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Search Result for: take off Cool
An impressive stunt from two professionals. The stunt itself is clearly a great achievement and as you can see has been well prepared. Although the take-off was perfect, I think that the landing on the other side of the river was a little off, and they can work some more on it, before they can go mainstream. Enjoy this spectacular stunt! Wow!
This video is from Angola. An airplane's tyre catches fire and the pilot is forced to abort, and also runs off the runway. The funny thing in this vid is the way the airport maintainance crew is sitting and taking photos, instead of rushing to help
A very cool takeoff by a glider on a mountain, while standing still! Guess he has some wheels to land this thing, or it's gonna be Fred Flintstone style all the way. Lol.
This particular C-130 is the so called "Fat Albert" belonging to the Blue Angels. It's very cool to see this beast take off almost vertically like a jet does with its afterburners. Enjoy!
Funny
It was probably staged, or the guys filming had something to do with it...either way it's an oportunity to see a pick-up truck take a dive off a ferry
The P50 has a 49cc moped engine, and is the smallest car ever to be mass produced. Granted, that comfort, wasn't the main advantage for the car, but you can take it with you at the office. Lol. Enjoy!
A hilarious compilation, of snow face plants, and all-round funny mishaps on the slopes. It's a little something to take your mind off things! Enjoy!
A very funny video in which you can hear the flight attendant make some funny jokes about the usual boring stuff. It's a pretty good strategy for making people really pay attention! Enjoy!
Ouch
At take off an F-18 dual-seat fighter plane hits a bird. Fortunately the pilots manage to eject just in-time, but the plane and the bird didn't make it.
Amazing
This video of a Russian IL-76 fully loaded cargo plane is from Australia. The airplane uses ALL of the runway to takeoff. If they had another ounce of weight...they would have made the news. Crickey, that was close!
This beach is so close to the runway, that a 747 preparing for take off literally blows people into the water!
Here's what happens when a 747 aborts a take off too late, and on top of everything in heavy rain! Spoiler: The plane doesn't make it!
A Japanese guy with an amazing talent. He can fully take off his clothes in 7.31 seconds. The guy is unbelievable. Now, if only a woman would learn this...
As the title says here's a video clip of a Russian Suhoi 33 which does a "Cobra" maneuver immediately after taking off from the Russian Carrier. The maneuver is said to take its name from an incident on the 17th of July, 1998 when the carrier landing mistake of Pavel Podguzov was turned into a new aerobatic element - "gurza Podguzova" of "Podguzov viper". Of course, that only pilot's professionalism and highest Su-33 flight performance can execute this fantastic maneuver which can easily become a disaster. There is a moment there after the take-off from the Russian carrier when the plane looks like it is floating in mid-air. Wow! Enjoy this very spectacular video clip!
Sexy
Hot girl teases the body and the mind! She doesn't take it all off, but it is still a worthwhile watching and sexy clip. Enjoy!
Technology and Health News
The habitual consumption of alcohol reduces the size of brain mass. This suggests a study in Neurology magazine.
The more we drink, the more our brains will decrease. To suggest this is a report of Wellesley College, Massachusetts, published in the journal Archives of Neurology (a publication of Jama) and this week the American Academy of Neurology.
We know that the volume of the brain decreases with age (about 1.9 percent every ten years). This physiological reduction is accompanied by an increase in white matter lesions and both factors - reminiscent of the authors - are related to cognitive problems like memory.
While some scholars have suggested a possible positive effect of alcohol on reducing the normal volume of brain mass, this new study suggests just the opposite. Data was collected on a sample of over 1,800 individuals aged between 55 and 64 years, most consumers of alcohol or ex-drinkers, which carried out magnetic resonance (participants in the Framingham Offspring fall Study, a study of the cardiovascular problems started in 1971, for which it was collected information on weekly consumption of alcohol, sex, body mass index and other physiological parameters). The results show that there is a significant correlation between alcohol intake and reduction of brain volume, especially in women which usually consume less alcohol than men.
A new advanced thermometer, based on noise Johnson, increased by five times the accuracy of current systems
After seven years of work, researchers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (Nist), the U.S. organization for the development of technologies, have managed to build a new type of thermometer, Johnson Noise Thermometer (Jnt), defined by the same scientists a goal of thermometry, which advances to five times the current state of the art. The new device will in fact take measurements of extreme precision, never obtained so far, fundamental for basic research and for the definition of units of measurement. At the head of the project is Sam Benz, the Quantum Devices Group, which officially presented it on June 9th at a conference on measures of accuracy in Broomfield, Colorado.
The new thermometer provides the temperature starting from noise Johnson (hence the name), generated by the random motion of electrons inside a resistance. This measure is directly proportional to the temperature, and the system makes it possible to reduce the error without any additional calibrations. "All measurements are electrical, and do not require volumes of gas or mechanical systems that sometimes, depending on environmental conditions, could give approximate results." says Benz, " beauty is that the measurement is also very simple to perform. "
Even a visual stimulus extremely short, less than millisecond, affects the decoding of information in the nervous system.
The Ferrari of insects, the horsefly, a tiny acrobat who moves at high speed, has proved that even a very short visual stimulus (on the scale of milliseconds) affects decoding information in the nervous system. This was discovered by scientists in universities of Indiana, Princeton (New Jersey) and the Los Alamos National Laboratory (New Mexico), one of the largest multidisciplinary institutions in the world.
A human being is unable to record the continuous change of scenery and should have a supra-sensory stimulation. But this is a fly: its nervous system processes information very quickly so that the insect can adapt to what he sees with a reaction time of 30 milliseconds. "During the flight," says Ruyter van Steveninck University of Indiana, "the horsefly must quickly analyze a number of complex information and, because of its ability to move rapidly, it is reasonable to think that the way it deciphers level sensory-motor data is optimal. We then decided to study its visual system to understand how his brain can order a continuous stream of very complex data in such an efficient way. "
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