican establishment and heavyweight political action committees ahead of his primary fight against Liz Cheney. The Wyoming Republican received $7,500 from Koch Industries PAC, the committee affiliated with the company owned by megadonors Charles and David Koch, according to a POLITICO review of Enzi’s second quarter campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. Other PACs affiliated with major politically active companies and trade associations who gave to Enzi between April and June include: Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Time Warner Cable, Pfizer and National Retail Federation. The three-term incumbent also received support from the leadership PACs of establishment Republicans such as Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Sens. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.” [Politico]

CELEBS PROMOTING OBAMACARE – Oprah’s boldly going where the NFL wouldn’t dare. Sarah Kliff: “What do Oprah, Funny or Die and the Grammys have in common? All three, it turns out, have volunteered to promote Obamacare. Senior advisor Valerie Jarrett hosted a meeting Monday with a star-studded group of actors, musicians, writers and producers who have ‘expressed a personal interest in educating young people about the Affordable Care Act,’ according to a White House official.” [WashPost]

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Novel Program Shaves Electricity Bills By 34% In South Carolina

By Justin Gerdes, Contributor

Dozens of low-income households in South Carolina have more money at the end of each month thanks to a novel financing program that eliminates the upfront cost to install energy upgrades. After loan payments, participants in the “Help My House” on-bill financing program have reduced their electricity bills by nearly $300 annually. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Pacific Northworst LeMons Inspections: Austins, Saabs, and a Hudson Hornet

By Murilee Martin

Here we are at The Ridge Motorsports Park once again, for the third annual Pacific Northworst 24 Hours of LeMons, and the assortment of race cars preparing for Saturday’s race session looks to be one of the best we’ve seen this year. The weather promises to be strangely non-rainy, nobody threw a rod during practice, and British Leyland products are well-represented. Let’s check out the highlights!


King Henry the V8th Racing, having retired their Index of Effluency-winning Cadillac Sedan DeVille, showed up with their new car: a 1976 Chevy Nova, possibly inspired by the daily-driver ’76 Nova once owned by your LeMons correspondent.


Of course, the King Henry the V8thers haven’t forgotten their Cadillac origins.


This diesel Mercedes-Benz broke down early and often at last year’s Pacific Northworst, but perhaps Things Will Be Different this time.


The 1987 Plymouth Reliant-K wagon that NSF Racing put together for the 2012 season-ender and then handed off from team to team as part of their “K-It-FWD” program, has been traveling to nearly every LeMons race this season. So far, the K has raced in South Carolina, New York, Michigan, Texas, Colorado, California… and now Washington. Much of the traveling between races has been done without benefit of a tow rig, and now Pit Crew Revenge has taken over the K-racing duties. This car has yet to run well enough to have a real shot at the Index of Effluency, but we continue to keep our hopes high.


The two-stroke Saab of the Freewheeling Pikers (winner of the 2012 Pacific Northworst Index of Effluency) will be battling the Reliant-K for the Class C victory.


The Freewheeling Pikers won’t have the only two-stroker in this race; Balto, the snowmobile-engined Miata has returned to show that having the best power-to-weight ratio doesn’t always translate into the best on-track performance. Balto is absurdly fast, but drinks fuel like a container ship and breaks drive belts with depressing regularity.


As always, some teams dressed in costume.

<img src="http://blog.caranddriver.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/21-BS-Inspections-at-2013-Pacific-Northworst-24-Hours-of-LeMons-626×426.jpg" alt="" title="21 – BS Inspections at 2013 Pacific Northworst 24 Hours …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Car & Driver

'Glory': Civil War fight by black troops recalled

By hnn

SULLIVANS ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Dozens of Civil War re-enactors gathered Thursday to commemorate the 150th anniversary of a famed attack by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry — a battle in South Carolina that showed the world black soldiers could fight and was chronicled in the movie ‘‘Glory.’’

Re-enactors portraying members of the black Union regiment as well as Confederate counterparts defending Battery Wagner in Charleston Harbor planned to travel Thursday afternoon by boat to Morris Island, site of the battle, to lay a wreath and fire a salute.

Speeches and Civil War period music also were planned on nearby Sullivans Island — an inhabited barrier island near the harbor entrance — about the time of the evening attack 150 years ago. Luminaries were to be lit by nightfall in memory of the dead….

Source:
Boston Globe

Source URL:
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/2013/07/18/marking-anniversary-massachusetts/m22JNh7ygpdXYRy35XavGL/story.html

Date:
7-18-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

D.N.A. backs lore on pre-Columbian dogs

By hnn

BISHOPVILLE, S.C. — Inside a fenced acre on the swampy Lynches River flood plain in central South Carolina, seven of Don Anderson’s primitive dogs spring into high alert at approaching strangers. Medium-sized, they fan out amid his junkyard of improvised habitat: a few large barrels to dig under, an abandoned camper shell from a pickup, segments of black plastic water pipe and backhoed dirt mounds overgrown with waist-high ragweed….

Some Carolina dogs still live in the wild, and local people have long thought they were one of the few breeds that predated the European arrival in the Americas: “Our native dog,” as Michael Ruano, another enthusiast who often works with Mr. Anderson, put it. “America’s natural dog.”

Source:
NYT

Source URL:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/16/science/a-dog-that-goes-way-back.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20130716&_r=2&pagewanted=all&

Date:
7-15-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Central Florida Sail Posts

By JackDaddy

Separated From: http://www.doityourself.com/forum/de…es-moving.html

So glad to see this thread. I live in Orlando, FL and am hoping to use sails on my back yard paver patio. The patio is going in about two weeks from now so I am behind a little on my sail poles. Pilot Dane, you have asked about the yard in a previous post so I am hoping you can help me out given these details.

Our soil here is not as hard as the South Carolina clay I grew up with, so I am concerned about how it is somewhat sandy and easy to dig. My house was built in 1952 and the yard has not been disturbed during that time so it is pretty stable compared to new construction areas. I notice the 18″ by 48″ footer suggestion for a 12′ pole. Is this sufficient? If you can’t tell from this limited information, how would you suggest I find out? Thank you.

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Source: DoItYourself.com

24 Hours of LeMons Detroit Inspections: I-Mark Diesel vs Reliant K Grudge Match

By Murilee Martin

Here at lovely Gingerman Raceway on the shores of Lake Michigan, we’re experiencing some invigoratingly brisk Upper Midwest Spring weather (in other words, howling Arctic winds driving icy needles of sleet right through our suffering flesh) and admiring the collection of 70 or so racin’ machines that have come to compete in the Cure For Gingervitis 24 Hours of LeMons. Now that your LeMons correspondent has stopped shivering long enough to work the keyboard, let’s take a look at some of the more interesting competitors.


Back from their Judges’ Choice triumph at the Chubba Cheddar Enduro last summer, the zany Canadians of Red Shirt Racing went to extraordinary lengths to obtain a genuine Sportbak for their Nissan Pulsar. Some members of the team felt that the Sportbak’s added 100 pounds of weight would be too much for their slushbox-enhanced 71-horsepower E16 engine, but the LeMons Supreme Court promised a coveted Class C berth if the team agreed to keep that crucial accessory on the car all weekend.


That means the Red Shirt Pulsar will be battling for a class win with the NSF Racing 1987 Plymouth Reliant-K station wagon. This car was purchased and prepped by the legendary NSF and is being handed off from team to team across the country, having now traveled from LeMons races in Texas, South Carolina, and New York before washing up here in Michigan. After this race, the K-car will be heading back to Texas as part of NSF’s infamous, 2.2-engine-killing “K-it-FWD” program.


Of all the teams that could have taken on the K-car for this race, the best possible choice had to be the Celica-killing New Zealanders of Apocalyptic Racing. Not content to shoot rods out the block of their hopelessly overcarbureted 22R engine the Apocalyptic guys have adopted the Reliant-K for the weekend. Fortunately, they picked up a spare 2.2 engine at the junkyard (a wise move for a car that has killed two engines per three races so far) and will be ready in case problems crop up with the K’s powerplant this weekend. If you can find a better car, buy it!


Also in Class C is the Zero Budget Racing Chevy Chevette Diesel. This car won the Index of Effluency trophy here back in 2011, but Zero Budget brought another car, one that shoves the Chevette right out of the spotlight.

<img src="http://blog.caranddriver.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/17-24-Hours-of-LeMons-The-Cure-For-Gingervitis-2013-BS-Inspction-626×426.jpg" alt="" title="17 – 24 Hours of LeMons

From: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/caranddriver/blog/~3/LUx87IaYqic/

Garden-to-Table Cookbook for Young Adults

By Joanne Camas The importance of a healthy diet is undeniable, with more and more evidence touting the benefits of the Mediterranean style of eating. Cookbook author Patricia Moore-Pastides has spent years working in public health and teaching good nutrition and wellness habits to young people, and now she’s taking her mission one step further with her new book, Greek Revival from the Garden: Growing and Cooking for Life. “It is a great book that teens and college-age students can use independently, families with young children can use together, and novices to gardening and cooking will enjoy at any age,” she told Epicurious. Moore-Pastides teaches healthy Mediterranean cooking classes for USC students, and also adults and children through a community program offered by the university’s Cancer Prevention and Control Program. “I wanted to write a book targeted to young adults to start them on a healthful lifestyle while they are still young.” She certainly has hands-on experience with both gardening and college life. “Five years ago my husband became president of the University of South Carolina, and I became the university’s First Lady,” she explained. “As such I do a lot of entertaining, to the tune of 200 events per academic year. I wanted to try to influence the community to enjoy more healthful food options, so I started an organic garden behind the President’s House. We started serving lots of plant-based options, and people have raved about the food.” The USC Press published her first cookbook, Greek Revival: Cooking for Life in 2010, and it’s now in its fifth printing. “As you know, research on the Mediterranean diet just keeps getting stronger,” she added. “It helps prevent heart disease and all the contributors to heart disease like high cholesterol; hypertension; inflammation; stroke; Alzheimers; breast, colon, and prostate cancers; arthritis; age-related blindness; birth defects; and childhood allergies and asthma. “The food preparation is simple and the flavors are wonderful, so we can be healthy, fit, and not at all deprived!” Moore-Pastides said. Check out sample recipes from Greek Revival from the Garden: Growing and Cooking for Life, which will be published by the USC Press in June. * Want to know more about the Mediterranean diet? Nutritionist Monica Reinagel shares an eating plan, including recipes and menus, and nutrition advice.

From: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/epicurious/epiblog/~3/L1Eji03iDLA/garden-to-table-cookbook-for-young-adults.html

Paul Says He Is Considering 2016 Presidential Bid

By Breaking News

WASHINGTON— Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky says he is considering a presidential campaign in 2016 but will not make a decision before next year.

Paul says at a breakfast sponsored by The Christian Science Monitor that he wants to be part of the national debate and being considered a potential candidate gives him a “larger microphone” on issues.

Paul plans to travel to early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire this spring and South Carolina this summer as part of the process.

Read More at OfficialWire.

From: http://www.westernjournalism.com/paul-says-he-is-considering-2016-presidential-bid/

Sanford Accused of Trespass at Ex-Wife's Home

By Rob Quinn Mark Sanford has got a date in court two days after his date with voters in May’s special congressional election. The former South Carolina governor’s ex-wife filed a trespassing complaint after allegedly catching Sanford leaving her home by the back door, using his phone for a flashlight, according to court…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166353/sanford-accused-of-trespass-at-ex-wifes-home.html

Glowing Triangle UFO Over South Carolina On April 6, 2013.

By ScottCWaring

Date of sighting: April 6, 2013
Location of sighting: North Charleston, South Carolina, USA

I have said it a hundred times. If you want to see a UFO then go watch ten sunsets with your camcorder. You will see something, but be patient. The light bends around the cloaked ships differently causing them to temporarily reveal themselves. SCW

Eyewitness states:
April 6, 2013 North Charleston, SC Area. Seen a weird cloud that was somewhat reflective or something.

From: http://www.ufosightingsdaily.com/2013/04/glowing-triangle-ufo-over-south.html

Supreme Court To Hear Arguments On Indian Child Welfare Act

By The Huffington Post News Editors

COLUMBIA, S.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court this week will hear an emotional family challenge to longstanding federal law on the adoption of Native American children, with several states, tribes and children’s welfare groups lining up to support the current rules.

The case involves a South Carolina couple fighting for custody of their adopted daughter who, after a court battle, was returned to her biological father in Oklahoma.

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From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/14/supreme-court-indian-child-welfare-act_n_3081842.html

These 6 States Tax You the Least

By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Anywhere you go in the U.S., you’ll still have to pay taxes. But choosing low-tax states to live in can free you from your tax burden a lot faster than in other parts of the country.

The nonprofit Tax Foundation created Tax Freedom Day as a way of easily comparing the relative amount of taxes that people pay to federal, state, and local revenue agencies. You can do the same simply by taking the total you pay in tax and dividing it by your income, telling you what percentage of the year you spend paying your fair share of taxes.

For the U.S. overall, Tax Freedom Day won’t come until this Thursday, April 18, and as we saw yesterday, some states will have to wait quite a while longer before they can declare independence from taxes. But in several states, Tax Freedom Day has already come and gone. Let’s look at the six least-taxed states in the U.S., along with a brief explanation of what makes their taxes so much lower than the rest of the country.

6. South Dakota, April 4
South Dakota makes the list for a couple of key reasons: It doesn’t have an individual income tax, and it doesn’t charge businesses on their corporate income, either. The state gets its income from property and sales taxes, but a state sales tax of 4% with local taxes of about 1.8% still doesn’t raise the total burden too far. Property taxes average less than $1,150 per person.

4 (tie). New Mexico, April 3
Where New Mexico stands out is in low property taxes, with an average of just $633 each year. By comparison, a 4.9% top income-tax rate and a 5.125% sales tax actually bring in a fairly substantial amount of tax, with the state’s per-person sales and excise tax liability among the top quarter of states across the nation. Corporate income-tax rates are also fairly high at 7.6%, although the rate is low enough to have enticed chipmaker Intel to move to the area in the early 1980s and gradually expand its production facilities over time.

4 (tie). South Carolina, April 3
South Carolina‘s tax rates don’t seem all that attractive, with a 7% maximum individual income-tax rate and a 6% sales tax. But low property taxes of just over $1,000 on average help keep total taxes down, and a relatively small business presence leads to very low corporate-tax revenue.

3. Tennessee, April 2
Tennessee’s claim to tax fame is that its 6% income tax applies only to interest and dividend income, leaving wages untouched. Property taxes of less than $800 are also extremely low, although a sales tax of 7% helps the state raise needed revenue. A flat corporate-tax rate was probably one incentive that attracted shipping giant FedEx to locate its headquarters in Memphis.

1 (tie). Mississippi, March 29
Mississippi earns high honors on the list with its

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/14/these-6-states-tax-you-the-least/