• Here is a link to the full explanation: https://rollitup.org/t/welcome-back-did-you-try-turning-it-off-and-on-again.1104810/

Whats YOUR DREAM!!!

wawa007

Member
Hi u guys and gal's i was watching today on a tv live free fall from over 100.000 feet , a guy name Felix had his dream and he fallow it , u guys can watch that short version on this you tube link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHySOWwVrTU

I'm a sky diver myself but my dream is to fly lol sounds crazy wright , well not so much ,
here is a version of my dream .... watch it and enjoy it :))))

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWfph3iNC-k

sooooo.... my fellow tokers i was wondering what ur dreams are and do u do anything about it :).....?
i got few other things to keep my gear running like 196 mph on a highway on my bike , i really wanna try surfing to , i just never had a chance , i live on east coast in winter i got snowboarding tho lol :)
So that's my dreams i wanna know ur , it can be something simple like getting a new job , or dream vacation or crazy orgy, I don't know:)))) , but what i know if u wanna share it , this is the place :)
 

RyanTheRhino

Well-Known Member
100,000 ft fall= 10,000ft fall = 100ft fall

You reach terminal after 6 seconds or 100 ft of free fall.

Which ever comes first, but physics says they happen at the same time.

Oh and that's would roughly be a speed of 130mph depending on position.


And to think some scientist out there convinced a man to jump out of an air plane just to figure out the terminal velocity of a human.

212mph in bullet position. Head tucked and arms and legs flat against the body
 

Scrotie Mcboogerballs

Well-Known Member
100,000 ft fall= 10,000ft fall = 100ft fall

You reach terminal after 6 seconds or 100 ft of free fall.

Which ever comes first, but physics says they happen at the same time.

Oh and that's would roughly be a speed of 130mph depending on position.


And to think some scientist out there convinced a man to jump out of a plane just to figure out the terminal velocity of a human.
Lol . . awesome. The things us crazy humans do in the name of science. ;)
 

ebgood

Well-Known Member
i wanna cop an A380, build a studio in it. and be the first to produce a full album at 36,000 feet. i play lotto every week to try to fulfill my dream!
 

Granny weed

Well-Known Member
Hi u guys and gal's i was watching today on a tv live free fall from over 100.000 feet , a guy name Felix had his dream and he fallow it , u guys can watch that short version on this you tube link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHySOWwVrTU

I'm a sky diver myself but my dream is to fly lol sounds crazy wright , well not so much ,
here is a version of my dream .... watch it and enjoy it :))))

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWfph3iNC-k

sooooo.... my fellow tokers i was wondering what ur dreams are and do u do anything about it :).....?
i got few other things to keep my gear running like 196 mph on a highway on my bike , i really wanna try surfing to , i just never had a chance , i live on east coast in winter i got snowboarding tho lol :)
So that's my dreams i wanna know ur , it can be something simple like getting a new job , or dream vacation or crazy orgy, I don't know:)))) , but what i know if u wanna share it , this is the place :)
To be cancer free and watch my grandchildren grow
 

Saerimmner

Well-Known Member
100,000 ft fall= 10,000ft fall = 100ft fall

You reach terminal after 6 seconds or 100 ft of free fall.

Which ever comes first, but physics says they happen at the same time.

Oh and that's would roughly be a speed of 130mph depending on position.


And to think some scientist out there convinced a man to jump out of an air plane just to figure out the terminal velocity of a human.

212mph in bullet position. Head tucked and arms and legs flat against the body

Austrian Felix Baumgartner has become the first skydiver to go faster than the speed of sound, reaching a maximum velocity of 833.9mph (1,342km/h).
 

Carne Seca

Well-Known Member
I'll admit I'm missing the reference ... cn


No worries. It was a stretch. :p

Austrian Felix Baumgartner has become the first skydiver to go faster than the speed of sound, reaching a maximum velocity of 833.9mph (1,342km/h).
Just when I start thinking I'm getting too old for this shit, someone comes along my age and pulls a stunt like this.



Why are all the good ones straight or married?
 

dvs1038

Well-Known Member
Yeah it was from 23 miles up I believe and the previous record was set around 1960 at 19 miles up. The dude the other day was tryin to break both the highest free fall and break the sound barrier at the same time, had to wear a special pressurized suit while falling otherwise he would have liquified, even if the suit got the smallest tear while falling he would have been fucked!!!
But I'm kinda confused, maybe u can answer this question Neer, I thought all free falling objects fell at the same speed, as a law of gravity they could only reach around 120mph unassisted that is by any propellant. So what am I missing how was he able to accelerate to break the sound barrier?
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Yeah it was from 23 miles up I believe and the previous record was set around 1960 at 19 miles up. The dude the other day was tryin to break both the highest free fall and break the sound barrier at the same time, had to wear a special pressurized suit while falling otherwise he would have liquified, even if the suit got the smallest tear while falling he would have been fucked!!!
But I'm kinda confused, maybe u can answer this question Neer, I thought all free falling objects fell at the same speed, as a law of gravity they could only reach around 120mph unassisted that is by any propellant. So what am I missing how was he able to accelerate to break the sound barrier?
Air density. The terminal velocity (for something as aerodynamically awful as a human in a suit) you list assumes air dense enough to breathe comfortably. Thin the air, and terminal velocity goes up as the square root of it. At 31 km (20 miles) up, air density is a hundredth of the surface value, and the terminal velocity receives a tenfold increase, to an approximate 1200 mph. But Baumgartner (oh those wild&wacky Austrians!) didn't have enough vertical room to build to full terminal before the air got dense enough to slow him down.

By an altitude of 20 km (12 miles), the air density is up to 55 mbar from 10, and terminal is down to a decidedly subsonic 500mph.

Interestingly, I read many many years ago that Kittinger broke the sound barrier in his famous jump. But a web search suggests that whoever filled my adolescent head with those ideas ... was exaggerating. Such a bummer. He made it to about Mach .96 ... cn
 
Top