I'll never use that foam unless its pre-installed and certified in a new house. Apply it wrong, and it offgases forever, the home is unlivable and its quite toxic.
3. Good luck adding a new circuit in the future. 5. Guy at the switch must be on his phone. 7. Looks like a fun game. I don't know rules but looks like guy at 4 o'clock pussied out. 10. Wonder how much pain was inflicted on that horse for training
I use foam on every home I build. All exterior walls, ceilings in a garage with living space above and a couple inches on top of the drywall if accessible. Stuff is great. It does stink till dry but once it's dry a couple hours, it's fine. Makes for a tight house that heats and cools easily.
#5 - Worked in a rolling mill for a few years that was still in the startup phase. Basically, there was a long period of adjustments to get all the equipment timing right. Saw many a cobble like that firsthand. Cleaned up quite a few, too!
Acme Steel, Chicago, mid 90’s. I had to do some R&D on a coil box. 18” steel, 0.020” thick and cobbled right in front of me. Pretty sure I set some sort of Olympic record getting out of the building. They’d occasionally kill somebody. The cold rolled end of the building called it a wreck when that happened. Neither much fun.
#1) A4 Skyhawk with refueling pod. i think it's refueling another Sky hawk.
ReplyDeleteTomcat I think; Skyhawks had fixed straight refueling probes.
Deletecould be. That makes it kind of funny - big ole tomcat getting fuel from a skyhawk!
Delete#4 is a rodent! A Capybara, 77-150 lbs
ReplyDelete#7, that guy has a good arm
I'll never use that foam unless its pre-installed and certified in a new house. Apply it wrong, and it offgases forever, the home is unlivable and its quite toxic.
ReplyDelete#5: Trust me, I'm an engineer.
-arc :)
#1 it's another A4, you can tell by the position of the refueling probe.
ReplyDelete3. Good luck adding a new circuit in the future.
ReplyDelete5. Guy at the switch must be on his phone.
7. Looks like a fun game. I don't know rules but looks like guy at 4 o'clock pussied out.
10. Wonder how much pain was inflicted on that horse for training
Just cause you drive a train doesn't mean you know anything.
ReplyDeleteOld foam had toxic ingredients, new formulas have safe contents.
-JoeDick-
I use foam on every home I build. All exterior walls, ceilings in a garage with living space above and a couple inches on top of the drywall if accessible. Stuff is great. It does stink till dry but once it's dry a couple hours, it's fine. Makes for a tight house that heats and cools easily.
Deletejoe
#5 - Worked in a rolling mill for a few years that was still in the startup phase. Basically, there was a long period of adjustments to get all the equipment timing right. Saw many a cobble like that firsthand. Cleaned up quite a few, too!
ReplyDeleteAcme Steel, Chicago, mid 90’s. I had to do some R&D on a coil box. 18” steel, 0.020” thick and cobbled right in front of me. Pretty sure I set some sort of Olympic record getting out of the building. They’d occasionally kill somebody. The cold rolled end of the building called it a wreck when that happened. Neither much fun.
Delete#1 reminds me the one time I gave a girl $20 and then she............
ReplyDelete@WeAreLuis
Top GIF... Think I went to high school with that girl
ReplyDeleteLooks like Whitie has had he ass whipped before. Sometimes that crazy card works though!
ReplyDeleteR