@JesseTayRiver remembering that one time my friend kept complaining about his knife not holding an edge, so bought a brand new spiderco, and less than an hour later I found him heating it to red hot with a plumbing torch to cut out a wood splinter
@JesseTayRiver does the theory account for the dynamic load of a several hundred thousand pound object hitting the structure, and dropping several thousand pounds of the structure onto itself in the process
My zoom background is the TNG bridge so every time my therapist logs on for our session he opens the hour by asking โHow are things on the Starship Enterprise?โ and I just think thatโs so much better than โhow was this weekโ or โhow are you feelingโ
โRunโ would be the funniest last words. Imagine youโre dying of old age, surrounded by family, and they lean in to your bedside expecting some final nugget of wisdom or expression of gratitude and you just whisper โRUN.โ
@suchnerve oh yeah, as a man with birthing hips, it's a cheat code to being able to effortlessly carry things in one hand and hip, my other male friends cannot & must chest clutch, or shoulder carry
@suchnerve what if only in sunlight, or bright light one eye can kinda sorta hack it, but the other eye will tear up & feel like you're driving a red heat iron poker through your brain if there's too much light around you
but, in appropriate, and low light never a headache
@JesseTayRiver the wires from the generator were very literally bigger than C cell batteries inside, as just the copper part, and had to be bent into the panels with a battery powered specialty tool that also I later used successfully to bend exhaust tubing full of sand to fit my pickup
@JesseTayRiver the systems that scared me the most doing elecrical work were the pig farms with backup generators, and used 1300-1500 amps at 110v, which we had to hook up hot since a system shut off would somehow effect a food safety something (I do not remember specifics on what exactly?)