krymdog
Krymdog
krymdog

I needed a good laugh this morning.
1. You believe what you said
2. I am guessing it gives you some sense of superiority.

OPEN ASK TO ALL JALOPNIANS!:

Find wherever NMB343 explained all his “statistics” to me, and tell me, objectively, why I am wrong and he is right.

The only place I could find in our thread is this:
With

Eh, and it isn’t. We DO know how many HAVE deployed and how many of THOSE were faulty. Or, at least, that data should be achievable in the set given that we have so much other crash data.

I mean, “How do I know if I like ice cream if I haven’t tried all the flavors?” isn’t a good reason to pass judgement on ice cream.
“8

What in the third circle of dueling banjo monkey hell was that sentence even supposed to mean?
You aren’t even a good troll, dude.
Literally no one has jumped to your defense, but it is everyone else that is wrong? Look, I can’t help what you think you heard or understood; that’s between you and your God. I can be

Dude....
Absolutely not what I said.
Absolutely not what he said.

It is like trying to have a discussion with drunk uncle on Thanksgiving...

No one is saying that everything should be perfect
Andy is...

I understand that it be a very small amount of people being maimed or killed by these airbag inflators, but shouldn’t the ideal number of people you’re killing be, I don’t know, zero?”
Nope.
Not at one rupture in 33 years.
As cold as it sounds, the cost of making it perfect would eliminate driving for most people.

Tom Cruise..... Tom Cruise.... Days of Thunder?
Was that the one where he plays a young cocky man that has to overcome internal adversity before he overcomes external adversity to complete a character arc and win the woman?

Was that Days of Thunder?

Not looking for an argument....
From where do you get the information on ‘the grid’? Charging overnight is one of the best times to do it, as the load is lower.  If everyone charged at night, and the load did not reach  the max of daytime, then it is fine.

The ‘Related Content’ algorithm isn’t wrong....

Er... both men are starting with rotary engines (you know, hallmarks of durability), so I would think ‘foolish’ left the gate quite some time ago for both of them.

Yeah, I think someone did some half-assed research and conflated RTTs with bed tents, but decided anyone buying the CybaChuck may not know the difference either.
“Full send for 3k on the tent!”
“Got it, boss!”

They probably did it for the rights to put on socials.
You know, getting paid in ‘exposure.’

Also, no idea what it would cost

And the easily forgotten Nissan Titan, from 2020 or 2021 onwards, has a nine-speed transmission.

I had to double check the author when I got to that bit. I thought for sure it was Erin.
Then I saw and remembered, “oh, that fits.”

It isn’t so much that the fines are reasonable or not; we like to believe that they will be evenly applied.
We know they won’t, even in medium-sized towns and large cities, but it is part of the basis of our separation from the king of England.
It makes us feel good to get mad about injustice, if that makes any sense.

The Civics were everywhere. They were not, however, looking like that photo.
Everything from well thought out power and handling mods to “Oh, you want to die” mods were omnipresent.

No snarkiness intended here:
How does it work then? If it is true that oxygen is required for combustion, and the battery is submerged in water, then what is the oxygen source?

I think the water is a good source of oxygen.
It may go something like “Fire is so hot, it turns the water into steam, which frees up oxygen (the O2), which helps combust the fire.”
Thermal runaway combustion, or some such whatnot

I have the Gazelle T3. I only sleep in it, so I can confirm it fits a Queen air mattress, but with little other room. It is a great tent.
The chair and table sit just outside the tent.  They get rained on if it rains.
If there was a tent that went up faster, I would use that, but I don’t think there is, at least not one

And the Mossad, but whatever.