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Phuzun posted:Parking brake, never heard of it. No poo poo, I was a manager of a place that we'll just say rhymes with "Iffy Lube" for about 5 years. We'd have customers leave their cars and walk off to get lunch or whatever, and we'd park 'em out front. One daft bitch came back, paid, hopped in, and spent about five minutes revving her motor, and then walked into the waiting area saying "you guys broke my car!" No, dumbass, here's your brake release lever. Have a nice day and learn how to loving operate a car.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 12:56 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:24 |
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spankmeister posted:If they left their phones in the car, what were they using to film the incident with???? Farmdizzle posted:No poo poo, I was a manager of a place that we'll just say rhymes with "Iffy Lube" for about 5 years. We'd have customers leave their cars and walk off to get lunch or whatever, and we'd park 'em out front. One daft bitch came back, paid, hopped in, and spent about five minutes revving her motor, and then walked into the waiting area saying "you guys broke my car!"
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 13:06 |
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Farmdizzle posted:No. :itsajoke:
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 13:42 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhpMrPCz3bY
Synthbuttrange fucked around with this message at 14:27 on Dec 31, 2016 |
# ? Dec 31, 2016 14:24 |
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if that was america, they would have fired 53 warning shots through the back window.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 14:28 |
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why did he stop, and not drive off into the night
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 14:30 |
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He was actually there to pick up someone from the airport and realized he left without them
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 14:30 |
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Oh I so want to shoot hidden video of my boss telling me to lift him to the top of the warehouse racks on the forklift with him just standing on the forks and then crawling all over pallets of stuff up there. Like literally being a monkey jumping from pallet to pallet. There are way to many identifying marks for me to stay anonymous and the boss in question is the owner too.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 14:58 |
Humphreys posted:Oh I so want to shoot hidden video of my boss telling me to lift him to the top of the warehouse racks on the forklift with him just standing on the forks and then crawling all over pallets of stuff up there. Like literally being a monkey jumping from pallet to pallet. There are way to many identifying marks for me to stay anonymous and the boss in question is the owner too. Ram the steel so he falls off like in every other warehouse video we have ever seen.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:27 |
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Humphreys posted:Oh I so want to shoot hidden video of my boss telling me to lift him to the top of the warehouse racks on the forklift with him just standing on the forks and then crawling all over pallets of stuff up there. Like literally being a monkey jumping from pallet to pallet. There are way to many identifying marks for me to stay anonymous and the boss in question is the owner too. What's your endgame? Reporting or just fuel for the thread?
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:30 |
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Secretly establish a life insurance policy for him that pays to you and justify it as: if my boss/the owner dies, I might be out of work and I have to provide for my family, of course. I'm pretty sure there's a Law and Order or American Greed or something about this where the guy in the forklift loses patience after his boss's risky antics somehow don't end with him getting dead so he just murders him.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:35 |
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mostlygray posted:Parking brakes don't work well in reverse. What would give you this idea? Parking brakes work equally well in both directions. In most vehicles they're just a cable-actuated drum brake (generally inside the rear discs) which works exactly the same as the rear brakes still to this day found on cheap cars. On a few higher-end vehicles where the rear disc doesn't have the space for this it's an additional cable-actuated caliper. Odds are that truck was an automatic, and most automatic owners pretend the parking brake doesn't exist 99.99999% of the time, then when they actually need it the cable snaps or it's so far out of adjustment that it doesn't hold.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:35 |
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http://i.imgur.com/7qeKEmS.gifv edit: gently caress it, I can't get this video to be visible in the post.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:40 |
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Onkel Hedwig posted:http://i.imgur.com/7qeKEmS.gifv I've watched this a couple times over, and I'm pretty sure the crane operator is so on the ball here that he lifts up before the roof even starts to fall.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:45 |
Thomamelas posted:As per this, https://fas.org/sgp/othergov/doe/lanl/pubs/00326640.pdf there were still detectable amounts in his urine during the 70's. I'm sure there were. Minute amounts of it will be excreted for the remainder of your life if you ingest the stuff, it sticks around that well. I don't have the retention factor data in front of me right now but I'm certain that it's over 90% and the biological half life is quite long, with a physical half life of 24,110 years. It really does not like to leave your body, but some small fraction of it will as long as it's present inside you. The issue is that "detectable amounts" are insanely small in most cases. Alpha radiation in your urine is not at all common, and in most cases people don't screen for it unless they suspect you've been exposed. In his case they know to screen for it, but unless you work directly in the weapons industry or some bizarre niche of the nuclear industry at large (check source manufacturing maybe?) it's not going to happen. Testing for this involves putting the urine in a liquid scintillator and looking for light flashes, which you'll get from the alphas and the associated gammas. Because there should be zero, even a few flashes are enough for someone to determine there's contamination. Internal dosimetry is weird and I'm not terribly great at it, but usually the results are "welp, can't do much about this." You can use chelation to remove heavy metals from the blood stream, but that doesn't do poo poo for plutonium because it is mostly in your bone structure and not freely in your blood stream. Mostly it's about identifying what, how much, and when you were exposed to figure out what the health outcomes will look like.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 16:51 |
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Log082 posted:I've watched this a couple times over, and I'm pretty sure the crane operator is so on the ball here that he lifts up before the roof even starts to fall. work is 10 times easier when the safety guy calls in sick.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 17:18 |
Log082 posted:I've watched this a couple times over, and I'm pretty sure the crane operator is so on the ball here that he lifts up before the roof even starts to fall. You can see the treads spinning under the vehicle as it drills, so he probably didn't even lower him onto the roof at ALL. spankmeister posted:Confirm. Who leaves everything in a vehicle? Even if it's not at risk of rolling off, that's a great place to just leave all your valuables to get stolen while everyone is gone.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 17:46 |
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Here's something every safety officer and OSHA inspectors cringes at. https://i.imgur.com/7qeKEmS.gifv
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 17:58 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Who leaves everything in a vehicle? Even if it's not at risk of rolling off, that's a great place to just leave all your valuables to get stolen while everyone is gone. uhh it was filled with backpackers who were presumably on the way to somewhere and who unloads all their luggage for a 30 minute ferry ride?
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:01 |
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Rojo_Sombrero posted:Here's something every safety officer and OSHA inspectors cringes at. Seems fine to me, they are practicing proper personal protective equipment when working at height, not just for people but for vehicles as well.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:02 |
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Applebee123 posted:Seems fine to me, they are practicing proper personal protective equipment when working at height, not just for people but for vehicles as well. High vis vest Helmet Tether Checks out
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:09 |
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Rojo_Sombrero posted:Here's something every safety officer and OSHA inspectors cringes at. same page reposts?
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:12 |
LUBE UP YOUR BUTT posted:uhh it was filled with backpackers who were presumably on the way to somewhere and who unloads all their luggage for a 30 minute ferry ride? Yeah but they didn't even have their phones, passports, and apparently wallets (since their cards went down with the jeep) on their person. It's one thing not unloading their luggage, but not even having your phone and wallet with you?
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:21 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Yeah but they didn't even have their phones, passports, and apparently wallets (since their cards went down with the jeep) on their person. It's one thing not unloading their luggage, but not even having your phone and wallet with you? The barge is just a floating platform with engines so they didn't need their wallets for anything, they were between the mainland and an island so there probably wasn't any phone reception and I doubt the barge had wifi so their phones were useless except I guess for playing solitaire, plus they weren't travelling internationally so they weren't going to need their passports at any point. Also as far as they were concerned all that stuff was a lot safer in the car.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:50 |
Snowglobe of Doom posted:The barge is just a floating platform with engines so they didn't need their wallets for anything, they were between the mainland and an island so there probably wasn't any phone reception and I doubt the barge had wifi so their phones were useless except I guess for playing solitaire, plus they weren't travelling internationally so they weren't going to need their passports at any point. Maybe it's just me, but I never leave my phone or wallet anywhere if I'm not in my own house or a hotel room. I keep them secure in my pockets where nobody can grab them and they can't be left behind by accident.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 18:54 |
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Rojo_Sombrero posted:Here's something every safety officer and OSHA inspectors cringes at. I don't know what this is but it's not loading and spiking my CPU to 100% until I close the browser.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:02 |
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Why are they calling it a barge? Looks like a ferry to me. A ferry with a ramp that should be raised before embarking so that the cars don't roll of
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:03 |
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I can't figure out how to embed a gifv from my phone... https://i.imgur.com/7qeKEmS.gifv
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:38 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Maybe it's just me, but I never leave my phone or wallet anywhere if I'm not in my own house or a hotel room. I keep them secure in my pockets where nobody can grab them and they can't be left behind by accident. That'd usually be a good idea but your pocket often isn't the safest place when you're on a boat out at sea, poo poo's likely to get wet.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:39 |
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Snowglobe of Doom posted:That'd usually be a good idea but your pocket often isn't the safest place when you're on a boat out at sea, poo poo's likely to get wet. You're not wrong but in this case they still got wet
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:41 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Maybe it's just me, but I never leave my phone or wallet anywhere if I'm not in my own house or a hotel room. I keep them secure in my pockets where nobody can grab them and they can't be left behind by accident. My phone's always on me, but I leave my wallet in my car for the most part if I'm somewhere I won't need it. Especially on an open ferry, the risk of being pickpocketed seems greater than the risk of someone breaking in to a car.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 19:46 |
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https://i.imgur.com/7qeKEmS.gifv Yo, check out this gif. Safety guys hate him!
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 20:03 |
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JoelJoel posted:Yo, check out this gif. Safety guys hate him! Posted separately by 4 people on the same page...is that a record?
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 20:10 |
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I suspect #3 and #4 might be ironic.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 20:26 |
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Olothreutes posted:The issue is that "detectable amounts" are insanely small in most cases. Alpha radiation in your urine is not at all common, and in most cases people don't screen for it unless they suspect you've been exposed. In his case they know to screen for it, but unless you work directly in the weapons industry or some bizarre niche of the nuclear industry at large (check source manufacturing maybe?) it's not going to happen. Testing for this involves putting the urine in a liquid scintillator and looking for light flashes, which you'll get from the alphas and the associated gammas. Because there should be zero, even a few flashes are enough for someone to determine there's contamination.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 20:37 |
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Pyroclastic posted:Yeah, in the posted video, you can see after he fails to pry open the passenger door, he hits one of the tires on his trailer in frustration/anger when he realizes the fire's getting too large too quickly for him to get into the tanker's cab. Poor bastard probably wakes up with nightmares about it regularly.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 20:51 |
wolrah posted:My phone's always on me, but I leave my wallet in my car for the most part if I'm somewhere I won't need it. Especially on an open ferry, the risk of being pickpocketed seems greater than the risk of someone breaking in to a car. Keep your wallet in your front pocket and buy pants with good pockets? wolrah posted:My phone's always on me, but I leave my wallet in my car for the most part if I'm somewhere I won't need it. Especially on an open ferry, the risk of being pickpocketed seems greater than the risk of someone breaking in to a car. Maybe if you're hanging halfway off a sailboat trying to turn it, but they were on a pretty standard ferry. Your wallet isn't going to get wet unless you fall overboard or the ferry sinks.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 21:03 |
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wolrah posted:My phone's always on me, but I leave my wallet in my car for the most part if I'm somewhere I won't need it. Especially on an open ferry, the risk of being pickpocketed seems greater than the risk of someone breaking in to a car.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 23:12 |
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 23:21 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:24 |
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Cugel the Clever posted:...what third-world country do you live in that pickpocketing is still a thing? Either way, just wear a jacket with an inside pocket. lol just lol Anywhere a subway exists, anywhere street performers exist, anywhere you're forced into close contact with people there will be pickpocketing for obvious reasons. If you live somewhere that pickpocketing happens all the time (i.e. a city) you might want to consider keeping your wallet in a breast pocket and zipping up your jacket, instead of having it in your trousers/backpack/handbag. You might think you are paying attention but really you're not and there's a good chance if they pick you you wont even realise.
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# ? Dec 31, 2016 23:31 |