Ouch, no snarky comment here. I woulnd't wish that on anyone. Admit it, you could probably envision yourself too distracted to notice or too busy to have put some small little bottle separate from some other small little bottle somewhere in the house.
Tonino Lamborghini, not Lamborghini Gallardo. I don't see the Gallardo car's name on any of those products. I guess the poster over at Cool Material was really the first one to make that mistake though. This product tie-in actually isn't that far from making prefect sense. Lamborghini made tractors before they ever produced a single sports car. In fact, they still make tractors to this day.
50% and I'm with most everyone else here, a good number of guesses thrown in even if I at one time had read about that particular piece of trivia. Also, looks like the average has now dropped to 41%.
I'm sorry, but in keeping with the modern climate of Clarksonism under which we live, I believe that the title of this article should be changed to "The Fastest Lawn Mower..... (dramatic pause) ....in the World".
When was the last time I was enthusiastic enough to spend large chunks of my life dedicated solely to one accomplishment? Right now as a matter of fact. I've spent a couple hundred hours over the past few months welding, grinding, panel beating, straightening, filling, sanding, smoothing, sanding some more and otherwise preparing a classic car of mine for paint. I can't help but think that in the future I'll appreciate and enjoy my investment just a bit more than this kid will.
"And here, ladies and gentlemen, we have the latest in breathable wallpaper now gearing up for high volume production. It's another amazing Blücher..."
Okay, I can see free climbing for ease of mobility and speed. If this is something you have practised many times before, you know your limits and what to watch out for it isn't too much worse than climbing a ladder to put up Christmas lights. As a sport climber myself, however, I can't help but question only using one safety restraint line when resting or when anchored to do work. At the top of most every sport climb in the U.S. there are two anchors. If one anchor, or your equipment fails you should have a much greater chance of survival being clipped into two separate anchor points.
Step 1: Walk calmly to restaurant area Step 2: Turn on stove which will most likely automatically ignite via an electric spark Step 3: Find a pan and enjoy some Swedish meatballs
So the lesson that can be gleaned from this short clip is to never feed cephalopod to your bird of prey or else it will grow to such a size that its wingspan dwarfs the diameter of the whole earth? Got it. Logged away in the 'ole memory banks.
Flamethrower??!?? That isn't even a flametosser, not quite a flamelobber, nowhere near a flameflinger and barely counts as a flamewafter, much less a flamethrower.
Music: Great
Foley: Too quite, very distracting
This product tie-in actually isn't that far from making prefect sense. Lamborghini made tractors before they ever produced a single sports car. In fact, they still make tractors to this day.
Nnnneieeeiiiiieieggggghhhh!!!!!!
"....Technologies product."
As a sport climber myself, however, I can't help but question only using one safety restraint line when resting or when anchored to do work. At the top of most every sport climb in the U.S. there are two anchors. If one anchor, or your equipment fails you should have a much greater chance of survival being clipped into two separate anchor points.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gq40b1HegxY
How about when the tank gets stuck for 50 years? More tank treaded vehicles!
http://englishrussia.com/index.php/2006/09/17/russian-tank-recovered-from-the-lake-after-50-years-been-there/
Step 1: Walk calmly to restaurant area
Step 2: Turn on stove which will most likely automatically ignite via an electric spark
Step 3: Find a pan and enjoy some Swedish meatballs
Got it. Logged away in the 'ole memory banks.