The amazing and cool photo thread

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ok, who is having more fun here?
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This baby hippopotamus survived the Tsunami waves of 2004 on the Kenyan coast only to form a strong bond with a giant male century-old tortoise in an animal Facility in the port city of Mombassa.

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I want to go into an explanation of how the caption is wrong, but...

Where am I supposed to set my plate? Congratulations optical illusionist, physics magician, artist person. You created a table that I can't use.

Ok. Now that I have that out of my system: the table isn't being held up by the buckets. The buckets are holding it down,


And why would you make a table you can't use?

Sorry, the science part and the common sense part of my brain are fighting this one out.
 
If the buckets weren't there then the tabletop would fall down. So the buckets are both holding it up and holding it down. Wrapping my head around that was a bit of a struggle.

Oh, and there's plenty of space for plates, if the table is the size of a card table which it appears to be.
 
Oh, and there's plenty of space for plates, if the table is the size of a card table which it appears to be.
Adding weight to the table would cause it to drop.

And yes, just because it's a table doesn't mean it has to be practical in this particular instance.
 
If you were to put anything on the table, it would need an equal weight put in the buckets first, spread equally amongst the buckets. For example, if I was to put a 2Kg weight on the table, I would need to place four 500g weights in each of the buckets first.
 
If you kept adding weight to the buckets, wouldn't the table eventually lift them up with their own weight?

Assuming the ropes don't break.

EDIT: Nevermind, the ropes would need to extend because it's in equilibrium.
 
Adding a crap ton of weight to all the buckets wouldn't make the table drop* because the exact amount of weight they're pushing down with equals the amount of force on the table trying to lift it, all thanks to the pulleys.

Also, if the buckets were heavy enough, adding a few plates would do next to nothing to the balance.

*Until the ceiling joists snapped, but then you have other problems besides your table on the floor and a couple of spilled buckets!
 
Adding weight to the table would cause it to drop.
Only if the weight of the table plus the plates exceeded the weight of the buckets. Besides, you could put the pickles & relish etc in the buckets to offset the plates.

This is why, incidentally, we're told not to put our elbows on the table.
 
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Pushing a Huey off the deck.

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In April 1975, South Vietnamese Air Force Major Buang-Ly loaded his wife and five children into a two-seat Cessna O-1 Bird Dog and took off from Con Son Island. In an attempt to save his family as South Vietnam fell. Evading enemy ground fire, Major Buang headed out to sea where he spotted the carrier Midway. The Midway's crew attempted to contact the aircraft on emergency frequencies but the pilot continued to circle overhead with his landing lights turned on. When a spotter reported that there were at least four people in the two-place aircraft, all thoughts of forcing the pilot to ditch alongside were abandoned - it was unlikely the passengers of the overloaded Bird Dog could survive the ditching and safely egress before the plane sank.

After three tries, Major Buang managed to drop a note from a low pass over the deck: "Can you move the helicopter to the other side, I can land on your runway, I can fly for one hour more, we have enough time to move. Please rescue me! Major Buang, wife and 5 child."

Lawrence (Larry) Cleveland Chambers (born June 10, 1929) was the first African American to command a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier and the first African American graduate of the Naval Academy to reach flag rank. Chambers was in command of the USS Midway during Operation Frequent Wind.

Even though an admiral currently on board the USS Midway said the plane should be ordered to ditch in the ocean, Chambers knew that doing so would likely kill most of the people on it. Instead, he ordered that the arresting wires be removed and that any helicopters that could not be safely and quickly be relocated should be pushed over the side. To get the job done he called for volunteers, and soon every available seaman was on deck, regardless of rank or duty, to provide the manpower to get the job done.

With a 500-foot ceiling, five miles visibility, light rain, and 15 knots of surface wind, Chambers ordered the ship to make 25 knots into the wind. Warnings about the dangerous downdrafts created behind a steaming carrier were transmitted blind in both Vietnamese and English.

To make matters worse, five additional UH-1s landed and cluttered up the deck. Without hesitation, Chambers ordered them scuttled as well.

The aircraft cleared the ramp and touched down on center line at the normal touchdown point. Had he been equipped with a tailhook he could have bagged a number 3 wire. He bounced once and came stop abeam of the island, amid a wildly cheering, arms-waving flight deck crew.

Major Buang was escorted to the bridge where Captain Chambers congratulated him on his outstanding airmanship and his bravery in risking everything on a gamble beyond the point of no return without knowing for certain a carrier would be where he needed it. The crew of the Midway was so impressed that they established a fund to help him and his family get settled in the United States. The Bird Dog that Major Buang landed is now on display at the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, FL

At the time, Chambers had only been in command of the USS Midway for four or five weeks and believed that his order would get him court martialed. He also called Major Buang-Ly the "bravest man I have ever met in my life" and said of his decision to allow Lee to land that "When a man has the courage to put his family in a plane and make a daring escape like that, you have to have the heart to let him in."
 
Wow..... what a story.... Sad about the Choppers, though....

Question, though.... Did the Captain actually get court marshalled?

I wouldn't think so, if he did, then it wouldn't have said that he was worried about getting court martialed, but rather that he did.

And yeah, I was thinking that they could take off to get them off the deck.

But maybe they were low on fuel and it'd take too long to get them ready.
 
I first heard of drip ice castles in 1994. They were originally made by putting a garden hose up on a pole in a place (Utah that first year) that doesn't go over freezing for weeks on end, and just left the hose to drip.

The first one just got big, but apparently, they have become more works of art since then:
http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/brent-christensen-ice-castles

And for a bit of a story about this one:
http://curbed.com/archives/2013/02/15/touring-a-sculptors-impossibly-beautiful-icicle-castles.php

I'm not sure I can find pictures of the original one I heard of, but that's long enough ago, I'm not worried about it.

Oh, and after.... what.... 3 months....? I've finished going through this thread! Can't wait for more pics!
 
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TB
Adding a crap ton of weight to all the buckets wouldn't make the table drop* because the exact amount of weight they're pushing down with equals the amount of force on the table trying to lift it, all thanks to the pulleys.

Also, if the buckets were heavy enough, adding a few plates would do next to nothing to the balance.

*Until the ceiling joists snapped, but then you have other problems besides your table on the floor and a couple of spilled buckets!

Thanks for getting there way before me. I want to say it anyway though.

The table stays up because the buckets are heavier than the table. Doesn't matter how much heavier, just heavier. Adding a plate to the table is like adding weight to the table. As long as the buckets are heavier, the table stays up. So if you want to use the table, just make sure the buckets are heavier than the weight of the table and everything on the table combined.
 
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