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The boy who played with fusion
POPSCI ^
| Posted 02.14.2012 at 12:52 pm
| Tom Clynes
Posted on 12/27/2012 4:59:49 PM PST by virgil283
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....."I would say someone like him comes along maybe once in a generation, Johnson says. Hes not just smart; hes cool and articulate. I think he may be the most amazing kid Ive ever met....(H/T instapundit)
1
posted on
12/27/2012 4:59:55 PM PST
by
virgil283
To: virgil283
One afternoon, Tiffany ducked her head out of the door to the garage and spotted Taylor, in his canary yellow nuclear-technicians coveralls, watching a pool of liquid spreading across the concrete floor.
Tay, its time for supper.
I think Im going to have to clean this up first.
Thats not the stuff you said would kill us if it broke open, is it?
I dont think so, he said. Not instantly.
LOL
2
posted on
12/27/2012 5:11:17 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
To: virgil283
This is an excellent story about parents who guided their genus sons into fulfilling scientific careers.... Plus it is very well written even by today's standards...
3
posted on
12/27/2012 5:11:35 PM PST
by
virgil283
( "He is proud, knowing nothing, but doting about questions and strifes of words, whereof cometh envy)
To: virgil283
My nephew wanted a laboratorry set. His grandparents complied. Then he started raiding the kitchen for materials and requesting slow-burning fuses - he was intending to make explosives!
So, I bought him a book on pumpkin chunking and other delightful ways to make object fly while making big booms. Since the only location in our backyard that a trebuchet would be able to work resulted in two houses being spattered with pumpkin entrails, nephew and his best friend made the war engine at the friend’s house.
Only their flock of sheep was terrorized.
4
posted on
12/27/2012 5:14:18 PM PST
by
SatinDoll
(NATURAL BORN CITZEN: BORN IN THE USA OF CITIZEN PARENTS.)
To: virgil283
5
posted on
12/27/2012 5:15:15 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
To: virgil283
Safety Third.
6
posted on
12/27/2012 5:18:53 PM PST
by
Tupelo
(I'm an old man and most people hate me, but I don't like them either so that makes it all even.)
To: virgil283
The son of one of my cousins started out like that.
Full scholarship to study both chemical and aeronautic engineering.
Dropped out halfway through. Now he checks tire pressures and cleans the windows on Air Force planes. With luck, if he re-ups, they will maybe let him pump fuel into them.
To: SatinDoll
I built the grandsons a small-scale trebouchet. They be geeks with hands on skills.
/johnny
To: JRandomFreeper
9
posted on
12/27/2012 5:44:24 PM PST
by
jaz.357
(Welcome to hell. Here's your accordion.)
To: virgil283
The kids sat on the operators lap and took turns at the controls, guiding the boom as it swung above the rooftops on Northern Hills Drive.... That's really stupid. I doubt that happened. That is incredibly dangerous.
10
posted on
12/27/2012 5:48:30 PM PST
by
Cyber Liberty
(Obama considers the Third World morally superior to the United States.)
To: cripplecreek
Thank you for posting this amazing story.
11
posted on
12/27/2012 5:55:17 PM PST
by
Lurker
(Violence is rarely the answer. But when it is it is the only answer.)
To: Cyber Liberty
That's really stupid. I doubt that happened. That is incredibly dangerous. It happened decades ago. Unwad your panties.
And no, it's not particularly dangerous. I've been on job sites where heavy equipment was lifted over rooftops. As long as a certified operator is running the equipment, it's safe enough.
If it was incredibly dangerous, those of us that sat in grand-dad's lap while he drove, and learned to drive like that would all be dead.
Lord, I dislike sissies.
/johnny
To: SatinDoll
I love that word, Trebuchet. Maybe you should bring him to Delaware for the World Punkin Chunkin Championship.
To: virgil283
Regarding Smart Babies ~ we could use that crane.
14
posted on
12/27/2012 6:18:45 PM PST
by
muawiyah
To: cripplecreek; virgil283
I am kind of curious if after this article was published if this family got a visit from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
It just sounds to me like they have a lot of material in their garage that would require license from the NRC to posses and store.
And that stuff that he spilled in the garage sounds like a hazardous material that would be regulated.
15
posted on
12/27/2012 6:28:24 PM PST
by
Pontiac
(The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.)
To: virgil283
16
posted on
12/27/2012 7:00:19 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
To: 6SJ7; AdmSmith; AFPhys; Arkinsaw; allmost; aristotleman; autumnraine; Beowulf; Bones75; BroJoeK; ...
17
posted on
12/27/2012 7:00:42 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
To: JRandomFreeper
And no, it's not particularly dangerous. I've been on job sites where heavy equipment was lifted over rooftops. As long as a certified operator is running the equipment, it's safe enough. I've seen pictures of a suburban home with it's attic sliced clean through to the eves and a crane boom still laid out nearly horizontal. the crane itself was standing on two outriggers with the base plate near 70° out of plumb. I assume the operator was a pro but you need more counterweights when you lift over the side, oops!
I also saw a real life mobile hydraulic crane laying on it's side with the boom helplessly laying out horizontal. It was a brand spanking new model and was rolled out for a promotional photo shoot with the CEO and the Chief Engineer in attendance. The professional operator just extended the boom out with a modest load and forgot to set his outriggers. I know the operator was a pro because he worked for the company that built the machine. The "accident" happened in the company parking lot (SE Pennsylvania). They had to bring in another crane to stand it back up again!
Then of course there was the crane disaster with the 15,000 ton mobile crane lifting sections of the movable roof for Miller Park Stadium in Milwaukee. Big Blue collapsed with a load of 450 tons on the hook. Three people were killed, several injured and millions of dollars in damage and lost time. The "accident" was blamed on side wind loading. The entire job was staffed by a steel erection firm and it still managed to collapse.
The best advice is to have a care where you stand when there is high steeel flying overhead.
Regards,
GtG
18
posted on
12/27/2012 7:15:23 PM PST
by
Gandalf_The_Gray
(I live in my own little world, I like it 'cuz they know me here.)
To: virgil283
Yeah but I looked at his eyes.....this kid is either going to go bonkers and sit in a corner wondering about whatever or he is going to go out and slaughter dozens of others who aren’t him.
19
posted on
12/27/2012 7:24:28 PM PST
by
Nifster
To: Gandalf_The_Gray
Interesting.
I own and drive large feller/bunchers. On TV they always show them cutting little trees on flat ground. I laugh when I see it. My buncher is the biggest one Cat makes the cutting head alone weighs over 4K lbs. I work trees up to 34” on the stump on steep ground. The tracks follow the contours of the ground but I have to keep the cab level as I cut and grab the tree then maintain level as I pivot the cab and put the tree in a pile. No I do not use the automatic leveler It doesn't work that well and just screws things up. It is a bit like flying a chopper. I constantly adjust and control 9 different axises at the same time with a button under each finger and thumb, a joy stick in each hand and peddles under my feet. All of that with a 30K lb tree on the end of the boom and the leverage of the weight of the tall fir and pine trees that sticks up in the air 200'. Oh what fun it is to run a big buncher.
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