#1: What's going on, where is the beginning of the loop? They were skiing behind a car on the lake, and it fell through? Or they found the car, pulled it out, got it running and and went skiing?
It's a pickup pulling the skiers (there is a brief view from partway to the side so you can see the shape), but it's gray or something medium-dark. The white is snow on the tailgate.
What's not shown at all is any relation between the skiing and pulling the car out of the water. It doesn't show what is pulling the car. Did the skiing party find the sinking car and pull it out with the pickup, did the pickup pull the car out first, or are two unrelated clips ran together?
#2: I learned the hard way when I was 16 that only an idiot puts the window down when there's water on the road.
#3: She's gonna be even less bright with a cracked skull. That looked traumatic.
#4: It never ceases to amaze me how utterly unaware teenagers are of their surroundings. I was that way myself.
#5: Reminds me of the time my dad (who damn well knew better and normally didn't do stupid stuff like that) put a heater on our bathroom window in an attempt to defrost it. Window cracked in a few minutes and the window insurance eventually replaced it with wasn't half as good.
#6: "Don't worry, I've got this bucket."
#7: I love everything about this.
#8: Combining laziness and stupidity, what could possibly go wrong?
Side and rear windows are generally made of tempered glass, which is heat treated so the surfaces are in compression. It's somewhat stronger because this presses small cracks back together, but when a crack reaches the core, the glass just comes apart - in little crumbs without sharp edges, so you don't get cut. Tempered glass such as Pyrex for cookware and laboratory gear is also formulated to be resistant to thermal shock, but why would they go to that extra expense for a car window? You can defrost a window that way, but not with hot water, let alone with boiling. Fill your bucket from the "cold" faucet, which is above freezing but not above room temperature, and there's enough heat to melt some ice but not enough to be likely to crack glass.
Windshields are different. When you hit a goose or a deer at highway speeds, they don't want the critter coming through the windshield, so it's laminated - two glass sheets with tough stretchy plastic film between. If hit hard enough, the glass cracks into sharp and often long shards, but they are stuck to the plastic film, which also prevents large blunt objects from penetrating.
However, wear your seat belt and shoulder belt so you don't become the large object hitting the windshield. Best result: I used to know a guy who went into the windshield with enough force to crack the glass, but not so much as to break his head or break through the plastic. His face was covered with fine scars, and he looked utterly terrifying. Worst results: (1) Driver's brains were splattered across the cracked windshield. Passenger was belted in and walked away. (2) Sometimes a really hard-headed individual punches a hole all the way through a windshield. Next, his shoulders catch on the remaining plastic and broken glass all around his neck...
Usually in these clips guys tend to land on their crotch or their face, but #7 managed to do both.
ReplyDelete#1: What's going on, where is the beginning of the loop? They were skiing behind a car on the lake, and it fell through? Or they found the car, pulled it out, got it running and and went skiing?
ReplyDeleteI sincerely hope, that stupid is painful....
ReplyDelete#1-A white truck is pulling them…
ReplyDeletenot the car shown that’s sinking thru the ice
Nope. I see a grey car with snow on the back of the trunk.
Delete#7. Man is now and forever singing alto.
ReplyDeleteSoprano
DeleteBuddha
#3 & #4, stick to sucking dicks ... at home - inside
ReplyDelete#1- the skiers are being pulled by a white pickup….
ReplyDeletenot the car that’s sinking into the water..
It's a pickup pulling the skiers (there is a brief view from partway to the side so you can see the shape), but it's gray or something medium-dark. The white is snow on the tailgate.
DeleteWhat's not shown at all is any relation between the skiing and pulling the car out of the water. It doesn't show what is pulling the car. Did the skiing party find the sinking car and pull it out with the pickup, did the pickup pull the car out first, or are two unrelated clips ran together?
it's not a pickup, it's the same car. look close right when the vid starts
ReplyDeleteNumber 5. Looks like the door handle broke too.
ReplyDelete#9 You'd think they be better at swinging and hanging on to pole, I mean, well you know why.
ReplyDelete@LuisI'mRacist.
What's the deal with #10? Video started about two seconds too late to tell what broke and why.
ReplyDelete#2: I learned the hard way when I was 16 that only an idiot puts the window down when there's water on the road.
ReplyDelete#3: She's gonna be even less bright with a cracked skull. That looked traumatic.
#4: It never ceases to amaze me how utterly unaware teenagers are of their surroundings. I was that way myself.
#5: Reminds me of the time my dad (who damn well knew better and normally didn't do stupid stuff like that) put a heater on our bathroom window in an attempt to defrost it. Window cracked in a few minutes and the window insurance eventually replaced it with wasn't half as good.
#6: "Don't worry, I've got this bucket."
#7: I love everything about this.
#8: Combining laziness and stupidity, what could possibly go wrong?
#5 car windows are not made of Pyrex glass
ReplyDeleteSide and rear windows are generally made of tempered glass, which is heat treated so the surfaces are in compression. It's somewhat stronger because this presses small cracks back together, but when a crack reaches the core, the glass just comes apart - in little crumbs without sharp edges, so you don't get cut. Tempered glass such as Pyrex for cookware and laboratory gear is also formulated to be resistant to thermal shock, but why would they go to that extra expense for a car window? You can defrost a window that way, but not with hot water, let alone with boiling. Fill your bucket from the "cold" faucet, which is above freezing but not above room temperature, and there's enough heat to melt some ice but not enough to be likely to crack glass.
DeleteWindshields are different. When you hit a goose or a deer at highway speeds, they don't want the critter coming through the windshield, so it's laminated - two glass sheets with tough stretchy plastic film between. If hit hard enough, the glass cracks into sharp and often long shards, but they are stuck to the plastic film, which also prevents large blunt objects from penetrating.
However, wear your seat belt and shoulder belt so you don't become the large object hitting the windshield. Best result: I used to know a guy who went into the windshield with enough force to crack the glass, but not so much as to break his head or break through the plastic. His face was covered with fine scars, and he looked utterly terrifying. Worst results: (1) Driver's brains were splattered across the cracked windshield. Passenger was belted in and walked away. (2) Sometimes a really hard-headed individual punches a hole all the way through a windshield. Next, his shoulders catch on the remaining plastic and broken glass all around his neck...
I laughed way too much on #9
ReplyDelete