GitEmSteveDave
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There was one where they decided that no one ever made a Katana Machete before. I instantly looked in my end table and pulled out a then two year or so old copy of Special Projects:A Division of Cold Steel catalog and saw that they had one listed. Then I went to their website and saw that they have had a video of

Yeah. Claymores usually have two instructions written on them. Front Towards Enemy and Rear. They are like a box that shoots out ball bearings at tremendous speeds. So anything behind it is safe.

It's not pathetic. You need to think about how old his dorm is, and what kind of wiring he has in there. You can't have students fiddling around with wiring, because it's a fire hazard, and puts everyone in the dorms' life at risk. I had a college that had rules against Christmas lights because people usually put

Thanks for the info!

Is this the one that someone stole?

Wouldn't armor piercing rounds be just as well for a target behind a wall? IIRC, 50 cals have been used to hit targets behind walls for years.

Just logged out of my YouTube accounts, and the like button was still there. Is there any chance Mr. Wheaton was using an add-on that borked the interface and perhaps superimposed some buttons and obscured the thumbs up/down?

Hit the high hats!

It's actually a flying brick on approach.

Weren't Peter and Raymond on the same floor, not "roommates" with the people who recorded? IIRC, their walls were so thin and Peter and Raymond so loud that they could easily record through the wall.

At least he had novacaine. My two front were removed with a pool toy.

Tail section is your best bet.

No, if it hit at that steep an angle, there would be more crumple in the fuse.

I too remember when Fix proposed that. It was based on another experiment done years earlier that was also filmed. That one went "bad" when a door opened prematurely.

Except "totally", how is that question relevant?

While having the machine taking the xrays is great, it still needs a laptop to display and record the image off the plate. Honestly, even if you are in the field, it shouldn't be that hard to set up a generator or use an inverter in a truck.

Our vets uses a similar device. She wears a light vest/bib, but this is very directional and only produces when it's powered on.