Booo!Aaaaaand it's gone.
--Patrick
Vivaldi apparently was good for more than just violins, though I don't know if you could call human flesh a woodwind.It's amazing how well the classical music set it off.
Blah de blah SKIN FLUTE yep yep"human flesh a woodwind."
So many puns, so little time...
The Kennedy one was funny, but then they followed it up with the Arcimboldo painting SHOOTING ACTUAL RASBERRIES and I lost it.Oh my god, when they started in with the raspberries I lost it
... The fuck was that thing?No, Montreal, that sound isn't somebody mowing his lawn late at night, it's a gigantic fireball moseying its way across town on your powerlines.
... The fuck was that thing?
I'm pretty sure that's like, some electricity based super villain, traveling through the power lines.
Yeah... whoever that Bruce Timm creation is.
Yeah... whoever that Bruce Timm creation is.
The fact that I can't name the character, but can quickly tell the artist, should be a compliment to Timm.
News flash, nerd - Bruce Timm is the only reason anybody gives a shit about DC.
(It was LiveWire)
Ah, I took the tone as dismissive.The fact that I can't name the character, but can quickly tell the artist, should be a compliment to Timm.
Although, sometimes I confuse Bruce Timm with Tim Sale, just because of the names.
Here's an explanation:... The fuck was that thing?
It's somewhat akin to a Jacob's ladder... I think.This was a high impedance electrical arcing fault. Usually the upstream protective device (ie. fuse, relay/breaker, recloser, etc.) will interrupt these types of faults and prevent them from continuing. They can start because of tree branches or animals or lightning strikes or anything that can bridge two phases or a phase and ground. The air becomes ionized and no longer acts as an insulator but a conductor. This arc is interesting because it was able to be sustained for such a long period of time.
If the fault has a high enough impedance, the current is actually not very high in comparison to regular faults. This makes it very difficult for the protective device to clear the fault since it the current can even be lower than the normal "load" current. The utility should be able to analyze any event reports in the area from the relays to try and determine what happened and if it can be prevented in the future.
Yup.Here's an explanation: It's somewhat akin to a Jacob's ladder... I think.
Something like this could only happen...in Canada.a gigantic fireball moseying its way across town on your powerlines.
Did you see the transcript?Russians.
Also, Art.Driver: Oh, we float.
Passenger: Where are we going?
Driver: I don’t know. Maybe to the shore.
Passenger: Don’t turn the wheel, it’s useless.
I love that video so much. Saw it a few years ago. "Come get me!" still cracks me up.Steve's scissorlift DUI