shenmue37
shenmue37
shenmue37

This is slightly dangerous advice I think. I've worked in construction on and off for the past 9 years. Obviously straight up garbage piled up in someone's work truck would be a bad sign. However, depending on the types of jobs someone does as a contractor it doesn't matter how meticulous you are, your truck is

I bought my 1990 Samurai from an old man who used it as a hunting vehicle. Hardly ever drove it. Kept it parked in the woods. Poorly maintained except for the paint job (for some reason he waxed his hunting truck). Realized when I got it home and pulled the dipstick out bone dry that it didn't exactly hold it's

Totally rad; but, this being the internet, I've gotta point out that it's a Suzuki Sidekick, the part in the beginning where they captioned it and said it was a Sidekick tipped me off ;-)

Yup. Incredible vehicles. Can't kill them, can't get them stuck, only need a pair of lockjaws, 10, 12, 14, and 17 wrench to fix anything on them, and Jeep-bros are super jelly every time they see you in it. My 1990 Samurai is going to the grave with me....extremely slowly, but it's gonna get there.

Still not sure how I managed it but I nailed my driver's test first try in a 1999 GMC Suburban. Had to do a three point turn for mine, on a normal street without hitting a curb, at this DMV the rumor was that making it a 4 point turn or higher was an automatic fail. 18 foot long land yacht with a 44 foot turning

I see what you mean and I agree it's not the worst example of one. However, I still think it's a bit misleading to highlight the least likely scenario. You could simply say, "Jackie Chan's Son Faces Notoriously Tough Penalties for Possession of Marijuana in China" or something to that effect. The article mentions

Good point. Still, I'm not a fan of the sensationalism.

Then why such a sensationalist headline. I'm not trying to troll or anything, but, come on. Shouldn't a headline give a brief synopsis of an article's content, not highlight the least likely outcome of the event?

I know it wasn't a steep approach angle I said it was a relatively low approach angle. I'm not assuming anything about artillery I know a lot about it I was in an artillery unit in the Marine Corps. I was just making a generalization. For the most part high explosive shells are fired from artillery. Most of those

Oh the stories I could tell you, my friend.

86.5 inches wide. (that's what she said)

Mortar takes a super high approach angle and explodes upon impact with the ground sending a cone of shrapnel upward and outward. Artillery is similar to mortar except larger and used at MUCH longer ranges. It's also a bit more direct than a mortar instead of being a super high trajectory lob it's a little bit

Definitely not an artillery shell. Anything considered artillery would be a much larger boom than that. Not a mortar either because of the angle and type of explosion. Mortars explode conically up and outward. This was a missile. Relatively low approach angle and penetration before detonation. This guy's lucky

Oh I know man. We're too poor in the Marine Corps to build our own MOUT towns so we usually just trucked it to an Army base to use yours haha.

"The mix of bullet-spotted dummies and paper caricatures in desolate desert terrains, coupled with close-up portraits of real men decked out in camo and staring straight into the camera is unsettling, and provides an intimate glimpse at the anticipation of action before shit gets real."

Yes, this is pretty much as old as the internet. Seen it for years.

A good pair of lockjaw pliers.

I think this reviewer summed it up best, "Even when a Batman game isn't very good, it's still pretty good."

2003 Ford Windstar. Want to change the spark plugs? You better hope you have tiny spindly arms and can reach up over the back of the engine, if not you have to remove the entire WINDSHIELD WIPER ASSEMBLY. Want to change your oil? Get some real thick gloves because not only is the filter at an obscene angle right

'Dat exhaust note tho