Pennock's Fiero Forum
  Totally O/T - Archive
  amusing "facts" (Page 1)

T H I S   I S   A N   A R C H I V E D   T O P I C
  

Email This Page to Someone! | Printable Version

This topic is 2 pages long:  1   2 
Previous Page | Next Page
amusing "facts" by 2.5
Started on: 06-28-2010 08:04 AM
Replies: 40
Last post by: tgmchuck on 07-01-2010 08:03 AM
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:04 AM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
I don't know if all are true, but there are many I had not heard of ,some very interesing...


"Stewardesses" is the longest word typed with only the left hand


And "lollipop" is the longest word typed with your right hand.


No word in the English language rhymes with month, orange, silver, or purple.


“Dreamt" is the only English word that ends in the letters "mt".


Our eyes are always the same size from birth,
but our nose and ears never stop growing.

The sentence:
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
uses every letter of the alphabet.


The words 'racecar,' 'kayak' and 'level' are the same whether they are read left to right or right to left (palindromes).


There are only four words in the English language which end in "dous": tremendous, horrendous, stupendous, and hazardous.

There are two words in the English language that have all five vowels in order: "abstemious" and "facetious."


TYPEWRITER is the longest word
that can be made using the letters only on one row of the keyboard.

A cat has 32 muscles in each ear.

A goldfish has a memory span of three seconds.

A "jiffy" is an actual unit of time for 1/100th of a second...

A shark is the only fish that can blink with both eyes.

A snail can sleep for three years.

Almonds are a member of the peach family.

An ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain.

Babies are born without kneecaps. They don't appear until the child reaches 2 to 6 years of age.

February 1865 is the only month in recorded history not to have a full moon.

In the last 4,000 years, no new animals have been domesticated.

If the population of China walked past you, 8 abreast, the line would never end because of the rate of reproduction.

Leonardo Da Vinci invented the scissors


Peanuts are one of the ingredients of dynamite!


Rubber bands last longer when refrigerated.
The average person's left hand does 56% of the typing.


The cruise liner, QE 2 moves only six inches for each gallon of diesel that it burns.


The microwave was invented after a researcher walked by a radar tube and a chocolate bar melted in his pocket..

The winter of 1932 was so cold that Niagara Falls froze completely solid.

There are more chickens than people in the world.


Winston Churchill was born in a ladies' room during a dance.

Women blink nearly twice as much as men.

Bonus!! All the ants in Africa weigh more than ALL the Elephants!!

Now you know (a little) more than you did before
IP: Logged
PFF
System Bot
Pyrthian
Member
Posts: 29569
From: Detroit, MI
Registered: Jul 2002


Feedback score: (5)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 342
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 10:57 AM Click Here to See the Profile for PyrthianSend a Private Message to PyrthianDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:
Babies are born without kneecaps. They don't appear until the child reaches 2 to 6 years of age.


....really?
IP: Logged
twofatguys
Member
Posts: 16465
From: Wheaton Mo. / Virginia Beach Va.
Registered: Jul 2004


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 227
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 11:02 AM Click Here to See the Profile for twofatguysSend a Private Message to twofatguysDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:

A goldfish has a memory span of three seconds.


I thought I read somewhere that Scientists had proved that wrong. Because there is nothing more important than the mysteries that are Goldfish.

Brad
IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 11:27 AM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Pyrthian:


....really?


I will have to check, if I ever have kids.
IP: Logged
Pyrthian
Member
Posts: 29569
From: Detroit, MI
Registered: Jul 2002


Feedback score: (5)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 342
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 11:31 AM Click Here to See the Profile for PyrthianSend a Private Message to PyrthianDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:
I will have to check, if I ever have kids.


lol - well...my "kid" is now 21 - a bit to late to check her for kneecaps - but - I'm pretty sure she had them all along...?
IP: Logged
twofatguys
Member
Posts: 16465
From: Wheaton Mo. / Virginia Beach Va.
Registered: Jul 2004


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 227
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 11:48 AM Click Here to See the Profile for twofatguysSend a Private Message to twofatguysDirect Link to This Post
10 Biggest Misconceptions We Learn in School

1) Einstein got bad grades in school.

Generations of children have been heartened by the thought that this Nobel Prize winner did badly at school, but they’re sadly mistaken. In fact, he did very well at school, especially in science and maths (unsurprisingly).


2) Mice like cheese

Mice enjoy food rich in sugar as well as peanut butter and breakfast cereals. So a Snickers bar would go down much better than a lump of cheddar.

3) Napoleon was short.

He was actually around 5ft 7, completely average for the 18th/19th century.

4) Thomas Edison invented the light bulb.

Edison invented a lot of things – in fact he’s one of the most famous inventors of all time – but the light bulb wasn’t one of them. What he did was develop a light bulb at the same time as the British man, Joseph Swan, who came up with it originally.

5) Lemmings throw themselves over cliffs to commit suicide

The poor old things are sometimes so desperate for food that they do, according to the BBC “jump over high ground into water”, but they aren’t committing group suicide.

6) Water flushes differently in different hemispheres

No it doesn’t. Sorry!

7) Humans evolved from apes

Darwin didn’t actually say this, but he’s been misreported ever since. What he did say was that we, and apes, and chimpanzees for that matter, had a common ancestor, once, a long, long time ago.

8) Vikings had horns/helmets with horns.

Vikings may have been buried with their helmets and with drinking horns. When they were dug up by the Victorians, they assumed that the helmets had horns.

9) Columbus believed the earth was flat

He may not have known how big the world was, but he wasn’t worrying about falling off the edge of it.

10) Different parts of the tongue detect different tastes

You do have different taste buds on your tongue and some are more sensitive than others. But they aren’t divided into perfect, easy-to-teach sections.
IP: Logged
pokeyfiero
Member
Posts: 16233
From: Free America!
Registered: Dec 2003


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 309
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 12:01 PM Click Here to See the Profile for pokeyfieroClick Here to visit pokeyfiero's HomePageSend a Private Message to pokeyfieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:

February 1865 is the only month in recorded history not to have a full moon.
Now you know (a little) more than you did before


Umm........There was a full moon on Feb 10. Maybe it was cloudy and they couldn't see it.

IP: Logged
kevin
Member
Posts: 2722
From: Elk Grove, CA USA
Registered: Jan 2000


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 12:57 PM Click Here to See the Profile for kevinSend a Private Message to kevinDirect Link to This Post
Fellas,
The word 'SEQUOIA' is the only word in the English language, having all 5 vowels!

The Pontiac Fiero is the only mid-engined, American manufactured, designed, manufactured and distributed two seat sport car (We all know this fact--right?)

Cordially,
Kevin

[This message has been edited by kevin (edited 06-28-2010).]

IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:01 PM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by kevin:

Fellas,

The Pontiac Fiero is the only mid-engined, American manufactured, designed, manufactured and distributed two seat sport car (We all know this fact--right?)

Cordially,
Kevin



What about the Ford GT?

IP: Logged
ls3mach
Member
Posts: 11610
From:
Registered: Mar 2002


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 222
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:05 PM Click Here to See the Profile for ls3machSend a Private Message to ls3machDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by kevin:

Fellas,
The word 'SEQUOIA' is the only word in the English language, having all 5 vowels!

The Pontiac Fiero is the only mid-engined, American manufactured, designed, manufactured and distributed two seat sport car (We all know this fact--right?)

Cordially,
Kevin



There are two words in the English language that have all five vowels in order: "abstemious" and "facetious."
IP: Logged
Flamberge
Member
Posts: 4268
From: Terra Sancta, TX
Registered: Oct 2001


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 89
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:11 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FlambergeSend a Private Message to FlambergeDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by twofatguys:

6) Water flushes differently in different hemispheres

No it doesn’t. Sorry!



This misconception comes from a scientific phenomenon called the "Coriolis Effect", where large bodies of water (like Lake Superior) have a circular current that is due to the earth's rotation. The northern hemisphere affected bodies of water circulate opposite those in the southern hemisphere. But the effect doesn't happen on such a small scale as to manifest itself in toilet bowls and sinks.
IP: Logged
PFF
System Bot
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:14 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Pyrthian:


....really?


After looking this up, it seems they form cartilidge kneecaps while in the womb, but they don't become bone kneecaps until approx 3 yrs of age.
Sort of a trick fact I suppose.
IP: Logged
TommyRocker
Member
Posts: 2808
From: Woodstock, IL
Registered: Dec 2009


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:17 PM Click Here to See the Profile for TommyRockerSend a Private Message to TommyRockerDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:


What about the Ford GT?


HA!

Wait, that means the Fiero is the WORST American 2 seat mid engine sports car...
IP: Logged
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:27 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by TommyRocker:


HA!

Wait, that means the Fiero is the WORST American 2 seat mid engine sports car...


Not for the money
IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:50 PM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:


Not for the money


You get a lot of car for the price of the GT. One of my favorite "super cars"
IP: Logged
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 01:53 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:


You get a lot of car for the price of the GT. One of my favorite "super cars"


Ford MSRP $149,995

...still for deep pockets only, but I agree would be a blast to drive.

Performance
0–60 mph (0–96 km/h): 3.3 seconds[8], 3.6 seconds[9], 3.7 seconds [10]
0–100 mph (0–160 km/h): 7.4 seconds [10]
0-150 mph (0–241 km/h): 16.9 seconds [11]
Standing 1/4 mile (402 m): 11.2 seconds @ 131.2 mph (211.1 km/h)[10], 11.6 seconds @ 126.2 mph (203.1 km/h)[12], 11.78 seconds @ 124.31 mph (200.06 km/h)[13]
Top speed: 205 mph (330 km/h) (electronically limited) [14]

[This message has been edited by 2.5 (edited 06-28-2010).]

IP: Logged
heybjorn
Member
Posts: 10079
From: pace fl
Registered: Apr 2007


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 97
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 02:18 PM Click Here to See the Profile for heybjornSend a Private Message to heybjornDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:

“Dreamt" is the only English word that ends in the letters "mt".



Does anyone actually use the word dreamt? Don't most of us say dreamed?

conjugation of dream ( great name for a band BTW )

 
quote
The words 'racecar,' 'kayak' and 'level' are the same whether they are read left to right or right to left (palindromes).


There are word eccentricities named after Sarah Palin? Wow!

 
quote
In the last 4,000 years, no new animals have been domesticated.


Because there haven't been any new animals. Duh!
IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 02:18 PM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
IP: Logged
crazyd
Member
Posts: 2016
From: Washington
Registered: Feb 2002


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 140
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 04:13 PM Click Here to See the Profile for crazydClick Here to visit crazyd's HomePageSend a Private Message to crazydDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:
Originally posted by kevin:

Fellas,

The Pontiac Fiero is the only mid-engined, American manufactured, designed, manufactured and distributed two seat sport car (We all know this fact--right?)


What about the Ford GT?


What about it? The suspension is by Lotus, the transmission is from England, the body is from England, brakes are Brembo from Italy, steering is from an Aston-Martin... About the only American thing in it is the engine.
IP: Logged
theBDub
Member
Posts: 9720
From: Dallas,TX
Registered: May 2010


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 154
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 04:23 PM Click Here to See the Profile for theBDubSend a Private Message to theBDubDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by heybjorn:


I still use dreamt!
IP: Logged
Raydar
Member
Posts: 41474
From: Carrollton GA. Out in the... country.
Registered: Oct 1999


Feedback score:    (13)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 463
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 04:30 PM Click Here to See the Profile for RaydarSend a Private Message to RaydarDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by crazyd:


What about it? The suspension is by Lotus...


IP: Logged
PFF
System Bot
Toddster
Member
Posts: 20871
From: Roswell, Georgia
Registered: May 2001


Feedback score:    (41)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 504
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 04:53 PM Click Here to See the Profile for ToddsterSend a Private Message to ToddsterDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by heybjorn:


Dreamt


There are more things in Heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy Heybjorn
IP: Logged
newf
Member
Posts: 8704
From: Canada
Registered: Sep 2006


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 116
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 07:01 PM Click Here to See the Profile for newfSend a Private Message to newfDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by twofatguys:

10 Biggest Misconceptions We Learn in School

1) Einstein got bad grades in school.

Generations of children have been heartened by the thought that this Nobel Prize winner did badly at school, but they’re sadly mistaken. In fact, he did very well at school, especially in science and maths (unsurprisingly).

3) Napoleon was short.

He was actually around 5ft 7, completely average for the 18th/19th century.

4) Thomas Edison invented the light bulb.

Edison invented a lot of things – in fact he’s one of the most famous inventors of all time – but the light bulb wasn’t one of them. What he did was develop a light bulb at the same time as the British man, Joseph Swan, who came up with it originally.

7) Humans evolved from apes

Darwin didn’t actually say this, but he’s been misreported ever since. What he did say was that we, and apes, and chimpanzees for that matter, had a common ancestor, once, a long, long time ago.

8) Vikings had horns/helmets with horns.

Vikings may have been buried with their helmets and with drinking horns. When they were dug up by the Victorians, they assumed that the helmets had horns.

9) Columbus believed the earth was flat

He may not have known how big the world was, but he wasn’t worrying about falling off the edge of it.



"History is a set of lies that people have agreed upon."

Lightbulbs
Contrary to popular belief, Thomas Alva Edison did not "invent" the first lightbulb, but rather he improved upon a 50-year-old idea. For example: two inventors that patented an incandescent lightbulb before Thomas Edison did were Henry Woodward and Matthew Evan. According to the National Research Council of Canada:
"Henry Woodward of Toronto, who along with Matthew Evans patented a light bulb in 1875. Unfortunately, the two entrepreneurs could not raise the financing to commercialize their invention. The enterprising American Thomas Edison, who had been working on the same idea, bought the rights to their patent. Capital was not a problem for Edison: he had the backing of a syndicate of industrial interests with $50,000 to invest - a sizable sum at the time. Using lower current, a small carbonized filament, and an improved vacuum inside the globe, Edison successfully demonstrated the light bulb in 1879 and, as they say, the rest is history."

http://inventors.about.com/...ons/a/lighting_2.htm

[This message has been edited by newf (edited 06-28-2010).]

IP: Logged
pontiackid86
Member
Posts: 19632
From: Kingwood Texas..... Yall
Registered: Sep 2008


Feedback score:    (12)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 344
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:05 PM Click Here to See the Profile for pontiackid86Send a Private Message to pontiackid86Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:


The sentence:
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
uses every letter of the alphabet.





Nop no G and no H

IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:07 PM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by pontiackid86:
Nop no G and no H


Oh My God. You are not serious are you? doG tHe
IP: Logged
Flamberge
Member
Posts: 4268
From: Terra Sancta, TX
Registered: Oct 2001


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 89
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:20 PM Click Here to See the Profile for FlambergeSend a Private Message to FlambergeDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by pontiackid86:
Nop no G and no H


Whether or not you were kidding, that is still the funniest post of the day!
IP: Logged
pontiackid86
Member
Posts: 19632
From: Kingwood Texas..... Yall
Registered: Sep 2008


Feedback score:    (12)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 344
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:29 PM Click Here to See the Profile for pontiackid86Send a Private Message to pontiackid86Direct Link to This Post
Lol i know. i know... Im just kidding. just wanted to see if you all would catch on.
IP: Logged
LitebulbwithaFiero
Member
Posts: 3381
From: LaSalle, Michigan
Registered: Jun 2008


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:44 PM Click Here to See the Profile for LitebulbwithaFieroSend a Private Message to LitebulbwithaFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by pontiackid86:

Lol i know. i know... Im just kidding. just wanted to see if you all would catch on.


Catch on to what. I guess I didn't "catch on"
IP: Logged
avengador1
Member
Posts: 35468
From: Orlando, Florida
Registered: Oct 2001


Feedback score:    (7)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 571
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:46 PM Click Here to See the Profile for avengador1Send a Private Message to avengador1Direct Link to This Post
it's physically impossible to lick your elbow.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
I saw you trying!
IP: Logged
pontiackid86
Member
Posts: 19632
From: Kingwood Texas..... Yall
Registered: Sep 2008


Feedback score:    (12)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 344
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 08:50 PM Click Here to See the Profile for pontiackid86Send a Private Message to pontiackid86Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:


Catch on to what. I guess I didn't "catch on"



Just to see if anyone would beleave me.... it failed.

IP: Logged
newf
Member
Posts: 8704
From: Canada
Registered: Sep 2006


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 116
Rate this member

Report this Post06-28-2010 09:40 PM Click Here to See the Profile for newfSend a Private Message to newfDirect Link to This Post
Here's a good one if you haven't seen it already pontiackid.

Don't cheat! Because if you did, the test would be no fun. I promise, there are no tricks to the test.
Read the sentence below and count the F's in that sentence. Count them ONLY ONCE. Do not go back and count them again.
.

FINISHED FILES ARE THE RE-
SULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIF-
IC STUDY COMBINED WITH
THE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS.

[This message has been edited by newf (edited 06-28-2010).]

IP: Logged
PFF
System Bot
spark1
Member
Posts: 11159
From: Benton County, OR
Registered: Dec 2002


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 175
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 12:12 AM Click Here to See the Profile for spark1Send a Private Message to spark1Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by ls3mach:


There are two words in the English language that have all five vowels in order: "abstemious" and "facetious."


AnY that also contain the sometimes vowel, "y"?

IP: Logged
FieroRumor
Member
Posts: 35007
From: New York
Registered: Dec 2001


Feedback score: (2)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 348
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 12:19 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FieroRumorClick Here to visit FieroRumor's HomePageSend a Private Message to FieroRumorDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by twofatguys:

10 Biggest Misconceptions We Learn in School



8) Vikings had horns/helmets with horns.

Vikings may have been buried with their helmets and with drinking horns. When they were dug up by the Victorians, they assumed that the helmets had horns.


Oh SNAP!


didn't know that one!
IP: Logged
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 01:43 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by heybjorn:

Does anyone actually use the word dreamt? Don't most of us say dreamed?

Because there haven't been any new animals. Duh!


I say dreamt!
Or "I had a dream" .

I actually what qualifies something as domesticated, I would think meaning you can train it to behave..?
IP: Logged
fiero go fast
Member
Posts: 1728
From: Royersford, PA
Registered: Apr 2002


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 60
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 02:22 PM Click Here to See the Profile for fiero go fastSend a Private Message to fiero go fastDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by 2.5:


TYPEWRITER is the longest word
that can be made using the letters only on one row of the keyboard.



I reason for this was so the salesman could easily type the word TYPEWRITER with one hand without issue finding the letters.
IP: Logged
Marvin McInnis
Member
Posts: 11599
From: ~ Kansas City, USA
Registered: Apr 2002


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 227
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 03:28 PM Click Here to See the Profile for Marvin McInnisClick Here to visit Marvin McInnis's HomePageSend a Private Message to Marvin McInnisDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Flamberge:

This misconception comes from a scientific phenomenon called the "Coriolis Effect" ... But the effect doesn't happen on such a small scale as to manifest itself in toilet bowls and sinks.



The Corliolis effect actually occurs at all scales, but other external forces usually dominate at the scale of bathtubs and sinks.

Probably the most common example of the Coriolis effect is weather systems. In the Northern Hemisphere high pressure systems rotate clockwise and low pressure systems rotate counter-clockwise. The effect extends down to the scale of hurricanes and tornadoes. Tornadoes are miniature low pressure vortices that usually (but not always) rotate counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere. The systems rotate in the opposite direction in the Southern Hemisphere. I spent several weeks in South Africa on business many years ago, and it was strange (to me, but not to the locals) to observe the storm systems rotating backwards (i.e. clockwise).

I had an old classmate from engineering school whose first job out of college was working on the Apollo program. He was assigned to the engineering team developing the Saturn IV-B booster, and one the first problems he was assigned was to research a major problem they were having with "bathtub vortices" in the main fuel and oxidizer tanks due to the HUGE fuel flow rates required. They did determine that the Coriolis effect was a minor factor, but other effects ... most notably swirl introduced while fueling ... were by far much more dominant. He reported that in the original tank configurations residual swirl was still present two or three days after fueling had been completed.

Coriolis was a military engineer, and he originally discovered the effect while studying the deflection of artillery projectiles that occurred when fired perpendicular to the earth's rotation (due south or north) but not when fired due east or west.

[This message has been edited by Marvin McInnis (edited 06-30-2010).]

IP: Logged
2.5
Member
Posts: 43235
From: Southern MN
Registered: May 2007


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 184
Rate this member

Report this Post06-29-2010 04:00 PM Click Here to See the Profile for 2.5Send a Private Message to 2.5Direct Link to This Post
Yeah, toilets little openings that the water comes out into the bowl of may be angled, forcing the water in a direction...
IP: Logged
jetsnvettes2000
Member
Posts: 3311
From: Menasha,Wisconsin,USA
Registered: Dec 2009


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback

Rate this member

Report this Post06-30-2010 01:19 AM Click Here to See the Profile for jetsnvettes2000Send a Private Message to jetsnvettes2000Direct Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by LitebulbwithaFiero:


What about the Ford GT?


and the pantera and the gtm supercar and the avero aero and the saleen supercar and the vector?
IP: Logged
USFiero
Member
Posts: 4879
From: Everywhere and Middle of Nowhere
Registered: Mar 2002


Feedback score: N/A
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 109
Rate this member

Report this Post06-30-2010 08:17 AM Click Here to See the Profile for USFieroSend a Private Message to USFieroDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Pyrthian:


....really?


I read that you are born with more bones than you will have as an adult because some fuse together as you mature.
IP: Logged
Flamberge
Member
Posts: 4268
From: Terra Sancta, TX
Registered: Oct 2001


Feedback score: (1)
Leave feedback





Total ratings: 89
Rate this member

Report this Post06-30-2010 10:26 AM Click Here to See the Profile for FlambergeSend a Private Message to FlambergeDirect Link to This Post
 
quote
Originally posted by Marvin McInnis:


The Corliolis effect actually occurs at all scales, but other external forces usually dominate at the scale of bathtubs and sinks.

Probably the most common example of the Coriolis effect is weather systems. In the Northern Hemisphere high pressure systems rotate clockwise and low pressure systems rotate counter-clockwise. The effect extends down to the scale of hurricanes and tornadoes. Tornadoes are miniature low pressure vortices that usually (but not always) rotate counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere. The systems rotate in the opposite direction in the Southern Hemisphere. I spent several weeks in South Africa on business many years ago, and it was strange (to me, but not to the locals) to observe the storm systems in satellite images rotating clockwise.

I had an old classmate from engineering school whose first job out of college was working on the Apollo program. He was assigned to the engineering team developing the Saturn IV-B booster, and one the first problems he was assigned was to research a major problem they were having with "bathtub vortices" in the main fuel and oxidizer tanks due to the HUGE fuel flow rates. They did determine that the Coriolis effect was a minor factor, but other effects ... most notably residual swirl introduced while fueling ... were by far much more dominant. He reported that in the original tank configurations residual swirl was still present two or three days after fueling had been completed.

Coriolis was a military engineer, and he originally discovered the effect while studying the deflection of artillery projectiles that occurred when fired perpendicular to the earth's rotation (due south or north) but not when fired due east or west.



Thanks for the additional information.
IP: Logged
Previous Page | Next Page

This topic is 2 pages long:  1   2 


All times are ET (US)

T H I S   I S   A N   A R C H I V E D   T O P I C
  

Contact Us | Back To Main Page

Advertizing on PFF | Fiero Parts Vendors
PFF Merchandise | Fiero Gallery
Real-Time Chat | Fiero Related Auctions on eBay



Copyright (c) 1999, C. Pennock