Page 151 of 443

Posted: Tue Dec 06, 2011 6:08 pm
by Gun Freak
I thought jet turbines had spinning blades! How the FFF could he live?!?! Dude, that guy can walk around and tell people he got sucked in a jet engine :D That's awesome :lol:

Posted: Tue Dec 06, 2011 6:14 pm
by velocity3x
Gun Freak wrote: Dude, that guy can walk around and tell people he got sucked in a jet engine :D That's awesome :lol:
I doubt having bragging rights is worth the experience to earn them.

Posted: Tue Dec 06, 2011 11:13 pm
by mark.f
Gun Freak wrote:I thought jet turbines had spinning blades! How the FFF could he live?!?!
Explained somewhat at the end of this video...

<div align="center">[youtube][/youtube]</div>

Posted: Tue Dec 06, 2011 11:19 pm
by jsefcik
anybody hear on the abc news some girl walked off a plane and got her arm taken off but a plane propeller???

what is she doing by the front of the plane??? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Posted: Wed Dec 07, 2011 1:57 am
by jackssmirkingrevenge
velocity3x wrote:I doubt having bragging rights is worth the experience to earn them.
Picture getting sucked off by a jet engine though... it would be like extreme sports for people who really love their vacuum cleaners :D
anybody hear on the abc news some girl walked off a plane and got her arm taken off but a plane propeller?
Saw this article yesterday.

I liked this comment:
Well, I guess if everyone's praying so hard, she doesn't need those $Ks worth of medical equipment and highly-specialised medical staff. Oh wait.. that's right... God doesn't cure amputees.

Posted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 4:05 pm
by jackssmirkingrevenge
[youtube][/youtube]

The office of the rising sun :D

Posted: Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:05 pm
by mark.f
jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:[youtube][/youtube]

The office of the rising sun :D
I think it's funny my friend's dad picked up an old oscilloscope about two years ago and still nobody knows how to work it or what to even do with it.

Makes a good conversational piece I guess. :roll:

Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 1:06 am
by jackssmirkingrevenge
mark.f wrote:I think it's funny my friend's dad picked up an old oscilloscope about two years ago and still nobody knows how to work it or what to even do with it
Complete lack of imagination ;)

Also,it's about time.

Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 9:22 pm
by Hotwired
From the Toyota FJ Cruiser Forum.
I blew up my FJ... literally...
So my time almost came to an end this morning... im very lucky to be alive.

First of all, GO HUG YOUR WIFE/HUBBY and tell them you love them.

i had an acetylene bottle in my truck, the valve was bumped so slightly and over night the truck filled with the gas. i noticed the smell, and opened the doors to air out the truck. i drove the truck out of the garage to get some more air movement. i went to roll the pass side window down and as soon as i touched the power windows. BAM. with me in the truck. i lost all hearing out of my right ear and got a scratch on the back of my head. all things considering, im alive.

so now ive got the question out to toyota about a 2012 TT. 125 to canada only, 15 in standard. i want a standard...

pictures tell 1000 words.

dont take any minutes or seconds you have for granted... it may be your last...

peace everyone,
evan...

Image
Image
Image
Image

Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 9:28 pm
by mobile chernobyl
jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:
Also,it's about time.
All of those 'splosions were a bit too rich with gasoline if you ask me.
mark.f wrote:I think it's funny my friend's dad picked up an old oscilloscope about two years ago and still nobody knows how to work it or what to even do with it
I got one in the beginning of summer - I wish I had one just laying around before it! I was working on designing LED power supplies and needed something to monitor switching frequencies greater than the good 'ol "computer sound card oscope" could handle lol.

Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 9:40 pm
by mark.f
mobile chernobyl wrote:I was working on designing LED power supplies and needed something to monitor switching frequencies greater than the good 'ol "computer sound card oscope" could handle lol.
Not even a 192 kHz one? :D

Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 9:50 pm
by jackssmirkingrevenge
Hotwired wrote:From the Toyota FJ Cruiser Forum.
Clucking bell... shouldn't that be in the combustion section?

Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2011 4:22 am
by MrCrowley
Any Aussies here watch this Test match today? I was glued to my seat all day. Screw winning the Rugby World Cup, this is my sporting highlight. There were half a dozen occasions in the last 2 hours or so where the favourites would swap from the Kewis (Mark Taylor pronunciation) to the Aussies or vice versa... this is why I love every minute of Test cricket.

What despair looks like after losing a game that lasts 30 hours over 5 days


Sorry, just revelling in this moment :D

Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2011 8:00 am
by inonickname
MrCrowley wrote:Any Aussies here watch this Test match today? I was glued to my seat all day. Screw winning the Rugby World Cup, this is my sporting highlight. There were half a dozen occasions in the last 2 hours or so where the favourites would swap from the Kewis (Mark Taylor pronunciation) to the Aussies or vice versa... this is why I love every minute of Test cricket.

What despair looks like after losing a game that lasts 30 hours over 5 days


Sorry, just revelling in this moment :D
Go fuck a sheep you bastard :x

:lol:

Posted: Mon Dec 12, 2011 2:55 pm
by MrCrowley
Here's another combustion cannon, this one is in the form of a house:
Image
A woman who lit a gas stove to bake a cake is in hospital with severe burns when the house she was in blew apart.

Tia Ropitini, of Nuhaka, in her 30s, had just flicked the switch on a gas oven in her mother's granny flat.

"She went to put a cake in the oven and it blew when she flicked the switch," Nuhaka chief fire officer Robert Wesche said. The flat was destroyed instantly.

"It was a heck of a bang - it shook the houses around here. Bits and pieces and glass were strewn 100m away. There must have been a fair bit of gas to make a bang like that."

The woman had crossed the road to bake a cake just before the 6.35am explosion on Saturday. Tia Ropitini's mother had already left the flat for work.

The flat was beside the house of the injured woman's brother-in-law, Nuhaka volunteer fireman Ian Barber and the impact also smashed his windows and cracked the wall of his house.

"I ran around the house and screamed at her to get out of the house," he said. "She was dazed and staggering around. I shouted at her to come towards me."


She scrambled to him through the burning wreckage.

"I put her in the shower and told my wife to keep her in there and I got the hose and put it through the window to put extra water on her."

Mr Wesche, who was already awake at his home 200m away, was about to make a cup of tea when he heard the explosion. The noise was so loud and the jolt of his two-storey house so great he wrongly assumed the explosion was at his next-door neighbours and ran to the fenceline.

"When I looked over my shoulder I could see a big plume of smoke," he said.

He drove 600m to the Nuhaka Fire Station where his crew had assembled.

"The little bach was flattened. We had to make sure it wouldn't spread to the house."

The rescuers at first thought the woman's son was in the house with her but he was found safe, Mr Wesche said. "Thank God he was asleep back in her home."

The remaining walls and roof structures soon collapsed.

"If Ian hadn't got there she would have been buggered," he said. "He probably saved her life."

Mr Barber denied being a hero.

"I was just doing what anyone else would have done. Because I am a fireman I knew I shouldn't go into the house alone so I called her out."

He said it was lucky there was no wind at the time or the flames might have claimed Mr Barber's house.

"It was thanks to Wairoa and Mahia [fire services] who were here quick with their tankers that the flames did not spread."

Mr Wesche said the fire service and gas company were investigating. A large gas cylinder was lying on the ground beside the building.

"This is a wake-up call. The building was only two years old."

St John ambulance secured a landing spot for the Lowe Corporation rescue helicopter at a school so it could take Tia Ropitini to Hawkes Bay Hospital. She was later transferred to the Intensive Care Unit at Middlemore Hospital. She was in a serious but stable condition yesterday.