Small/Miniature Spectrum Analyzer
- Screen size 2.8 inch
- Spectrum Analyzer with two inputs, high quality MF/HF/VHF input for 0.1MHZ-350MHz, lesser quality UHF input for 240MHz-960MHz or
- Signal Generator with two output, sine wave output for 0.1MHz – 350MHz and square wave output for 240MHz-960MHz when not used as Spectrum Analyzer.
- Switchable resolution bandpass filters for both ranges between 2.6kHz and 640kHz
- Color display showing max 290 scan points providing gapless covering up to the full low or high frequency range.
Death from above
Vaping
Spirit Dancers
Sleeping
Jane Fonda
Right ..What could possibly go wrong??
La Fe’e Verte ~ The Green Fairy
Absinthe is an overproof liquor, meaning it is a spirit whose ABV (alcohol by volume) is over 50%. It is made from medicinal and culinary herbs, plants, and flowers steeped in high-proof spirits. “The elixir was invented in Switzerland as a general cure-all by Pierre Ordinaire, a French physician, in 1792,” writes Paul Harrington and Laura Moorhead in their book Cocktail: The Drinks Bible for the 21st Century.
Its signature bitter anise flavor comes from a mix of herbs including fennel and most notably, wormwood, a bitter herb notorious for both its health benefits and supposed hallucinogenic properties. Wormwood, or Artemisia absinthium, contains a chemical called thujone, which when consumed in large quantities can act as a convulsant. In small quantities, like in a few servings of absinthe, thujone is totally harmless. Traditionally, absinthe is not bottled with added sugar, making it a high-proof spirit instead of a sweetened liqueur, which gives absinthe its sharp, harsh flavor.