- cross-posted to:
- memes@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- memes@lemmy.world
theory: f(x) = x
practice: f(x) = -8 + 16/(1+e^-10x)
Maybe it’s just mine but can we agree that a lot of showers do that?
A lot of showers need a new mixer valve…
I used to live in Japan and I had an in-line gas water heater. Outside the bathroom and kitchen was a thermostat for the hot water. I just set the temp for a good shower and blasted the hot water. It was bliss. America really needs to catch up with Japan in bathroom tech in general.
>really needs to catch up with Japan in bathroom tech in general
yes gimme those bidets
Based on the sounds from my computer, that’s exactly the same curve the fans on my GPU and CPU uses, except for the X axis being temperature starting from 0°C going to 100°C and Y axis being fan power in percentage.
I think the problem there is that GPU temps are spiky themselves.
True. But I also tested when my GPU fans would turn on and it seems like the cut-off point was 45%, below that and they’d just stop completely. And normal idle temperature is around 40°C, and with the curve on the left it makes sense that even a 5°C increase would rev the fans up from 0% to 45% making it sound like a jet fighter about to take off.
Get a thermostatic mixer valve. You’ll never go back…
Will think about it ^^
Remember when those boring old two-tap showers never had this problem?
No its just that our ideal water temperature is very very narrow
Turn your hot water heater down or replace your shower valve
f(x)=x? In theory the water in a shower can get infinitely cold? That would be some shower that can go past absolute zero. It would be interesting to shower in a Bose-Einstein condensate.
Your pain receptors fire at some threshold so anything beyond that very suddenly gets uncomfortable.
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