A rolled structural shape having a cross-section resembling the letter "I."
a suspension design exclusive to Ford vehicles. This type of suspension includes beams and radius arms, with the beam connected to a spindle with balljoints or kingpin. A coil spring is used for load bearing. The pros of this design are strength, availability of parts, ease of travel gain, and race proven design. The cons are excessive camber change, a.k.a. sloppy travel. Although the geometry is not as desirable or controllable as an a-arm suspension, it has been proven in the desert.
An iron or steel structural framing member, in cross-section forming the letter I.
A wood engineered joist, consisting of a center engineered wood board (web, web stock) affixed between 2 wood strips (flanges), top and bottom, that are size based on anticipated spans and loads.
girder having a cross section resembling the letter `I'
A type of beam constructed of iron, steel or wood that is shaped like the letter I at its cross section.
A graphical image used to represent the location of the mouse pointer in a text entry box and providing a visual cue that text can be entered in
A beam whose cross section resembles the letter "I"; one in which the top and bottom flanges (such as 2x4s) are connected by thinner material (such as plywood or OSB). Also called an I-Joist.
A piece of rolled iron of the section shown on Plate II., Fig. 2.
A type of cursor shaped like the capital letter " I ". The cursor is used for editing and moving text in a word processing application. See Insertion Point.
A steel beam with a cross section resembling the letter I.
An I-beam (I) is a symbol that appears over places where text can be entered.
The blinking vertical line that shows the point at which text or graphics will be inserted.
The shape the pointer assumes when the text tool is selected.
interface: The cursor shape that looks like the edge-view of an I-beam. When you want to enter text, position the I-beam cursor and click. The insertion point (a flashing vertical bar) appears where you clicked, and you're ready to go.
a rolled iron or steel joist (beam like those used in house construction) having an "I" section, with short flanges
The shape of the mouse pointer as it moves over a text field that will accept an insertion point. This term comes from steel construction because the mouse pointer looks like the end of a steel beam.
A pointer shaped like a capital I. Used for working with text.
A type of pointer shaped like the capital letter I, used for entering and editing text. See insertion point.
A steel beam that resembles a capital letter "I". Often used to support heavy loads
Steel girder constructed so that, in cross-section, it resembles a capital letter 'I'.
the shape of the mouse cursor when it is over an editfield (as opposed to the usual upwards arrow-head of the mouse cursor when selecting from menus for example).
A type of load bearing beam made of metal or composite wood whose cross section is shaped like the letter I.
I-beams (also known as double-T esp. in Polish and German) are beams with an I- or H-shaped cross-section. The horizontal elements are flanges, while the vertical element is the web. The Euler-Bernoulli beam equation shows that this is a very efficient form for carrying both bending and shear in the plane of the web.
The I-Beam was a popular nightclub in San Francisco that was located in the Haight-Ashbury at 1748 Haight Street from October 1978 to July 1992. It was founded and owned by Sanford Kelleman, a former astronomer. The building it was located in was the former Park Masonic Hall (In 1966, the Park Masonic Hall was host to the ironically titled Straight Ashbury Viewing Society, a theatre that showed avant-garde gay films, and in 1967, rock dances with psychedelic light shows were held there.).