They all said it was a smooth landing but they could sense a lack of deceleration. |
|
In tow haul mode it will even perform multiple downshifts for controlled deceleration, all of which tested well on the loaded trucks we tried. |
|
He feels that the post-1973 slowdown in productivity growth is evidence of a deceleration in technical progress. |
|
They should have had a very large deceleration in inflation, given the theory. |
|
The crash sensors and diagnostic unit measure deceleration, not acceleration. |
|
It registers the severity of the crash by reading the deceleration data from the airbag's sensor. |
|
What we misjudged was how long it would take for the earnings deceleration to run its course. |
|
Signs of economic deceleration will emerge as the world economy moves into 2005 with less strength. |
|
In April and May the first signs of lending growth deceleration were already present. |
|
Mountain bikes feature a crosswise handlebar which helps prevent the rider from pitching over the front in case of sudden deceleration. |
|
Data recorders in air bags can record a car's speed and deceleration and other data such as the pressure on a brake pedal at the time of a crash. |
|
The soft-tissue tightness may be from muscle inflexibility due to significant and repetitive eccentric muscle forces during arm deceleration. |
|
At the time of the impact, the module breaks and the vehicle begins its deceleration by losing speed in sand. |
|
The presence of the oxidization substance and the difference in psid were assessed as not contributory to an engine deceleration. |
|
The burden of public debt has diminished, as risk premiums ebbed, in line with the general deceleration of inflation. |
|
The tree and creek bottom rock scuff marks were consistent with the deceleration and direction of travel the aircraft took before coming to rest. |
|
The economists attribute about a third of the deceleration to slower growth in the workforce, and the rest to less innovation. |
|
A gradual deceleration in employment occurs across all trades and occupations. |
|
The stopping action must not, irrespective of the load, cause deceleration that is dangerous for the occupants. |
|
The deceleration in smoking quit rates may signal the need for a stronger effort to decrease this cancer risk. |
|
|
Electric drive results in more precise control and quicker braking compared with hydraulic systems as quick deceleration is possible. |
|
British Columbia, however, has seen growth slow considerably, partly as a deceleration in population burst the bubble in the housing market. |
|
The more sophisticated systems can store energy during deceleration in a new type of capacitor called supercapacitor. |
|
A delayed conditioning paradigm was used with cardiac deceleration as the conditioned response. |
|
Programmable acceleration and deceleration eliminates approach points and results in reduced teaching time. |
|
The ramp block includes: linear ramps, and an S ramp function for ramped acceleration and deceleration. |
|
In Asia, it seems that the pace of deceleration in exports is slowing, which is encouraging, analysts said. |
|
At higher collision or deceleration speeds the tolerance is low and the results are serious or even fatal injuries. |
|
Indexing not generated by G903 requires 3 accelerations and decelerations, whilst the G903 only requires one acceleration and deceleration. |
|
The causes of the apparent deceleration of productivity are controversial. |
|
Therefore, due to a deceleration of external and domestic demand, we believe that counter-cyclical fiscal stimulus is necessary to revive the economy. |
|
To overcome these issues, Honda has added a one-way clutch for engine braking that acts on the crankshaft instead of the torque converter during deceleration. |
|
The other position sense is the vestibular sense, which tells us about balance, about where we are in relation to gravity, and about acceleration or deceleration. |
|
The specific management choices not only could not stave off the course towards deceleration and recession but, on the contrary, constituted a bomb ready to explode, with incalculable consequences for people's income. |
|
For vehicles equipped with a single service brake system control, it may be necessary to modify the brake system if one of the wheels is not approaching maximum deceleration. |
|
Still, global deceleration will affect Russia through a decrease in exports and deceleration in credit growth. |
|
While it is normal for the speed of a train under emergency braking conditions to decelerate at a faster rate as the train speed gets closer to 0 mph, the recorded deceleration rates do not appear to be reasonable. |
|
The combination of the defined extensibility of the webbings with belt tensioner and belt force limiter means that the deceleration values for the occupants wearing a seat belt remain acceptable, even in serious collisions. |
|
The deceleration in weight gain observed in the most recent two-year period was related to a decrease in the proportion of men who gained weight and an increase in the amount of weight loss among women who lost weight. |
|
This deceleration in the pace of growth is owed in large measure to the drop in the fertility rate between 1970 and 2002, from 5.8 to 2.15 children per woman in child-bearing age. |
|
|
In keeping with our economic scenario, this augurs sustained economic growth until the end of this year and at the beginning of next year, and more moderate deceleration than forecast after that. |
|
The deceleration reflected decelerations in all major components except medicaid and health care. |
|
Not adopting a brace position would mean that, with the usual lap belt as a restraint, due to the violent deceleration in a crash a person remaining in a normal sitting position would jackknife. |
|
Note, however, that the current confidence level is not dramatic in the least and does not point to a deeper deceleration by consumer spending than our economic scenarios had projected. |
|
The effects of the load varying velocity, acceleration and deceleration are also discussed. |
|
The deceleration rate for each country will depend on the extent to which domestic demand, stimulated by expansionary fiscal policy, can offset the setback in the export sector. |
|
Collision energy shall be absorbed in unoccupied crumple zones designed for such eventualities, which limit deceleration forces and prevent overriding of the vehicle bodies. |
|
Other equipment includes a sport seat, plus both a back-pedal brake and a handbrake which ensure optimal deceleration. |
|
Hence, these unpredictable shakings of M-Acc in the CRU phase will cause the estimation mechanism misjudge the shakings as the signal of deceleration of the train, and thus misestimate the ARR phase too early. |
|
Arguably, inflationary pressures could be eased by the deceleration in unit labour costs resulting from the gradual adjustment of real salaries for productivity gains. |
|
These booms swing from side to side under high acceleration and deceleration about once every minute and thus experience very large fatigue cycles. |
|
Meanwhile, the length of acceleration lane LA or the length of deceleration lane LD is adopted to reveal the space available provided for merging or diverging maneuvers, respectively. |
|
This increase mainly reflected lower productivity growth associated with the deceleration of euro area activity in 1998 and also some increase in nominal compensation per employee. |
|
Machinery for lifting or transporting persons must be designed, constructed or equipped in such a way that the acceleration or deceleration of the carrier does not engender risks for exposed persons. |
|
These phases include attaining maximum deceleration and modulating the brake pressure. |
|
Heat produced by the deceleration of these alpha particles makes it warm to the touch. |
|
This is Fenz and Epstein's explanation for prejump HR deceleration and postjump HR rebound in experienced parachutists. |
|
Baker of Bury worked on drums, and Hargreaves used parallel scrolling to achieve smoother acceleration and deceleration. |
|
The direction of the tool path changes progressively and local acceleration and deceleration of the tool are minimized. |
|
The reasons for the strong deceleration in growth lie partly in the record jet fuel prices seen at the beginning of the year and partly in the subsequent global financial and economic crisis. |
|
|
But the upside in the oil price was seen as limited, with some investors expecting slowing demand amid high oil prices and the global economic deceleration, dealers said. |
|
The brakes produce a deceleration of 10 metres per second per second. |
|
According to the SLOOS, the deceleration in such loans can be explained, in part, by businesses' reduced demand to finance inventory accumulation and fixed investment. |
|
The skill of speedway lies in the overall ability of the rider to control his motorcycle when cornering and thus avoid losing places through deceleration. |
|
I have been in a Group N rally car before but nothing could prepare me for the sheer speed, acceleration and deceleration of these awsome rally machines. |
|
We find evidence that economic, social, governance, and institutional variables are significantly different during acceleration and deceleration episodes. |
|
Because Earth's solar day is now slightly longer than it was during the 19th century due to tidal deceleration, each day varies between 0 and 2 SI ms longer. |
|
The velocity observations indicate a rapid deceleration of the flow associated with the passage of the bore as well as large velocity fluctuations. |
|
In the absence of rapid deceleration or rollover, the reel is unlocked and the belt strap may be pulled from the reel against the spring tension of the reel. |
|