Bad_Engineering

joined 2 years ago
[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 31 points 1 week ago (12 children)

Death stranding was the most boring trudge of a game I've ever played. I have no idea why it's so popular.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 1 points 2 weeks ago

Almost no one owns an m16. That would be a NFA (National Firearms Act) weapon that requires a special tax stamp for and would also have to be made before 1986. No new fully automatic firearms have been allowed to be made except for LEO/military purposes since 1986. All the of what you're calling an "m16" is an AR-15 (Armalite Rifle 15) or some variant. They're all semi-automatic.

The AR-15 is so popular because it is a very accurate, reliable rifle, and can be very affordable. It also helps that it's the civilian model of the m16 and m4 rifles the military has. I have one that I target shoot with and it's a very fun rifle to use. That's probably the biggest reason it's so popular.

I do agree that we need much stricter gun control in this country but it needs to be based around logic and fact. The "assault rifle bans" of the 90s were completely useless and didn't van anything meaningfully dangerous. They banned things like collapsable stocks, threaded muzzles and other silly things that don't effect the operation of the gun. Hell, California currently bans rifles with pistol grips, so when you buy an at there it just has a different grip. The function of the rifle is still the same. Personally I think we need stricter licensing on who can own a firearm. You should have to prove you are competent, capable, and safe in your use of firearms before you're allowed to own one. That includes VERY thorough background searches and atleast 20-30 hours of instruction. The old tired adage of "guns don't kill people, people kill people" does have some truth to it. But if less people had the guns to begin with, they'd have a lot harder time hurting people.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Or you can just put an ethanol rated carb kit and fuel line in it and not have to worry about it.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 3 points 2 weeks ago

Good news, you're not fucked. Your car has been running on roughly 10-15% ethanol its entire life. If you havnt had problems yet, you likely won't. Unless they go full stupid and put an absurd amount in of ethanol in, then it won't effect most cars on the road today.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 2 points 2 weeks ago

The main problem with ethanol in rubber fuel lines is that ethanol causes hardening and flaking of the rubber. Long before it ever gets bad enough to leak the little flakes of hardened rubber detatch from the inside of the line and travel down to fuel pumps, injectors, and carburators. Where they clog up all the small metered orifices that regulate the amount of fuel the engine is getting. This can lead to the car just not running or running poorly, to the internal components of the engine breaking or seizing, thus trashing the whole engine.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 2 points 2 weeks ago

I'm a car girl, its mkind of my thing. Octane ratings aretgere to protect your engine, its a rating of how readily the gasoline ignites in the engine. The larger the number the harder to self ignite. Most cars use 85, the only time the higher octane 93 is needed is for cars with turbo or supercharging, or cars with higher compression ratios.

Just put whatever its rated for in it, going with a higher octane than what your car is rated for doesn't hurt a thing, but it also won't make your engine run better or anything.

As far as ethanol goes, modern cars ate fine with 10-20% ethanol in their gas. It will get worse mileage the higher the percentage of ethanol as it is not as energy dense as gasoline. The E85 stuff has a higher percentage of ethanol (85%) than is allowed in conventional gas and was introduced to try and lower gas prices (it's actually completely ineffective and ethanol for fuel is more energy intensive than just giving us straight gasoline but they have to prop up the corn industry somehow). Regular cars can't use E85 unless they are rated for it as the engine has to add more fuel to keep a close to stoichiometric ratio of fuel to air.

TLDR: Use whatever octane your car asks for, if you put a higher octane in it doesn't hurt, but it also doesn't add any benefit.

When it comes to ethanol regular cars can tolerate up to roughly 20% with only a reduction in fuel mileage as a result. E85 is only for cars rated to use it as they need a sensor to detect ethanol percentage and adjust fuel to air ratios accordingly.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 17 points 3 weeks ago (9 children)

How is gamestip still even a thing? I havnt bought a physical game disc in years.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 3 points 1 month ago

Get the extra creamy variety of oat milk. Otherwise yea its pretty watery.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 2 points 2 months ago

So you swapped out a few pairs of NOS parts on a couple classics. I worked as an engineer for akebono, one of the biggest brake manufacturers in the world. Almost every European and American manufacturer ditched asbestos around 1990. Some imported "value" pads may contain asbestos, and some classic cars are still gonna have asbestos pads. But the vast majority of cars on the road do not.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Asbestos isn't used in brake pads anymore, we've gone to organo metallic mixtures. So mostly carbon with some iron, manganese, and nickel thrown in.

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io -2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Wouldn't all EV's have to be drive by wire by definition?

[–] Bad_Engineering@fedia.io 2 points 2 months ago

My sisters cat is named Mr Meow Meow, he was named by twin 4 year olds.

 

The proposals would also reportedly force transgender firearm buyers to out themselves by listing their birth sex on purchase paperwork

 

I propose a new ASME standard, the Scaling Banana™.

 

For your consideration, I submit my design for a new ASME standard. The Scaling Banana.

 

President Donald Trump is set to sign three executive orders on Monday involving the U.S. military, including banning transgender service members, eliminating military DEI programs, and reinstating service members discharged for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine.

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