Quick Search of DRB:
Lijit Search
drb rss about
suggest
advertise
subscribe
rss rss
rss
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | famous | cool ads | funny pics | food | futurism | gadgets | history | japan
military | music | nature | photo | russia | sci-fi | signs | space | sports | steampunk | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Heavy Seas, Part 2


"QUANTUM SHOT" #255
link



READ THE FIRST PART HERE

Hurricane force vs. a few brave ships

The 2007 Hurricane Season is on, with the onslaught of the monster hurricane "Dean" - a catastrophic category five storm. I'm sure we'll all see the tv coverage of what it's like somewhere on-shore, but here are some hair-raising pictures of ships in heavy seas, including a wrecked oil rig platform (the likes of which they are evacuating right now, away from the hurricane's path)


(image credit: Expeditioner in heavy seas aad.gov.au)




(image credit: navy.forces.gc.ca)


(image credit: Seafish.org)

HMCS "Halifax" encounters some heavy seas on the Grand Banks off the coast of Newfoundland during a fisheries patrol in January 2007":




(images credit: DND, navy.forces.gc.ca)




(images credit: J. J. Pronk, tv-antenna)

A stunning photo of a helicopter rescue of the "Braer" ship crew, in trouble near Sumburgh Head:

(image credit: Seafish.org)

Navy aircraft carriers in trouble

During the WWII and until 1950, most Navy aircraft carriers had a certain blunt bow design, that did not stand well against the onslaught of powerful waves.


(image credit: Pentagon)

In January 1959 US Aircraft Carrier "Valley Forge" encountered heavy seas that "broke over her forward flight deck, tearing away part of its port side. This was a dramatic example of the vulnerabilities of the "open bow" design typical of World War II aircraft carrier design, a problem solved by the enclosed "hurricane bow" fitted to carriers newly built or modernized during the mid-1950s and later." (source). The survey of the storm damage to the ship caused positive changes in design, but not until a few other carriers suffered the same fate:

"Valley Forge" before the damage:




Battling heavy seas:


The damage after the storm: (imagine the force with which the waves slammed the ship!)


(images credit: US Navy)

On 5 June 1945 the carrier "Bennington" was damaged by a typhoon off Okinawa:




(image credit: uss-bennington.org)

Aircraft carrier "Hornet" also suffered typhoon damage:


(image credit: cco.caltech.edu)

USS "Essex" on January 1960:


USS "John F. Kennedy", one of the more modern carriers, is shown here in heavy seas:

(image credit: chinfo.navy.mil)

Tankers are a BIG wave target:



"Erika" - a massive oil tanker succumbed to the power of the storm in the waters of Northern Gascony. A little rescue ship "The Abeille Flandre" have been able to secure the tanker even after it split in two, keeping the stern afloat and preventing the ship to run aground, which could've caused a huge oil spill.


(image credit: bourbon-online.com)

Nothing can help this tanker:
("Levoli Sun", in the English Channel, north of the Isle of Batz)


(image credit: bourbon-online.com)

Big cruise ships are tossed around in the heavy seas like a child's toy:



"Voyager" - very modern ocean liner, in the middle of Mediterranian swells:



Here is another big ship: New Zealand' ferry "The Aramoana" in the Cook Strait - one of the roughest stretches of water in the world:

(image credit: teara.govt.nz)

The wreck of oil tanker "Prestige" off the coast of Spain (more info) -


(image credit: Archive Photo EFE)


Evacuate! Evacuate!

When big offshore oil rig is damaged, it's not a pretty sight; it is rather a testimony to the power of hurricane's wave surge, which can crumble the structure like a bunch of sticks:

This is the current facility off the shores of Mexico (14,000 workers evacuated, production completely shut down, oil rigs abandoned) "Dean bears down on oil fields" - article.



Here is what it might look like after Dean passes over:

"NEW ORLEANS, La. (July 12, 2005)--Thunder Horse, a semi-submersible platform owned by BP, was found listing after the crew returned. The rig was evacuated for Hurricane Dennis. USCG photos by PA3 Robert M. Reed"










(image credit: Botinok)

CONTINUE TO NEXT PART

READ THE FIRST PART HERE

"StumbleUpon" this page

Permanent Link...
Category: Nature,Ships / Boats

Dark Roasted Blend's Photography Gear Picks:

READ LATEST POSTS:

November 20, 2009 - Quantum Shot #599
The Extraordinary World of Ex Libris Art

Mythic, bizarre, fantastic

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

incl. "Marvelous Burj Dubai Fountain Show"

SFSite
"Steampunk Anthology" Reviewed, in All Its Brass Glory

Making all sci-fi punks in the world "feel lucky", since 2008
(for other weekly "Biscotti" issues - see our main page and monthly archives)

COMMENTS:

5 Comments:

Anonymous Tom (London) said...

Fun, unless you're there I guess...

I'm particularly intrigued by the picture of HMCS Halifax's fo'csle, though - who's the poor blighter who has to go out and drop the fence onto the deck to save it from being ripped off the gunwales? It looks like there's a cable to strap on to, but I wouldn't be to chuffed with that detail!

___  
Anonymous Sham said...

The "Abeille Flandre is very far from being a "small rescue ship"...
That's one of our most powerfull (12800 HP's!) puller ships! :)

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Don't let them fool you, modern aircraft carriers get tossed around quite a bit!

Memories....

___  
Blogger Momma Bear said...

OMG! This is absolutely AMAZING! Loved the pics!!

___  
Blogger ax2usn said...

A little math to put things in perspective:

One cubic meter of water weighs one ton. If a storm wave 12 meters high hits a ship, you can count on 6 tons of force per square meter, which is less than half the structual strength of large vessels (15 tons per square meter). But...rogue waves hit with an estimated force of 100 tons per square meter.

Many factors determine damage to any given ship under rogue wave conditions: stress fatigue (the structural stress brought about by doing what ships do), compressive strength (the ability to fight crushing forces of the wave), longtitudinal bending stress, shearing (tangent to the main body) stress, progressive stress (at the point where ships load and unload cargo), operational error and possible cargo shift, to name a few.

I reckon it would be impossible to retro-fit the world's ships to withstand such an onslaught. The best we can hope for is an early warning system enabling ships to get out ...wayyyy out...of the rogue wave path.

(A snappy Navy salute to the hearty souls who bravely navigate the world's oceans every single day.)

___  

Post a Comment

<< Home


SF ART & BOOK REVIEWS:
Don't miss: The Ultimate Guide to SF&F Writers!
Fiction Reviews: Alastair Reynolds "Chasm City"
Short Fiction Reviews: Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" (with pics)
New Fiction Reviews: The Surreal Office

MORE RECENT POSTS:


Outrageously Creative Ads, Issue 12

Unexpected Weirdness & Visual Candy


Weird Food McDonald's Sells Around the World

Spaghetti! Soaked! In Sugarrr!


The World's Most Magnificent Pipe Organs

Simply Blockbusters of Their Time!


Lovely Cowgirls in Vintage Westerns

Beauties with guns scorched the screen... and it was good


Weirdest Cell Phones Ever!

Totally non-conventional looks and futuristic specs.


British Pubs: Signs of the Times, Part 2

Pub signs are almost like time machines...


Fabulous Las Vegas: Vintage Treasures

Part 1: Glamour vs. Kitsch


Incredible Astronomical Clocks

Antique and medieval technology blended with art


Battersea, and Other Abandoned Power Stations

Part 2 of popular urban exploration series


Hilarious & Crazy Signage

Part 13 of this side-splitting series


Living, Growing Architecture

Grow your house one root at a time


Alone in the Wild: Yukon Survival Saga

How to eat porcupine livers, and more!


Unusual and Marvelous Maps

Alternate histories, sea monsters, weird politics


Airships & Tentacles

Exclusive Interview with artist Myke Amend


Jet Engines on Trucks (For Fun and Profit)

Snow-blowers from hell, and more...


Star Wars for Your Mind, Heart and Soul

Part 3 of the popular series


Britain's Colorful Pub Signs, Part 1

A map to your last night adventures


Flying Colors! Creative Paint on Airliners

Groovy additions to the fleet...


Walled Cities: Keeping Out the Joneses

Highlights of the defensive architecture


Postage Stamps From the Future

...and some alternative realities


The Glamour of Flight: Sexy Stewardesses

Part 4 of highly popular series


Flags of Forgotten Countries

Don't just wave a black flag... consider your options


Spectacular Steampunk Art Update

Part 2 of this eye-popping, mind-boggling series

MORE OF THE RECENT POSTS:








Anything for the Perfect Shot! Part 3
Charmed by the Unknown Brazil
Ekranoplans Showcase, Part 2
Riot Vehicle with Water Cannon
Thrilling Vintage Movie Posters
Cheers to Beers!
Most Interesting Bridges, Part 3
Mesmerizing Kinetic Sculptures
Real Life Spy Gadgets
Tangled & Crazy Wiring
Underground Cities and Bunkers
Extraordinary Clocks & Watches
Pasta Monster & Other Strange Food
How Morgan Cars Are Made
Abandoned Boeing-747 Restaurant
Surprised Astronauts (Funny Pics)
One-Track Wonders: Early Monorails
Komodo Dragons: They Eat Meat
Spring Cleaning of the Mind: Surreal Art
Crazy & Funny Faces, Part 5
Wonder Weapons of World War Two
Narrow Buildings in Japan & Around the World
The Cutting Edge of Retro Tech
Bladerunner Tokyo Large-Format Photography
Nightmare Playgrounds, Part 3
Victorian Flea Circuses: A Lost Art Form
Strangest Music Scores, Part 2
Monstrous Aviation: Huge Helicopters!
- many more in the Archives and in the Contents Index (left bar)


FULL ARCHIVES (with previews, fast loading):

September 2009 -- August 2009 --
June-July 2009 -- May 2009 -- April 2009 -- March 2009 --
February 2009 -- January 2009 -- December 2008 --
November 2008 -- October 2008 -- September 2008
August 2008 -- July 2008 -- June 2008
May 2008 -- April 2008 -- March 2008
February 2008 -- January 2008 -- Dec, 2007
November 2007 -- October 2007 -- Sept, 2007
August 2007 -- July 2007 -- June 2007
May 2007 -- April 2007 -- March 2007
February 2007 -- January 2007 -- Dec, 2006
November 2006 -- October 2006 -- Link Lattes




CATEGORIES:
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | books | cool ads | funny pics | famous | futurism | food
gadgets | health | history | humour | japan | internet | link latte | military | music | nature | photo | russia | steampunk
sci-fi & fantasy | signs | space | sports | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird



Discretion Advised! These cartoons contain some extreme animated violence!






Airplanes
Animals
Architecture
Art
Auto
Boats
Computers
Cool Ads
Extreme Weather
Food
Funny Pics
Futurism
Gadgets
History
Humour
Link Latte
Military
Music
Nature
Oops Accidents
Photography
Robots
Science
Science Fiction

Space
Sports
Technology
Trains
Travel
UE Abandoned
Vintage
Weird




Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
James Golbey
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman
Steve Levenstein

- Join Our Team -
Guidelines








  • The mistery bird is a Colibri (I guess). link
    Read more



  • Digg This Article



    This is one of the best Picture Galleries of Animals ever. It must have taken weeks to locate all of those unforgettable photos
    Read more

  • Definately a moth. How many birds have antennas?
    Read more

  • I believe thats is a hummingbird moth. they fly just like a hummingbird. there are several videos of them on you tube.. heres one.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7SF8_OhHks&mode=related&search=
    Read more

  • The bird / insect animal is a Hummingbird Hawk-moth (Macroglossum stellatarum). A colibri (hummingbird) looks quite different - and certainly has no antennae. ;)
    Read more

  • Really nice..
    Read more

  • Just a quick note to say that your blog is my favourite. I'm amazed a where you find these great photos and links.

    Keep up the sterling work!
    Read more

  • the one with the elephant falling out of the monorail is a fake, though. it happened, but nobody took a picture of it.
    Read more

  • That last one is a moth, family Sphingidae. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawk_moth)

    Love your site!
    Read more

  • Excellent post. Except that first hippo..erm..isn't.
    Read more

  • Could you be so kind to call them a Chimpanzee and a Gorilla instead of "monkeys"? Although they are related, therre IS a difference between Monkeys and Apes. Thank you!
    Read more

  • Um, the first photo in your two of hippos is actually a rhinoceros. Not sure what type though. :)
    Read more

  • What an absolutely fantastic and stunning collection of book art!
    I don't often feel compelled to plug other blogs, but I have blogged it on this occassion!

    I did a smaller blog on some artistically recycled books a while ago you may be also interested in, you can find that here
    Read more

  • Thank you Roo,
    Great collection of book art links!
    Read more

  • I love these books, which are truely inspirational. I think I will try to create one myself. Thanks for the ideas.

    Terri
    Read more

  • For anyone who'd like a copy of the Codex Seraphinianus, you can get a reprint from http://www.internetbookshop.it/code/9788817013895/SERAFINI-LUIGI/CODEX-SERAPHINIANUS.html

    Though unless you speak Italian you'll need to take a few visits to your translation tool of choice. Also note when ordering that the choice of Spanish or Italian refers only to a small informative booklet you get in a plastic sleeve inside the back cover. I assume it's informative but to a non-Italian speaker like me it's as undecipherable as the codex itself.

    Fanstastic book by the way, it's huge (atlas sized) and beautifully drawn. It will have pride of place on my coffee table should I ever buy a coffee table.
    Read more

  • Just to let you know that the link to Peter Callesen's paper-based art in your older post on paper-cut art "One Sheet of Paper" (8-Nov-2006) has changed. It's now at www.petercallesen.com
    Read more

  • Thank you Mez,
    I updated it.
    Read more

  • thats a tennis ball not a golf ball
    Read more

  • That's a tennis ball.
    Read more

  • Just to be clear, I am not a redundant commenter; I'm a different Anonymous from Anonymous 1.
    I am Anonymous Bosch.
    Read more

  • 'Creative Publishing' its not a golf ball, its a tennis ball ;)
    Read more

  • - How are we doing? What would you change for a better experience?

    Add an Archive section instead of listing them on the left.

    - Which themes would you like to see more often, and which ones you don't care about?

    More tech, less cyberpunk and art.

    - Do you have high speed internet? How's the loading time?

    Loading times are excellent.

    - Are you happy with RSS feed?

    Excellent

    - You can't have everything...where would you put it?

    Everywhere!
    Read more

  • I am on Google Reader, and everything's good, to be honest!
    Read more

  • I often have to use 56k, and sometimes end up with only half the pictures loading; I could use the image links to Flickr, etc. if there was alt. text to provide regions to click on, but there often isn't.

    Content-wise, you've got a fascinating mixture.
    Read more

  • I love what you've done. Very eclectic mix. I read your blog every day. I have high speed DSL and loading times are OK. RSS is very good. Don't do more tech, there's already sites for that. Keep doing what you're doing. And Thank You!
    Read more

  • Appreciate all your comments, friends. Will be adding categorized "site map" feature soon. More cool stuff to come.
    Cheers!
    Read more

  • This is hands down my favorite feed. The Rss is great...

    I have high speed. Load times are stellar.

    The only thing I would change is to have more content. Preferably once every half hour during the work day so that I won't get any work done.
    Read more

  • I've stood under the Convair YF2Y-1 Seadart, a jet powered sea plane, at the San Diego Air and Space Museum so knowing that designers also thought"Hey, if the one land ON the water why can't we make one that goes UNDER the water?" is no great leap. It's still pretty amazing.
    Read more

  • Wow. I'd much rather have my tax dollars go for this kind of thing than socialized health care. Deadbeat babies or awesome flying attack stingrays? The choice isn't even close.
    Read more

  • very cool. but as someone else mentioned, sad that the latest artist-impressions are with war in mind. How about a clear-bodied version for the ultimate sight-seeing flight?
    Read more

  • To those who bemoan the military applications of such ideas: recreation is great, but without ways to protect your right and freedom to recreate, there won't be much use for recreation equipment. I doubt that in a global caliphate the Supreme Leader would look kindly upon such decadent recreation. Yes, overall it is a sad fact that we must defend ourselves from those who have DECLARED INTENTIONS of subjugating and/or killing all free people, but nonetheless it is a fact. I too, wish we could all live in peace, but wishing it does not make it so (when other parties do not share that wish). Just ask my ex. :)
    Read more

  • ...the best thing the military ever came up with since jets. this is the best idea in a century.
    Read more

  • For a new vision of a future with flying submarines - check out http://empirethefilm.com/html/empire_-_mecha.html

    Its a story/series where supercavition submarines aer also equiped to fly. Cool graphics if nothing else.
    Read more

  • I've seen that Corbin Sparrow more than a few times around my house. Haven't seen it lately but a year or two ago I'd see it all the time on the way to school.
    Read more

  • There are battery operated cars made by an indian manufacturer called 'Reva' that seems to fit the 'small' bill:

    http://www.revaindia.com/worldwidegallery.htm
    Read more

  • http://farm1.static.flickr.com/126/332278624_ed3d7df65d.jpg

    this one is Ape, 3wheels producted by Italian Piaggio.
    Read more

  • Mr. Bean may be able to change his clothes and do other things in a bubble car but he has other challenges in the area of romance, I think.
    Read more

  • Thanks for the article, I love microcars.

    In response to some of the pictures you have posted and were interested in more information:
    The Mivalino small car you have pictured, I'm not sure if the ownership of the manufacturing rights on that car was just transferred over or not, but I've seen a very similar vehicle (if not the same thing, it's really, really close if not) as the Messerschmitt KR200.

    The BMW Isetta: BMW also made a car very commonly mistaken as an Isetta known best as the "600 Limo" which basically was a 4-seater version of the Isetta with a slightly more powerful engine and a rear door.

    under Smorgasborg of Small:
    The yellow car with the trailer with flowers on it is also an Isetta.

    The white truck looking thing with the "Yamamoto" tire cover is a Daihatsu Midget... personally I prefer the look of the Midgets through the 50's and 60's, when they were built with only 3 wheels.

    The Corbin Sparrow is an interesting car, in that it's a 3-wheeled electric 1-seater vehicle that was created for the sole purpose of being a daily commuter car to/from work... the idea was that most people drive to work alone, and most of them drive under 30 miles each day, so why drive a gasoline car when you could just have something that would scoot you back and forth for next to nothing... they were used as the "goldmember" cars in Austin Powers 3... you'll find one for sale on ebay every now and again, but normally they need batteries replaced... fewer than 300 were made because Corbin Motors filed for bankruptcy, but the rights were sold to Myers Motors who re-released them in 2005 and is still producing them.
    Read more

  • The 7th image down in the "Unknown" category is a Morgan Super Sport, circa 1932-34. I saw one puttering about when I was stationed in the UK back in the '80s. Everyone stopped to watch the thing go whizzing by. Looked like a fun car to own and operate.

    Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgan_Motor_Company
    Read more

  • The HM Freeway was produced in Minnesota in the '70's. The design philosophy was, "The average passenger load in a 'full-sized' car is 1.4 people. Let's build a car that will carry that many." ie; One adult and two bags of groceries. I test drove one. It was noisy but quick. The Crosley refrigerator people built a couple different sized models in the late '40's. The engines used a number of parts common with their refrigeration compressors and could be serviced by their existing mechanics.
    Read more

  • That red vehicle in Amsterdam en the white one which comes two pictures later, are electrical vehicles for disabled and elderly people. They have a legal max. of 25km/h

    Some other kind of micro-car is frequently seen on Dutch roads which is something like small Smart, but bigger then these electrical cars.
    These latter vehicles have a petrol-engine, have a max. of 40km/h and you don't need a driver license for it.
    Read more

  • The car labeled "Tri-Magnum" was built from a set of plans sold by Mechanix Illustrated magazine in the early 1980s. The car was designed by Robert Q. Riley. It is based on a motorcycle drivetrain married to a Volkswagen front end. A web search will turn up a number of examples built by various individuals around the US. Mr. Riley has his own design firm and is presently working on a hybrid descendant of the Tri-Magnum.
    Read more

  • the one in http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=1133522911&size=o

    is called a carver, by Carver Engineering. You can see ab better shot of their tilt-vehicles at http://www.carver-engineering.com/, or you can go to http://flytheroad.com/ for a proposed hybrid variant by an American company.
    Read more

  • One of these cars is the carver, a Dutch autombile. (link)
    It has been tested by topgear, the video can be seen on youtube (link)
    .
    Enjoy

    Maarten

    I love this blog!
    Read more

  • Are any of these available in the U.S.A ?? How much do they cost?? Do they run on gas? What kind of mileage do they get? Where can I see them in person -are they legal in Missouri? I want to know more.
    Read more

  • Peach, looks like Corbin Sparrow and Smart car (in Canada) are the only ones available in North America.
    Read more

  • Peach (& Others) The Morgan Super Sport was produced in big numbers early on due to big tax credits offered at the time, but continued production through the 50's. They're good for freeway speed (70ish) stock, but most examples that you find today can go much faster. They've always been great club racers. They handle very well. I had a couple of friends with them in the San Francisco area and they come up for sale on eBay with some regularity.

    My guess is that pretty much anything that canb be registered for the road in California can be registered anywhere in the U.S. (You can certainly register things here in Florida that aren't legal there).

    You might want to look into one.
    Read more

  • The Norsjö Shopper was still quite common here in Sweden when I was growing up, at the end of the eighties. With an engine of less than 50cc, delivering a single horsepower, it was classified as a moped and could be driven without a license by anyone 15 or older. By that time it was mostly used by elderly ladies living in the countryside, though, except for a few that got in the way of the popular pastime of moped-tuning and got turned into three-wheeled deathtraps.
    Read more

  • There is a lot of strange and small cars on http://www.kvadd.net
    Read more

  • What about the Nash Metropolitan or MG midget? Or are these too big in comparison?
    Read more

  • Don't forget the CityEl (www.cityel.de) an electric vehicle capable of transporting one adult and a child around 60-100 kilometres at up to 70 km/h depending on the model
    Read more

  • Don't forget the Subaru 360. It was about the size of the Isetta.
    More cars here:

    http://www.microcarmuseum.com/tourindex.html
    Read more

  • Hi,

    the BMW Isetta was not called by the Germans "Coffin on wheels". It was the Messerschmitt KR 175 and it was called "Schneewittchen Sarg" = Snow White's Coffin.

    According to the fairytale Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs Snow White was buried in a glass coffin and the Isetta are hardly look like a coffin, but the Messerschmitt.

    Anyhow great site.

    Best regards

    Udo Doerge
    Read more

  • Forgot the Eshelman :)
    http://www.microcarmuseum.com/tour/eshelmanadultsport.html
    Read more

  • For those who like to view more New-Generation-Fun-Cars Infos, Videos & Fotos, look @

    http://www.karts2rent.de/
    Read more

  • Hungary had only ONE self-manufactured car called PULI:

    http://www.bparchiv.hu/magyar/kiadvany/bpn/49_50/091.jpg

    It has been manufactured in Hódmezővásárhely, which is by birth city.

    More pictures and some modified models:
    http://totalcar.hu/tesztek/haszon/szertartasko/
    Read more

  • I forgot to say, that the Puli was RATHER small. :) It should have the place among the collection :)
    Read more

  • Do Google image search on "Goggomobil". Goggo's were very popular 4 wheel microcars from the 50's.
    Read more

  • You are missing the Danish batterypowered ultramini car, 'Ellert'.

    http://www.ellert.info/

    http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellert

    It is still in production - now in Germany - under the name 'City El'.

    http://www.cityel.de/
    Read more

  • These car are beautiful to watch.But not comfortable to use.I think they are just showpieces.
    Read more

  • With the fuel prices skyrocketing, we surely will have to use these small cars.The best cars are the ones which are fuel efficient and environment friendly.
    http://www.latest-cars-in-the-world.blogspot.com
    Read more

  • Is there like some sort of mini Toyota? I know there's the Aygo, but anything smaller? Such as the B.M? (This may sound weird, but I've seen Erkel [from "Family Matters"]drive a BMW lsetta), and I was wondering if there is a small car for a kid like me to legally drive. Leave any suggestions if u find any!
    -------------------------------------
    THIS MESSAGE GOES OUT TO THE PUBLIC
    Read more

  • I'm amazed how famous the little Peel cars are, being from the Isle of Man - makes sense - a small city car for the smallest city there is. I'd love a little one of my own!
    Read more

  • Just another comment about the Isetta: as Udo put it, it's the Messerschmitt that is called Schneewittchensarg.
    The Isetta was called Knutschkugel, which means "snogging ball" according to wikipedia. I think you get the idea ;)

    Best regards, Anonymous.
    Read more

  • Nice post, I have a peugeot 206, my nieces smallest simplesy buggy doesnt fit in the boot, so i'll be changing when we are starting a family.
    Read more

  • Interestingly, lighting does not fork; it converges. The Tesla coil is, then, the terminus of the lighting, not the originator as you might think.

    I learned this from a meteorological friend of mine. He said that almost all of the lightning strikes we see photographed are ground-to-sky lightning; the true sky-to-ground bolt is very rare.
    Read more

  • fascinating comment... I did not know this.
    Read more

  • Me neither. Great but dangerous experiments.
    Read more

  • Lightning and tesla coil discharges are very different things. About the only thing in common is that they are both electrically induced air plasmas.

    Lightning is a pulsed DC current, produced when volumes of electrostatically charged atmosphere discharge to ground (or to another area of opposite charge.) A lighning 'strike' is usually one or more very brief, high current pulses in very quick succession. Usually too closely spaced to differentiate by eye, but sometimes you'll see a lighning bolt 'flicker' - you are seeing successive strikes along the same (or nearly same) ionisation path.

    Tesla coils are high frequency AC resonant transformers, and the arcs are thus high frequency AC, with broad spectral content up into the Megahertz range due to the ringing square wave primary coil excitation. As a result, the visible behavior of tesla arcs is quite different to lightning. The processes in action are too complicated to explain in detail here, but the dominating ones are: point discharge, skin effect, persistence of ionization paths in air, charge mobility in air within the HF electric field surrounding the tesla coil head, and distortions of the field due to active plasma paths. Which all intereact to produce the 'bushy' spreading arc tangles typical of Tesla coils.

    But, to address b. durbin's point, lightning (mostly) converges, but tesla arcs do actually diverge into the space around the coil, unless a single, direct arc forms to some nearby ground point. Its an AC current, and there is a single field source - the coil head. Hence, 'diverge' is a fair description.

    Btw, the photo of Tesla surrounded by arcs is a double exposure he arranged. Documented, sorry don't have ref handy.

    TerraHertz
    Read more

  • mystery #2 :
    any vehicle carrying explosives is not allowed past this sign.
    I have seen this one several times in France, mostly in small villages.
    Read more

  • The pink flier is from a Something Awful thread. It was awesome.
    Read more

  • Yes, it's true it's a french sign saying vehicles with explosives (oil, gaz) can't go this way.
    Read more

  • The one in Amsterdam is actually not that weird. The left arrow pointing to the right is for the tram, the right one pointing to the left is for cars.
    Read more

  • mystery #2, british version.

    http://www.highwaycode.gov.uk/signs04.htm
    Read more

  • Mystery #3 is from a MegaTokyo webcomic coffee mug (Kimiko's Lap Pour Blend):

    http://www.megagear.com/PhotoGallery.asp?ProductCode=MT+08%2D1004
    Read more

  • Mystery #1: Don't leave a child unattended in a car I guess. But normally there is no baby in the photo and it only means watch out for car theft or breaking in.
    Mystery #2: Hazardous materials cannot be transported beyond this point, there are several different types of this sign, according to which materials aren't allowed. There is a list of materials described for all signs.
    Read more

  • That “Mysterious Russian sign (possibly fake)” is clearly CGI, based on an old cartoon called “Hedgehog in the fog” (“Ёжик в тумане”).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedgehog_in_the_Fog
    http://hedgehoginmist.narod.ru/photoalbum.html
    Read more

  • The sign "prohibition of carrying an explosive cargo" is not for French only. This one is also in Russian Traffic Rules.
    Read more

  • mystery #2:
    this road sign exist in all european countries. It is usually only used in areas where transport of "real" explosives (like tnt, dynamite or gun powder) is common, f.ex. near a ammo factory or a coal mine. They may also be used at tunnel entrances and large bridges.
    Read more

  • Thanks, all
    I updated the post.
    Read more

  • Sadly, the one with the precision screwdriver set is also a Something Awful photoshop. I know, because I made it. :/

    Still, this was a fun article.
    Read more

  • Bill, thank you, I updated the credits. However my blogger version does not allow me to see your profile. Can you please email me with your name for more credit info.
    Read more

  • The first one is someone's attempt to copy writer Spike Milligan's gravestone, which say "I told you I was ill" in Gaelic. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/southern_counties/3742443.stm
    Read more

  • I went to the World Science Fiction Convention (WorldCon) in 2002. The convention center had posted several flyers up on various doors saying "THIS IS NOT A DOOR." Put a sign like that up and you get all sorts of editorial comments...

    This is a jar.
    This is not a wall. (On the wall.)
    It is a notice.
    It is Cezanne.
    (and very existential): This is not a sign.
    Read more

  • What's so strange about the sign with a frog? It just means watch out for frogs. Typically temporary signs placed in their mating season. It's meant to protect the frogs crossing the street (recognizable by squashing sound when driving).
    Read more

  • The sign forbidding taking a dump or pissing is in Estonia, Tallinn near the central trainstation "Balti Jaam"
    Read more

  • Mystery sign #1 "Caution: Michael Jackson's in town"
    Read more

  • Mysterious Russian sign (possibly fake)
    Migrating Lemmings crossing, maybe?
    Read more

  • The "Mysterious Russian sign (possibly fake)" is actually NOT fake! It's a picture of a hedgehog crossing the road. It is to warn drivers that there may be hedgehogs in the road and to attempt to avoid them.
    Read more

  • that "mysterious russian sign" - the hedgehog is from a cartoon, where the hedgehog wonders around a foggy hillside, and falls into a stream. so the setting where the sign is - it's perfect :)
    Read more

  • Re: "seen in Israeli bus"
    I agree the sign would be more appropriate in Israeli bus, but it is a really good street-art sticker from Prague subway (it was still in one of the trains a few weeks ago).
    Read more

  • the "french car sign" is also used for cars using liquid gas fuel cause they are classified as higly explosive
    Read more

  • So "mysterious hedgehog" is realy from "Hedgehog in a fog" short stop-mtion russian animation.
    About the frog sign, it's in Czech republic where on a certain road frogs strted mass crossing the road on certain month.
    Read more

  • Excellent set! Thanks :)
    Read more

  • Nice one as always. Many thanks.
    Read more


Send us your topic ideas, site suggestions, rants or sweet unpublished poetry. We love to hear from you.



Misc.:
Compare Prices
Samsung LED TV






Blu