Thursday, November 4, 2010
Dentsu Green Vending Machines Grow Veg Without Sun | Apartment Therapy Re-Nest
Dentsu Green Vending Machines Grow Veg Without Sun | Apartment Therapy Re-Nest: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"
Baby Falls From 8th Floor Paris Apartment, Lives
Baby Falls From 8th Floor Paris Apartment, Lives: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"
best of craigslist: Seeking bodyguard named Betty
best of craigslist: Seeking bodyguard named Betty: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"
Ashland library accepts food in lieu of overdue fines
Ashland library accepts food in lieu of overdue fines: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"
Therapist charged with murder-for-hire
Therapist charged with murder-for-hire: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Alcohol fire burns with invisible flames
This is not a metaphor. It is, in fact, rather difficult to fight invisible fires—as demonstrated by this clip from the 1981 Indianapolis 500, where fuel accidentally sprayed on a hot engine ignited an invisible, smoke-less fire on the car ... and on the racer and his crew. Everybody in this video survived, but it made me curious about what fuel they were using. Also: Why, if it's this difficult to put out invisible flames, would you use a fuel that produced invisible flames to begin with?
You might expect this was just the result of a bad decision. You'd be wrong. From 1965 until 2006, Indy cars ran on methanol, a fuel that's still used in a lot of other car racing categories, as well as in Monster Trucks. (And by the Chinese, who make it from coal.) Mostly made from the methane in natural gas, methanol was actually chosen as a racing fuel because it was safer than gasoline.
In 1964, two racers died and several others were injured when two gasoline-powered cars crashed, and the blinding smoke from the resulting fireball caused a seven-car pileup. Methanol was a solution to that problem. It burned clear, so when cars did wreck, everyone else on the track would be able to see what was going on. Bonus: You can put out a methanol fire with water alone, while spraying a petroleum fire with water will just give the petroleum something to float on, potentially spreading the fire further.
Turns out, the fire you can't see is actually safer—big picture—than the one you can. Which, I suppose, could be a metaphor for something.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Voting
2010 is turning out the same way as 1994; it's sad. I don't know if I'll even have a ride to my polling place. Only thing worth voting for on our ballot is Russell Feingold. Gotta love this waking hell.
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