mat200
IPCT Contributor
- Jan 17, 2017
- 15,830
- 26,665
$200k+ Teaxas house made of cardboard ..not even OSB ..
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after a strong wind ..
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ThermoPLY .. less than 1/3 of what OSB is in terms of weight ..
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Any insulation added to those block walls?The standard German house is "built like a tank" compared to USA houses. The exterior walls are over a foot thick, built with clay blocks. The interior walls are also blocks. Floors are poured concrete, even for a second story floor, and the roofs are tile. In the last decade or so, wood frame houses have started to pop up, but even they are more robust than in USA. Smurf tubes for wiring are embedded in the walls during construction. No easy fishing wires through the block walls like we can do.
The sentence about sitting on a plane reminded me about the Beverly Hillbillies episode where Jed was flying for the first time. As he looked out the window during the DC-8's takeoff roll, he said (as close as I remember) "By doggie, if this thing goes much faster it's gonna leave the ground!".
Blocks with integrated insulation are one way. I imagine that is newer technology. If you want to spend 12 minutes on an overview this struck me as a fairly decent video. Seems to me this type of construction is less tolerant of shoddy workmanship than with a stick-built house.Any insulation added to those block walls?
Another share, figured here was a good place since WTF was I thinking, LOL
Been playing with the best way to light our burn piles. I am still using gas, just seems to get er going best. So came up with an idea of shooting a lit arrow into the burn pile to light it from a distance. Bought this for fun:
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Funny, Bow has hole for arrow to go through. Figured an arrow a burn, 20 burns, plus I get to play while watching the burn, haha
Well, seemed like everything I tried I could not keep the arrow lit, plus these arrows are not accurate so I over shot the burn pile a few times, hahahaha.
So I looked around for something else that would work. Ding, Ding, Ding PINE CONES burn great, let me try that, Well could not get one to stay lit. GAS, ya that's the ticket, LOL, so I poured some gas on one end, lit it, threw/lobbed it QUICK before I burnt myself.
Tah Dah, a Pine Cone Grenade Works Great!!! Plus they are fun too. hahaha
So now the Bow and Arrow goes to my grandson![]()
After a couple of WWs do you blame them?The standard German house is "built like a tank" compared to USA houses. The exterior walls are over a foot thick, built with clay blocks. The interior walls are also blocks. Floors are poured concrete, even for a second story floor, and the roofs are tile. In the last decade or so, wood frame houses have started to pop up, but even they are more robust than in USA. Smurf tubes for wiring are embedded in the walls during construction. No easy fishing wires through the block walls like we can do.
The sentence about sitting on a plane reminded me about the Beverly Hillbillies episode where Jed was flying for the first time. As he looked out the window during the DC-8's takeoff roll, he said (as close as I remember) "By doggie, if this thing goes much faster it's gonna leave the ground!".
Oh there is, it's just not a desirable solution.I don't think there's any way to stop boys from playing with fire.
Gasoline vapors are also heavier than air. They spread out across the ground and you won't know you are standing in a pool of them until someone throws a match. Same thing with propane. You will instantly be Irish jig dancing.......Wow, lighting anything with gasoline is a recipe for disaster.
The vapors from the gas is what is dangerous, and can travel rapidly out and away from the pile and ignite.
I saw a guy light a bonfire with gas once, he was 20 feet from the pile when he lit it.
He received 2nd degree burns on his face, arms, lower part of his legs (shorts) and hands.
All that from a quick flashover of the vapors all around him.
I recall being shown a B & W film in Naval Air bootcamp June of '69 where a 6 foot step ladder was behind a hanging white sheet, a bucket of gas on the top, it's lid covered, the room sealed so no drafts, bright light shining on the sheet with the ladder between the light and the backside of the sheet, the camera on other side of the sheet. What the viewer saw was a white sheet with the shadow of a ladder with a bucket on the top.Gasoline vapors are also heavier than air. They spread out across the ground and you won't know you are standing in a pool of them until someone throws a match. Same thing with propane. You will instantly be Irish jig dancing.......
Co. pays the fines, so the workers should be jailed, IMO.![]()
Workers face massive fine after shocking act is caught by 7-Eleven surveillance camera: 'It's an outright betrayal'
"This kind of lawlessness endangers public health."www.yahoo.com