i call bull sh*t . its like 50 here73 degrees here in NC, you brahs jelly? My subs always ready to work.
i call bull sh*t . its like 50 here
I wouldn't say that. -40°f or below can detriment rubber. At around 70-80°f below zero both crude and elastic rubber become extremely brittle, and can even almost shatter like glass... Russia can get down to -92°f and even though irrelevant Antarctica can get to, I believe, around -120-130°f lol.I doubt there's any cold temperature on earth that would make foam/rubber or cotton/nomex brittle. As far as a cold motor/coil that will probably gain you a little more thermal power handling.
If you're pushing something close to its limits anyway and it breaks on a cold day it's not the fault of the cold IMO.
I wouldn't say that. -40°f or below can detriment rubber. At around 70-80°f below zero both crude and elastic rubber become extremely brittle, and can even almost shatter like glass... Russia can get down to -92°f and even though irrelevant Antarctica can get to, I believe, around -120-130°f lol.