Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 65
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

The rain (that the BOM last week were predicting for Wednesday) is now sposed to happen this afternoon with tomorrow being fine and sunny.

No doubt that forecast will change 3x between now and then though...

tonight was f**king gay. my brother held me up by a freakin hour and a half. i ended up getting down at 7pm when they told me they ran out of competitors tickets.

i was able to take some good photos though.

im heading down next week :)

that guy really did need help!!! 13.5 down the qtr isn't so bad though! lol!!!

and we saw your car parked in the competitor area.. with no front bar!!! wondered what had happened!!! was planning on taking a pic of it, but it was gone when i went to take one! lol!!! oh wells!!!

i havent had a front bar on in ages.. its too damn low for anything. im raising the car before i do anything.

the car parked next to mine was my brothers m3 (328i convertible with full m3 conversion) it freakin hammers

not a bad night

bloody busy though

only managed a 12.785

no slicks - rally tyres on. car just sat there in 1st and 2nd gear spinning on the spot til i grabbed 3rd

also quite possibly had something to do with the fact that i was launching at 7000rpm every time hehe

burnout comp was a shambles. same f**king truck and his team. its advertised as 6 cars. only five rocked up - i said i have my car ready to go to be #6. they tell me no it'sd only 5 cars allowed each week. pissweak. anyway rant over .

was good fun. cant wait to go again

mark

Mark it's 5 cars total, but if your a mate of that guy with the tow truck you can get straight in *shakes head* i'm actually sick of watching that tow truck now. It was good fun to watch the first 2-3x but watching it do a 5min burnout every single wed nite isn't amusing anymore.

The bogan award of the nite goes to the drive of the yellow ford that spat the diff at the start line only to get out of his car and lock the doors (whilst still at the start grid) haha.




  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Yeah, all the crude is used for fuels and petrochem feedstocks (pesticides, many other chemicals, etc etc). But increasingly over the last few decades, much of the petrochem synthessis has started with methane because NG has been cheaper than oil, cleaner and easier and more consistent to work with, etc etc etc. So it's really had to say what the fraction either way is. Suffice to say - the direct fuels fraction is not insigificant. Heavy transport uses excruciatingly large amounts. Diesel is wasted in jet heaters in North American garages and workshops, thrown down drill holes in quarries, pissed all over the wall to provide electricity to certain outback communities, etc etc. Obviously road transport, and our pet project, recreational consumption camouflaged as road transport, is a smaller fraction of the total liquid HC consumption again. If you're talking aboust Aussie cars' contribution to the absolute total CO2 production of the country, then of course our share of the cubic mile of coal that is used for power generation, metallurgy, etc adds up to a big chunk. Then there is the consumption of timber. Did you know that the production of silicon metal, for example, is done in Australia by using hardwood? And f**king lots and lots and lots of hardwood at that. Until recently, it was f**king jarrah! There are many such sneaky contributors to CO2 production in industry and farming. NG is used in massive quantities in Australia, for power gen, for running huge water pumps (like, 1-2MW sized caterpillar V16 engines running flat out pumping water) for places like mine sites and minerals/metals refineries. And there are just a huge number of those sort of things going on quietly in the background. So NG use is a big fraction of total CO2 production here. I mean, shit, I personally design burners that are used in furnaces here in Oz that use multiple MW of gas all day every day. The largest such that I've done (not here in Oz) was rated to 150MW. One. Single. Gas burner. In a cement clinker kiln. There are thousands of such things out there in the world. There are double digits of them just here in Oz. (OK< just barely double digits now that a lot of them have shut - and they are all <100MW). But it's all the same to me. People in the car world (like this forum's users) would like to think that you only have to create an industrial capability to replace the fuel that they will be using in 10 years time, and imagine that everyone else will be driving EVs. And while the latter part of that is largely true, the liquid HC fuel industry as a whole is so much more massive than the bit used for cars, that there will be no commercial pressure to produce "renewable" "synthetic" fuels just for cars, when 100x that much would still be being burnt straight from the well. You have to replace it all, or you're not doing what is required. And then you get back to my massive numbers. People don't handle massive numbers at all well. Once you get past about 7 or 8 zeros, it becomes meaningless for most people.
    • @GTSBoy out of the cubic mile of crude oil we burn each year, I wonder how much of that is actually used for providing petrol and diesel.   From memory the figure for cars in Australia, is that they only add up to about 2 to 3% of our CO2 production. Which means something else here is burning a shit tonne of stuff to make CO2, and we're not really straight up burning oil everywhere, so our CO2 production is coming from elsewhere too.   Also we should totally just run thermal energy from deep in the ground. That way we can start to cool the inside of the planet and reverse global warming (PS, this last paragraph is a total piss take)
    • As somebody who works in the energy sector and lives in a subzero climate, i'm convinced EV's will never be the bulk of our transport.  EV battery and vehicle companies over here have been going bankrupt on a weekly basis the last year. 
    • With all the rust on those R32s, how can it even support all the extra weight requirements. Probably end up handling as well as a 1990s Ford Falcon Taxi.
    • Yes...but look at the numbers. There is a tiny tiny fraction of the number of Joules available, compared to what is used/needed. Just because things are "possible" doesn't make them meaningful.
×
×
  • Create New...