Archive for the ‘melamine’ tag
How Should I Best Choose Brands When Buying White Marker Boards?
The melamine board is for occasional use because the clear coat on the top tends to wear away after a while. The porcelain steel is better if you will be using your board on a regular basis. It is a little more expensive but it is better in the long run.
The next thing to decide is whether you are able to mount the board on a wall, or if you have the space you can have a freestanding board. If you are a teacher you may want the lap boards for the kids.
You may also want a white board skin, which is something you can put over the old chalkboards. The reason that most people have changed over to white boards is because they are chalk dust free, which is great for allergy sufferers and it protects the computers.
The main thing you want to look for in a white board is the sturdiness, the ghosting or fading effect and the durability. Check your budget and get the board that best suits your needs and your pocket. Once you have it narrowed down to the type of board you need, you must remember to take care of it so it will last a long time.
Standard Melamine
So here's the scenario. It's Saturday and I have a long week. I hit the bars and tip back one or two too many. Stumbling from the last bar, I find I can not make it past of the city park without landing on my nose, so I plop on a bench. Slinging an arm over the back of the bench to stabilize myself, I fall into a deep sleep.
Now it's Sunday morning and the sun shines, the birds sing and I've got a splitting headache. My arm is where I left it last night, slung over the back of the bank. I pull it back to me, but something wrong. When I try to extend (pick up) my wrist, but no go. In fact, it bends down. Moreover, I can not straighten my fingers hanging down, either. As I study more, I think the skin on the back of my hand is numb. What gives?
The problem is that I have the arm's radial nerve injury. As a result, controls the muscles and skin sensation that they are managed from commissions. In its course from the spinal cord in the neck of the forearm and hand, the radial nerve – a bundle containing many individual nerve fibers –spirals around the humerus bone of the upper arm. The nerve is particularly vulnerable to damage in the vicinity of the central part of the humerus, in this case by the hard edge of the park-bench for compressing against the bone all night. The weakness produced by this condition is usually more than prejudice to the anesthesia that is present. With "paralysis" as another word for weakness, this type of damage to the radial nerve is called "Saturday night palsy.
Of course, damage to the radial nerve damage will occur at a other night of the week as well, and the institution not to have a park-bench. The usual common denominators that alcohol or other drugs are involved, and because the deep, drug-induced sleep, the arm is kept in the same position all night long.
This part of the radial nerve can be affected by off-course injection needles for above the shoulder muscle (deltoid). When this happens, the pattern of weakness and numbness is the same, but instead of going by the name of "Saturday night palsy ", the nerve injury is also called" law suit. "
In both cases, the nerve and the functions usually recovered over a time frame that may vary from days to more than one years. The faster recovery means that the nerve fibers in the nerve bundle were sick but not dead. In more severe injuries, the nerve fibers at the point of and beyond the damage actually died, survivors and their stumps to send sprouts to replace the missing parts. This is a slow process. The growing shoots reach the upper forearm (where the wrist-straightening muscles are located) before reaching the middle of the forearm (where the finger-straightening muscles are located). Due this, the muscles that straighten the wrist usually recover before stretching the fingers.
People with Saturday night palsy often have their arms by rubber balls squeeze or similar objects. Unfortunately, this activity exercises the wrong muscles. The radial nerve and the muscles have nothing to do with bending the hand muscles. These functions are instead operated by median and ulnar nerves of the arm's who were not injured in the first place. To be useful, an exercise should focus on contraction of the wrist and stretching the fingers.
But this may also be useless because the muscles have not cripple incoming nerve messages in order to activate them. To the damaged nerve fibers tires the muscle fibers, the most useful exercise is a passive one in which the other hand does the work by stretching the muscle weakness at least daily. The use of passive range-of-motion "exercises, people with a neurological injury could prevent a shortening of tendons and freezing of the joints that may otherwise occur as complications while waiting for the nerve repair.
What can be done? Unfortunately there is a lack of scientific evidence in the form of randomized controlled trials – the gold standard for evaluating a treatment – to continue. All we have to go public 'clinical experience and common sense. In order to properly heal and grow nerve fibers have a good supply of nutrients, so eating healthy – perhaps supplemented with a multiple vitamin or two a day – the nerve of the building blocks it needs to recover properly. Avoidance of alcohol can prevent half injury. Because alcohol is also a direct toxic effect on the peripheral nerves of the body produce withdrawal would also prevent this barrier to recovery. In cases of prolonged weakness, electrical stimulation of the affected muscles via probes applied to the skin would keep the muscle tissue healthy until they can get more normal activation through their nerves.
Pending the nerve to heal, the wrist can be splinted in a neutral position with a device that fingers are to move leaves. The fingers are more functional when the wrist is straight. This can prove to themselves by bending the wrist and try to do something useful with the fingers, write a sentence or pick up a coin. However, the use of a splint does not preclude the need for at least daily, passive, range-of-motion exercises.
(C) 2005 by Gary Cordingley
Gary Cordingley, MD, PhD, is a clinical neurologist, teacher and researcher who works in Athens, Ohio. For more health-related articles see his website at: http://www.cordingleyneurology.com.
Where can you buy melamine laminate particle board?
I am looking for a large sheet of wood to buy in pieces and a very simple furniture for myself creation. But I do not know where that is laminated chipboard (like standard Ikea office) to buy. When I lived in the UK I easily found it at B & Q. But the equivalent Home Depot in the U.S. sales and the employee seemed clueless about the whole concept. They sell just bare wood. No particle board (laminated or unlaminated). Please help. Where in the USA I buy it? Online or in a shop … Like: http://timberchina.en.alibaba.com/product/0/51878907/Melamine_Laminated_Particle_Board.html It is quite standard.
Many lumber yards carry white laminated boards planks, which are chipboard covered with melamine. Only 12 "or 16" wide, but if that will work for you it might be worth found. Large sheets never made it into the regular chain in the U.S.. Wholesalers who supply cabinet shops, the larger blades. You'll have to find either one of them or maybe a custom cabinet shop in your area. Seeing other comments, I suspect that availability varies by market area. I'm sure the big boxes do not keep it, but it it is possible in other areas. If you are one clueless worker had, it would certainly be worth a call to them as the other channels to get it can pretty pain.
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NEW ACCO S578 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 96 X $371.57 |
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NEW ACCO S577 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 72 X $318.96 |
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NEW ACCO S538 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 96 X $315.35 |
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NEW ACCO S537 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 72 X $280.00 |
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NEW ACCO S535 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 60 X $251.04 |
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Standard DryBoard Melamine White Oak Finish Wood Frame $204.11 |
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Acco Standard Dry-Erase Board, Melamine, 96 x 48, Wh… $198.99 |
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NEW ACCO S574 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 48 X $193.79 |
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NEW ACCO S534 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 48 X $191.07 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $157.55 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $157.55 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $124.31 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $124.31 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $120.45 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $120.45 |
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Acco Standard Dry-Erase Board, Melamine, 48 x 36, Wh… $72.99 |
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NEW ACCO S573 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 36 X $55.93 |
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NEW ACCO S533 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 36 X $53.03 |
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Acco Standard Dry-Erase Board, Melamine, 36 x 24, Wh… $44.99 |
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NEW ACCO S531 STANDARD DRY-ERASE BOARD, MELAMINE, 24 X $40.26 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $33.46 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $33.46 |
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Quartet Standard Melamine Dry Erase Board $33.46 |
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Standard Dry-Erase Board Melamine White Aluminum Frame $31.07 |
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Correll 18”D Standard Fixed Height Melamine Top Folding Table Melamine finished top 5/8” High Density Particle Board Core 1″, 18 ga. steel Pedestal Legs on Rectangular Tables 1 5/8″, one-piece steel apron Mar-proof plastic foot caps and edge molding Automatic lock-open mechanism Wide variety of finishes to choose from… |
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Correll 30”D Standard Fixed Height Melamine Top Folding Table Melamine top on 5/8″ high density particle board core 1″, 18 gauge steel pedestal legs with mar-proof plastic foot caps and edge molding 1-5/8″, one-piece steel apron Automatic lock-open mechanism Available in four different lengths Choose from many color combinations… |
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Correll 36”D Standard Fixed Height Melamine Top Folding Table Melamine top on 5/8″ high density particle board core 1″, 18 gauge steel pedestal legs with mar-proof plastic foot caps and edge molding 1-5/8″, one-piece steel apron Automatic lock-open mechanism Available in two different lengths Choose from a variety of colors… |
