- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 66,099
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
That's looks like me the day after drinking rum all night, then having a guzzling contest with Everclear 190.
That's looks like me the day after drinking rum all night, then having a guzzling contest with Everclear 190.
Bwa, HAHaha!!!This thread is spurring some real serious questions:
- What is my loader lift capacity on flat earth vs round earth?
- Can aliens get New Holland parts on Alpha Centori?
- Should I use anything other than Super UTD2 in my intergalactic spacecraft?
If you guzzled Everclear, you're lucky you didn't burst into flames or pickle yourself into a mummy for posterity. I used to buy it, and dilute it 50/50 with distilled water to make my own vodka. Why? Because I thought it would reduce my allergies. All I know was it was potent stuff.That's looks like me the day after drinking rum all night, then having a guzzling contest with Everclear 190.
Is that Spanky? I actually met him back in the early 1960's when I was checking groceries. He came into the store.
Any good prop department could build one of those.
Whacky if you ask me... but a lot is worth a consider. It's just likely not Lizard people......That was a really weird interview. A little bit of truth, a little bit of fantasy land?
More than likely.Any good prop department could build one of those.
Why fall? Why not in some other arbitrary direction?What is the driver that chooses that particular vector?It's all explained by relative density. Things float if lighter than air. Things fall if heavier than the medium (air, water).
We know by observation that lighter things float and heavier things fall or sink.Why fall? Why not in some other arbitrary direction?What is the driver that chooses that particular vector?
By the exhibit you posted, it seems that your claim is that anti-buoyancy makes the bolt want to move downward.
That observation has it's flaws.We know by observation that lighter things float and heavier things fall or sink.