Why does my telephone cord tangle




















Hi my name is J. C and when I had cancer I invented a device that will keep your phone cord from tangling. I was in intensive care with 7 intravenous in my arm and I try to make a phone call and the phone fell to the floor. You can read my store on my website About Us. Here is a link that might be useful: www. I was so relieved to read your post. Of course knowing you are having such a disaster doesn't exactly relieve me of my stress.

But it does give me hope. If you can survive your misery Indem Sie weiterhin auf der Website surfen bzw. Mehr erfahren.

Ultimate Lighting Sale. Bathroom Vanity Sale. Bestselling Chandeliers and Pendants. Sign In. Join as a Pro. Houzz TV. Houzz Research. Shop Featured Holiday Categories.

Home Decor. Holiday Decor. Christmas Trees. Holiday Lighting. Gift Cards. Home Disasters. Why is My Phone Cord always Twisted. Don't tell me I'm going in circles.

I already know that. Email Save Comment Sort by: Oldest. Newest Oldest. Then don't ask why and just get yourself a good cordless. Like Save. Related Discussions My kitchen always looks messy! Wow, Astor! You did that whole kitchen for 3k from Ikea? That is amazing! It looks like much more expensive. I am pretty new to the site, and I agree there was at least one comment that was undeniably rude.

I think people are sometimes not as tactful in written form, as they might be speaking face to face. Also, my friend and I have talked about how we ruminate about how our e-mails may be interpreted. I really don't use e-mail very much with friends, and closed my Facebook account in March.

I've also seen people on Houzz, comment on other commentors spelling, or use of language. A commentor used "rod" iron, instead of "wrought", and a commentor corrected her in a very abrupt way.

Honestly, I thought, "What a royal pain in the ass! She must be a barrel of laughs to live with! My sister is a writer, and taught that, and rhetoric, basically grammar at college level for years. You have a new cord, every once in a while look down at the phone.

If you let it continue, it will become permanently misshapen. ETA: forget the last paragraph, I just did a test and it does seem to put the phone back in a neutral position. Dangle away! I think that only happens if you let it get twisted into a tiny mess of knots. Cordless phones are blissfully hassle-free. Someone actually did a study on how phone cords get tangled. The usual cause is picking up the phone with your dominant hand right or left as appropriate , then having to switch hands to write down notes.

When I read the study reports I finally understood why my phone cords are never tangled. Thanks for bringing that up. I had forgotten that laterality is not only a matter of which hand one prefers, but also of which eye and ear is dominant. The link gave a fun statistic:. So with my phone to my left, and me being right handed in picking it up and bringing it to my right ear, and having to switch ears when I want to write something down with my right hand…no wonder the cord tangles so fast!

Once again I thank the Dope for fighting my ignorance. After all, I sometimes secretly water her plants….

Actually, in my experience the opposite is the case. The front paddler is basically just providing extra power, while the one in the back is acting as the rudder. It is possible though a bit of a pain to paddle a canoe solo, but only from the back. Ideally, the stronger paddler is in front and the one with more steering finesse is in the back, as wikipedia does point this out it is easier to paddle with more force in the narrow bow than in the wider wider in front of the rear paddler, though the same in the rear so having your big strong pal in front makes best use of them as a resource.

So do righties. The precise definition is not important. The key idea is that, whatever this number is, it will never change when we add twists to our cord. What does this mean? Suppose we have a very twisted knot that is, a knot with a high Twist Number. Naturally, the cord would like to untwist itself, thereby lowering its Twist Number.

But for the above equation to still be true, if the Twist Number goes down, the writhe must go up. So as the cord untwists, it must start to curl and bunch up, just as we expect. So we have found a mathematical explanation for why this happens. Now this might all seem a bit pointless.



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