TASSIMO Suchard Hot Chocolate 16 T DISCs/pods (Pack of 5)

£9.9
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TASSIMO Suchard Hot Chocolate 16 T DISCs/pods (Pack of 5)

TASSIMO Suchard Hot Chocolate 16 T DISCs/pods (Pack of 5)

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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During my research I discovered a german forum post, telling that's an invalid UPC-E. However I wasn't able to photoshop the missing parts on it, namely the start and end sequenz.

The clincher here is that at the time of writing, they are on sale in Tesco Ireland for a mere €5 for a bottle - normally €6.99. A little birdie told me that there are also two more offerings to be released soon in Tesco Ireland - B Fruitiful Strawberry and B Fruitiful Passionfruit - which will be only 55 calories (only 2.5 syns per glass)The service disk is used for cleaning, it makes hot water at 60° C flow straight through without any brewing time. As summer gets into a groove many of us feel the seasonal shift toward refreshing, fruity, fancy fizzy drinks of a Saturday evening. Typically this has us reaching for cider, wine or prosecco. Make one wrong move with our choices however, and our syns for the week are thrown off -- undoing all of the good work for the week. To put this into perspective, here are a couple of summer faves and their syn values: However when I make it, it is tasteless, only makes a quarter of a cup, am I doing something wrong? Unfortunately, that doesn't match anything from the patent volume table, even if i compare the larger volumes (170 / 230 to account for water that stays in the disc), or smaller volumes (130 / 190). - my two numbers have only one bit that's different, and each combination from the table needs more than one different bit. But, there's no guarantee for the volume table in the machine being identical to the one in the patent. My hypothesis is that there are bit ranges dedicated to certain functions. For instance, I've isolated the liquid volume to a particular three bits (8 settings). However, I think that the liquid volume changes based on a different bit-ranges.

First a thought regarding the volumes that don't seem to line up. The first link in the Q discusses purge and charge sections - these will contribute to the volume and it's possible that the table of volumes assumes some contribution from these processes that may not be the minimum

If you want to play with some other bit combinations, here's the source to my bitflip program (it's not the cleanest code, and it will produce strange results if you throw anything but binary digits at it, but it will do the job): #include You need to combine this two parameter to have the volume of the brevage. The bits 4-7 it like time the water pumpe work and 8-10 the flow rate. So I think you have max 15 sec for water pump Bits 4-7 1111 = 15 and flow rate is increment by 12.5% 111 = 7 7(111)=100% 6(110)=87.5% 5(101)=75% 4(100)=62.5% 3(011)=50% 2(010)=37.5% 1(001)=25% 0(000)=12.5% While this was sort of a success (I'm now able to produce barcodes with correct volumes for the drinks I'm interested in), I'm still completely lost as of exactly how this works. As you can see from the experiment table, the pattern is rather fuzzy, and there are entries that give same volume from different combination of bits. I'm also not sure I'm getting the same brewing parameters with the barcodes I made. I have a Bosch Tassimo TAS2002EE coffee maker that uses T-Disks. Those contain coffee/milk/something else, and a barcode that is supposed to tell the machine how to deal with the disk.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
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