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Fiber Metal

February 20th, 2010 admin 2 comments

Fiber Metal

How Foods Rich in Fiber Keep You Alive

It was first thought that foods rich in fiber had no significant in human health. But the important of dietary fiber was discovered not by doctors but by veterinarians. It was discovered that plants or foods rich in fiber had cell membrane structures that were not digestible. It is the fibers in plant walls that help plants keep the structure and strength.

Dietary fiber consists of carbohydrates where their polysaccharides were arranged in different fashions. The 4 basic fibers are cellulose, pectin, hemicellulose, and lignin. Cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin are considered insoluble fiber. Pectin, gum, and mucilage are considered soluble fiber.

Dietary Soluble Fiber

Soluble Fiber becomes gummy and viscous when it dissolves in water. It has the ability to slow down your digestion in the small intestine and it prevents simple sugars from entering the bloodstream right away, by keeping them imbedded in their gummy substance.

Because it absorbs water, soluble fiber softens and gives weight to fecal matter making it easier to pass through your colon and for having a bowel movement.

Soluble fiber consists of pectin, gum, and mucilage. Pectin is found in carrots, apples, beets, cabbage, citrus fruits, and bananas. Gums and mucilage are found in oat bran, sesame seeds, oats, oatmeal, legumes, guar gum, and gum Arabic

Pectin is used to make jam, forming into jell, when water is added to it. Apples and citrus fruits are high in pectin.

Besides helping prevent constipation and hemorrhoids, soluble fiber provides the following benefits.

reduces risk of heart disease

reduces risk of gallstones formation

helps to remove toxic heavy metals and toxins from your colon

helps to prevent appendicitis

regulates movement of sugar into the bloodstream during digestion

helps to prevent fissures

lowers cholesterol

slows absorption of fats in the intestines

and most importantly, help prevent the overgrowth of bad bacteria in your colon.

Dietary Insoluble Fiber

Insoluble fiber does not dissolve in water or during digestion and consists of cellulose, hemi cellulose, and lignin. Cellulose is extremely strong, giving plants their firm and solid structure. This type of fiber is extremely beneficial to your health. Since your body’s enzymes do not breakdown this fiber, like it does food, it remains in tack as it travels through your intestines and colon.

Hemicellulose gives plants their flexibility and their plastic properties, whereas, lignans give plants their wood like strength.

Dietary insoluble fiber helps fecal matter travel faster through the small intestine, colon, and rectum. It provides bulk and weight to your fecal matter. It makes your stools larger, softer, and stimulates peristaltic movement as it moves through your colon.

Insoluble fiber, like soluble fiber, slows down digestion. It also slows down absorption of protein, starch and fat and has the ability to inhibit the action of digestive enzymes. It also prevents the re-absorption of estrogen, cholesterol, and toxins.

Insoluble fibers are found in vegetables, wheat, and wheat bran. This type of fiber is considered an anti-carcinogen and a digestive aid. It is credited with preventing colon cancer and many other colon diseases.

Sources of Insoluble Fiber

Bananas

Broccoli

Brown rice

Brussels sprouts

Cauliflower

Cabbage

Corn

Lentils

Potatoes

Spinach wheat germ

Whole wheat bread

Whole wheat crackers

Other sources of foods rich in soluble and insoluble fiber are:

Oranges, grapefruit, nectarines, peaches, tangerines, apples, berries, apricots, bananas, figs, prunes

Zucchini, turnips, okra, cabbage, peas, sweet potatoes

Carrots, celery, broccoli, cauliflower, corn, eggplant, okra, Zucchini, greens

Barley, chickpeas, split peas, pinto beans, kidney beans, navy beans, potatoes

Foods rich in fiber contain both soluble and insoluble fiber. Some foods contain more of one than the other. Dietary fiber is a necessity for life. Without eating fiber food, disease sets in. Many people who develop illnesses don’t eat the required amount of fiber foods. Start now to increase your consumption of fiber foods.
About the Author

For a free health report and more tips on natural remedies, go to Remedies Newsletter and if you want some solid information constipation go to Constipation Help

Cap Style Hard Hat by Fibre Metal

Categories: Archery - Bow - Crossbows Tags:

Metal Bolt

February 14th, 2010 admin No comments

Metal Bolt

Ways to Assemble Sheet Metal

Working with sheet metal, especially the thin ones, is such a daunting task for amateur and inexperienced builders or welders. Nowadays, there are many different ways for assembling sheet metal, but the principle behind it remains the same. Sheet metal assembly, regardless of its method, refers to the process of fastening or combining two or more metal components to come up with a single output.

Any sheet metal assembly is always dependent on the components that are being used and assembled. For instance, the approach in melting or joining pieces of metal such as steel and copper is different from thin aluminum and other plated components.

Welding is the most popular way of fabricating or assembling sheet metal. Over the years, the advancement in the metals industry has paved the way to a number of welding methods and equipment. Depending on what you want to achieve on your project, welders can now carry out various sheet metal assembly techniques such as arc welding, gas welding and many others. Each of these welding techniques has its own features and uses in particular industrial applications.

Arc welding, for example, makes use of an electric arc. It utilizes heat of an electric arc to combine metal. Direct or alternating current can either be used depending on the components to be welded. In gas welding technique, meanwhile, burning gas is used to create heat. Gas welders may use propane, oxyacetylene and oxy-propane torches.

Aside from welding, there are other ways to combine sheet metal components. If you don’t know how to solder, you can undertake simple assembly routes such as riveting, bolting and screwing to assemble sheet metal. In bolting and screwing, stainless steel screws, either oval head or pan head, are often used to join metal sheets.

For this assembly task, you will need tools such as drill, twist-drill bits, scratch awl, center punch, and measuring equipment. Snips for cutting the sheet metal, as well as a pop-rivet tool and pop rivets, are required to join the pieces of sheet metal together.

About the Author

Andrei Smith writes for Midwest Metal Products, a company specializing in wire-formed, sheet metal fabricated and tubular metal products. Read more information on sheet metal fabricating and wire forming.

DESIGN LAB: Cutting Metal Rods with Bolt Cutters

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Categories: Archery - Bow - Crossbows Tags: