A belt got hooked into a tire on the car, the driver then preceded to drive however long with the belt (and hook) slapping the side of the car, damaging it.
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UnbrokenEvaHIGH ON THE WIREBUT I WON'T TRIP ITRegistered Userregular
also that person is *very* lucky the hook on the other end of the bungee had broken off
A belt got hooked into a tire on the car, the driver then preceded to drive however long with the belt (and hook) slapping the side of the car, damaging it.
I mean they were probably at speed when they ran it over. one time I had a plastic bucket lodged under my bumper cause I encountered it at seventy miles an hour
A belt got hooked into a tire on the car, the driver then preceded to drive however long with the belt (and hook) slapping the side of the car, damaging it.
I mean they were probably at speed when they ran it over. one time I had a plastic bucket lodged under my bumper cause I encountered it at seventy miles an hour
I once drove over a screwdriver some idiot had left on the road.
My tires were fine, but the damn thing got launched and impaled my rear bumper. Which I suppose is better than impacting whoever was behind me.
Munkus BeaverYou don't have to attend every argument you are invited to.Philosophy: Stoicism. Politics: Democratic SocialistRegistered User, ClubPAregular
My biology teacher in the 9th grade told us how in grad school she and the other chem/biology students would go out to a big lake and just hurl chunks of potassium into it and watch them explode.
Humor can be dissected as a frog can, but dies in the process.
My biology teacher in the 9th grade told us how in grad school she and the other chem/biology students would go out to a big lake and just hurl chunks of potassium into it and watch them explode.
Yeah, my HS chem teacher went over describing how potassium exploded and then went on to spin the urban legend about how they can't do that any more because some young, foolish student pocketed a big chunk of the stuff which exploded his legs off when he either sweat through his pocket lining or spilled a drink on his lap in the cafeteria.
Meanwhile my 7th grade chemistry teacher showed us how to grind potassium chlorate and sugar into a fine powder that can become model rocket fuel when mixed and ignited. He then casually mentioned not to do this because putting it in a sealed container creates a pipe bomb.
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picture the sound that would make
That's probably the reason why it was on the road to be run over to begin with, so if that was the case, they were unlucky instead.
What is "The sound of my dorm room in college?", Alex?
I mean they were probably at speed when they ran it over. one time I had a plastic bucket lodged under my bumper cause I encountered it at seventy miles an hour
I once drove over a screwdriver some idiot had left on the road.
My tires were fine, but the damn thing got launched and impaled my rear bumper. Which I suppose is better than impacting whoever was behind me.
I love his reaction to it: "Yes, that was well-executed. Well, time to murder my daughter."
Source: https://www.open.edu/openlearn/science-maths-technology/science/chemistry/alkali-metals -- "things gradually become more terrifying" is not something that I'd expected to hear on an educational video, I must admit.
"Now let's try cesium"
That is a strong neck.
Dammit, Bethesda.
My biology teacher in the 9th grade told us how in grad school she and the other chem/biology students would go out to a big lake and just hurl chunks of potassium into it and watch them explode.
Yeah, my HS chem teacher went over describing how potassium exploded and then went on to spin the urban legend about how they can't do that any more because some young, foolish student pocketed a big chunk of the stuff which exploded his legs off when he either sweat through his pocket lining or spilled a drink on his lap in the cafeteria.
Meanwhile my 7th grade chemistry teacher showed us how to grind potassium chlorate and sugar into a fine powder that can become model rocket fuel when mixed and ignited. He then casually mentioned not to do this because putting it in a sealed container creates a pipe bomb.
My 7th grade ass wrote that shit DOWN.
So in highschool duirng summer classes one of the students saw to potassium experiment and thought it looked cool
So he broke into the science cabinet and stole a football sized chunk of it
Then headed to the bathroom
and threw it in the toiler
According to what I heard he was deaf for a weak and the resulting shrapnel explosion evidently hit everywhere but where he was standing