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Blown Out Early On A Wednesday Night....


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Posted

Being there is a very good thing. :thumbup:

Posted

What were we talking about

?

Posted

bastards, i only get to go to my friend's place and drink tonight. <(

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

lol...oh, I dunno.

Maybe Austraila's cost-effective wine making methods, and the benefits to the American consumer.

:p

Posted

Always the capitalist...

=)

Have fun!!

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

Always the capitalist...

=)

Have fun!!

LOL...I do what I can to help the global economy... :happy:

Posted

oh.

I thought we were talking about spontainous combustion and the possible chemical causes.

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

We could. That's good stuff, too...

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

The Cesium and H20 combo is one of my favorites. :p

Posted

I've never really read all that deeply into it. Nor have I read anything in a long time. I've always leaned toward complet like... your body replaces every cell in it every 7 years. Each type of cell at differnt rates. Ok so like... in some far out realm where probabilty and possibilty meet by chance... every cell in the body dies at once. Or at least a large proportion of them. Cellular "death" releases heat and stuff. Poof. Then reality hapens are other people say "What the fuck?"

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

Anything in the left most column of the periodic table cause an instantaneous explosion when in contact with water. Cesium is the heaviest stable element of the bunch.

KA-BOOM!

Now that I think about it, Francium is heavier. I'm just not so sure of its stablilty.

Posted

But they don't explode. And nothing else catches fire. Bedding sometimes is only scorched. Too much energy would "leak" in such a reaction. A massive cell die off wouldn't create a significant amount of radiant heat. It fits the known cases.

Guest Game of Chance
Posted

I've seen first-hand what potassium and water do together. Cesium and Francium have very similar chemical reactions as K does with H20. Just more protons.

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