Not a "number." Energy is the speed of light squared times mass, so E = mc2.
5,865,696,000,000 is the approximate number of miles light travels in one year.
Light my Fire.
A light wave completes a billion cycles in one second.
no number E=energy m=mass and c=speed of light squared
Frame
Sure. You can mix them. Why would you? It will not help prime the walls or wood. The primer coat needs to be applied separately to be effective.
If it's the standard light gray primer it should be alright.
Primer is almost always the exciting color of light gray, so if you're painting with a light color, you should stick with the gray. Primer could theoretically come in any color, but gray is what you'll nearly always see used. Sometimes a shop will use a darker primer such as red for certain darker colors of paint so that they won't have to use as many coats of paint to cover the usual gray primer.
Lightning light frame .22 in 1894 and the medium frame .32,.38 & .44 caliber in 1886
Primer makeup is sometimes applied before foundation. Smashbox offers several primers (including Photo Finish Primer, Photo Finish Color Correcting Primer, Anti-Shine Primer, Photo Finish Lid Primer, and Photo Finish Foundation Primer Light) which may be applied the Smashbox foundation.
Its on the rear frame on a plate next to the tail light
1890 for light frame .22rf caliber and 1886 for mediam frame .32, .38 & .44 caliber
I would sand it down with sand paper then paint with primer. After that apply a outdoor paint. Prep work should be smooth If you really want it to be nice hit the primer with a light sandpaper after the primer coat.
Besides a few shades of black, white primer will reflect more light back than a gray primer under a paint color that doesn't cover well. Gray is often used under dark reds which would normally require several coats of paint to cover, The lighi that would normally be reflected from a white primer underneath the paint is, instead, absorbed by the gray primer, giving the illusion of an opaque surface. White primer is used under any light paint that covers well. It can also be tinted to the color of many off white or pastel wall colors to help ensure coverage using fewer coats.
Probably not. If you don't use primer, you can scuff the PVC with sandpaper. The primer gets rid of the surface sheen on the PVC and softens the surface just a little bit. A light sanding will do about as much.
He hypothesized that the speed of light is constant, no matter what the frame of reference is.