paulvallandigham
Passed On
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2006
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Jeremy: If you " work in an office", you have to know an engineer, or someone who does. Call them, and ask them about anything like this.
I have a twin brother who is a Professional Mechanical Engineer, with a master's Degree in Control theory. He has a couple of reference books at his desk he turns to and looks up the various strengths of metals used in all kinds of things. He says these are standard tests for Engineers, both Civil, and Mechanical.
I happen to agree with those who have already expressed the sentiment that this article should never have been published. When I was 7 and 8 years old, we kids experimented with making pipe bombs- small ones-- which we blew up in deep holes we dug out in the back of the garden. Mostly, it was curiousity to see if we could do it. We used gunpowder from blank cartridges that failed to fire at the Memorial, and 4th of July parades, flash powder scraped from unexploded firecrackers, smokeless powder someone found in their father's reloading room, etc. We knew that what we were making was seriously dangerous, even at that age, and that is why we spent half an hour digging a deep hole in the ground to contain any explosive " Shrapnel. ( think of a post hole.) That is also one of the reasons I don't by excuses that young kids over age 5 don't know a real gun from a fake, and can't appreciate their danger. Unless the kid is retarded, I don't buy it. I have had too many very young students in my Hunter Safety Classes who have been well motivated and trained by their parents before taking the class, to believe that all kids are that stupid.
Obviously, the author of this piece is a victim of retarded development. He's stuck on "5".
I have a twin brother who is a Professional Mechanical Engineer, with a master's Degree in Control theory. He has a couple of reference books at his desk he turns to and looks up the various strengths of metals used in all kinds of things. He says these are standard tests for Engineers, both Civil, and Mechanical.
I happen to agree with those who have already expressed the sentiment that this article should never have been published. When I was 7 and 8 years old, we kids experimented with making pipe bombs- small ones-- which we blew up in deep holes we dug out in the back of the garden. Mostly, it was curiousity to see if we could do it. We used gunpowder from blank cartridges that failed to fire at the Memorial, and 4th of July parades, flash powder scraped from unexploded firecrackers, smokeless powder someone found in their father's reloading room, etc. We knew that what we were making was seriously dangerous, even at that age, and that is why we spent half an hour digging a deep hole in the ground to contain any explosive " Shrapnel. ( think of a post hole.) That is also one of the reasons I don't by excuses that young kids over age 5 don't know a real gun from a fake, and can't appreciate their danger. Unless the kid is retarded, I don't buy it. I have had too many very young students in my Hunter Safety Classes who have been well motivated and trained by their parents before taking the class, to believe that all kids are that stupid.
Obviously, the author of this piece is a victim of retarded development. He's stuck on "5".