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Mitch

Mitch

May 24, 2026 5:50 PM
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Most people think a larger tool battery only gives longer runtime.

That’s only PART of the story.

A great example is a cordless circular saw cutting a 2x6.

You may notice the saw constantly stalls or bogs down with a small 2Ah battery… but cuts smoothly with a 6Ah battery.

Why?

Because battery size affects MORE than runtime — it also affects how much POWER the tool can actually deliver under heavy load.

Both batteries may be 18 volts, so the “electrical pressure” is the same. But the larger 6Ah battery can deliver MUCH more current without the voltage dropping.

Think of it like this:

* Voltage = water pressure
* Amperage/current = how much water can flow

The 2Ah battery is like trying to feed a fire hose through a tiny pipe.

When the saw starts cutting hard wood, the motor suddenly needs a lot of current. The small battery struggles to keep up, voltage sags, the motor loses torque, heat increases, and the saw bogs down or stalls.

The 6Ah battery has:
✔ Lower internal resistance
✔ Better current delivery
✔ Less voltage drop under load
✔ Better heat handling

So the saw maintains torque and cuts much more smoothly.

This is why larger Ah batteries often make cordless tools FEEL more powerful — even though the voltage rating is identical.

Another important point:

Repeatedly forcing a heavy-load tool to run with an undersized battery can increase motor stress over time. When motors bog down and stall, heat and current spikes increase dramatically, which can shorten the life of the motor and electronics.

That doesn’t mean small batteries are “bad.” They’re great for lighter tools and shorter jobs.

But high-demand tools like:

* Circular saws
* Grinders
* Chainsaws
* Leaf blowers

usually perform much better with larger capacity battery packs.

So a bigger battery doesn’t just make the tool run LONGER…

It also helps the tool run STRONGER.
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O

ohenry

Apr 18, 2026 5:35 PM
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Just logged on to TVByDemand for the first time and wow… this site is incredible.

The organization alone blows me away — everything is laid out in a way that actually makes sense. Categories, subcategories, and deep navigation that lets you find exactly what you want without digging through endless clutter like on YouTube or Facebook.

And the video quality… huge difference. No random compression destroying the content, no distracting junk all over the screen — just clean playback with real control over what you're watching.

The WYSIWYG post editor is another big win. You can create posts just like on Facebook — format text, share thoughts, actually communicate — not just drop a comment and move on. It feels like a real community space, not just a content dump.

Honestly, this feels like YouTube and Facebook combined into one platform — but without being stripped down and oversimplified like Instagram, X, or TikTok. You actually get full features instead of everything being reduced to quick, disposable posts.

What I really like is how it feels built for viewers and creators. It’s not just another algorithm-driven feed pushing nonsense — you can actually explore content the way YOU want to.

Curious what everyone else thinks — what features are you liking the most so far?
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 16, 2026 5:55 PM
Open Post
🚨 Heads up Android users — this settlement feels like a bad deal for consumers.

There’s a $135 MILLION class action settlement over claims that Google used people’s paid cellular data without permission — even when phones were idle. ()

Sounds big, right? Here’s the reality:

• Over 100 million people may be eligible
• Lawyers can take up to ~30% of the money
• That leaves pennies for the average person
• Some estimates suggest payouts could be around $1–$1.50 per user ()

So let’s get this straight…
A company allegedly used YOUR paid data behind the scenes — and the “compensation” might not even cover a cup of coffee.

Even worse:
• Google denies wrongdoing
• You don’t have to file a claim — but many people may miss payment anyway
• If you stay in the settlement, you give up your right to sue later

This is exactly why so many people feel class action settlements are broken.

Big companies pay a fraction.
Lawyers get millions.
Consumers get scraps.

👉 At minimum, people should understand what they’re agreeing to before doing nothing and staying in the settlement.

If this impacted you, it might be worth looking into your options — including opting out.

https://www.federalcellularclassaction.com/

#ClassAction #ConsumerRights #Android #Settlement
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 11, 2026 1:52 PM
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what they dont want you to know


For too long, corporations have been treated as if they are people—and the result has been devastating.

When corporations gained the same rights as human beings, they didn’t just enter the conversation… they drowned it out. Their money became “speech,” their influence became power, and the voices of everyday Americans—the middle class—were pushed aside.

This is why the middle class has been hollowed out. Wages stagnate while corporate profits soar. Policies favor billion-dollar entities instead of hardworking families. Opportunities shrink, and hope fades—not because people stopped working hard, but because the system stopped working for them.

Corporations are not people. They don’t live, struggle, raise families, or dream about a better future. But real people do—and they deserve a system that puts them first.

It’s time to restore that balance. It’s time to take back the voice of the people.

Move to Amend advocates for the "We the People Amendment," also known as House Joint Resolution 54 (H.J.Res.54). This vital amendment would unequivocally state to the world:

Corporations are not people! They are legal fictions, tools of commerce, and they possess no inherent rights that supersede the rights of human beings. The Constitution's protections and privileges are for natural persons only. Artificial entities have no rights under the Constitution and are subject to regulation by the People, through Federal, State, or local law.

Money is not speech! The torrential flow of corporate cash into our elections is not free expression; it is corruption, and it will be regulated to ensure our voices, the people’s voices, are heard above the din of greed. Constitutional rights belong to natural persons! These sacred protections are for us, the living, breathing, striving people.
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 9, 2026 6:09 PM
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 9, 2026 6:05 PM
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 9, 2026 6:02 PM
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 4, 2026 2:49 AM
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testing the post with image gain
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 4, 2026 2:45 AM
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testing again
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Mitch

Mitch

Apr 3, 2026 12:08 PM
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yup thats me
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