Valves are too tight.or seals are damaged.(valve seals)
yes as long as the motor in both have not been changed to a different size you can look at the top of the moyor and it should say 5.0 on the motor and as long as it does it is the exact same motor
Two ways to think about it: 1: 25% both heads 50% one of each 25% both tails -or- 2: 25% heads/heads 25% heads/tails 25% tails/heads 25% tails/tails
The probability of 2 coins both landing on heads or both landing on tails is 1/2 because there are 4 possible outcomes. Head, head. Head, tails. Tails, tails. Tails, heads. Tails, heads is different from heads, tails for reasons I am unsure of.
The probability that 2 flipped coins both come up heads is 0.52 or 0.25
One out of every four flips
yes. they both use the 420a motor.
In both . smoke comes out at one end!
yesyou can change just 1 you dont have to change both
All modern engine blocks and engine motor heads have a code on them. Find the number or code and then find someone who may have a listing for your motor & heads. Check both as people do change things after they obtain them.
yes as long as the motor in both have not been changed to a different size you can look at the top of the moyor and it should say 5.0 on the motor and as long as it does it is the exact same motor
Replace the valve stems inserts, this should take care of your smoking problems
White smoke from the exhaust is a symptom of coolant entering the combustion chamber. You either have a blown head gasket or cracked head or both. STOP driving the car until you can have it repaired.
#1 is the cylinder closest to the front of the engine (where the belt is). On a V engine that is harder to tell unless you can see both heads at the same time.
both of them smoke
if you power an ac motor with dc or a dc motor with ac you will likely start smelling smoke and the motor will be damaged. If the motor is marked "3-phase", "shaded pole", or "induction" it is an ac motor! BTW, there are ac/dc motors that will run on both, they are wound very much like dc motors but a bit differently.
its a tie they both have freakishly large heads,.(:
The answer depends on how many times the coin is tossed. The probability is zero if the coin is tossed only once! Making some assumptions and rewording your question as "If I toss a fair coin twice, what is the probability it comes up heads both times" then the probability of it being heads on any given toss is 0.5, and the probability of it being heads on both tosses is 0.5 x 0.5 = 0.25. If you toss it three times and want to know what the probability of it being heads exactly twice is, then the calculation is more complicated, but it comes out to 0.375.