Billy Buudd
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2022
Why no selfie of the bloated pig man squeezing into frame with an obviously uncomfortable subject? (In this case his dad). Have we ever actually seen his family other than Niki?
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He must have been so excited when his dad said “series” and “parallel” because he knew he could include those words that he doesn’t understand in his tweet about changing a lightbulb. Rick isn’t doing any actual electrical work, he probably just put the wrong kind of lightbulb in the fixture and they blew immediately.How many Tomlinsons does it take to change a light-bulb?
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Answer: 2
I think the joke here is that it's so unfunny, that it being presented as a joke is in itself funny for its absurdity.I don’t get it
So it’s like a Picasso joke, where he’s like “fuck it, I don’t even want to be funny”?I think the joke here is that it's so unfunny, that it being presented as a joke is in itself funny for its absurdity.
However, this is how I see absolutely everything. I am sorry.
these faggots sound and act just like Patrick. What could be a genuinely funny thread sucks because of a bunch of low attention span window lickers. I thought the death fat women and vtubers were the worst on the site
Well, that was very kind of Patirck to short Tesla stock so he could raise funds to pay Quasi since he doesn't have any other income.Fellas, fellas, fellas. How about instead of arguing about pedophiles, we just take a minute to enjoy Patrick being wrong?
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I’ve mentioned this before but they’re all literally redditors. They’re doing the same things they did on reddit before their sub got nuked.these faggots sound and act just like Patrick. What could be a genuinely funny thread sucks because of a bunch of low attention span window lickers. I thought the death fat women and vtubers were the worst on the site
Come on we all know he NEVER lies. I think that's more plausible to be honest, but I wouldn't put it past him to do some stupid shit like that. He thinks he knows about cars AND that he is the smartest person on the planet, and has also demonstrated that he is willing to waste money for internet points.I don't think the short position actually exists.
He puts his entire life on twitter. If he was actually shorting the stock, he would have announced it on the day with an accompanying twitter thread of half baked "investment analysis"
He saw it went down. He believed it would continue to go down. He thought he would look smart if he said he was shorting the company.
Now do his security camera:I hate to be that guy but if you don't know that you shouldn't be wiring things up in your house in series you really shouldn't be wiring things up unless you're following directions and double checking yourself every step of the way. I'm actually kind of bamboozled as to how he could have managed to do that based on the image he posted. That fixture should have been wired up in parallel internally and all he should have needed to do was to hook up the live and neutral leads to the proper loose wires on the top of the fixture. Even if he got it backwards it still should have worked fine. Unless he built that fixture himself, or if it was specifically designed to undervolt incandescent bulbs to achieve a target color temperature (which would work fine but it'd be easier and more versatile to use a dimmer switch since you could crank them up to full brightness at will), it should have just worked. You really have to go out of your way to wire something up in series as household electrical stuff is pretty much as idiot proofed as it can be
I'm not an electrician or anything but for a very basic run-down of series vs parallel, if you wire up a set of devices, lightbulbs in this case, in series, you're splitting the voltage between them. If you were to wire them in parallel, as intended, you're splitting your amperage instead.
Anything that plugs into your house is going to be designed to run on 110-120 or 208-240v, usually tolerating anything between those two or even a bit lower, and pulling anywhere from a fraction of an amp up to 12-13 for standard 120v plugs (or 15 amps for brief durations). As you'll notice, you've got pretty narrow ranges on the voltages, but quite a wide range on amperage that you can play with. Very simple devices, incandescent bulbs for example, will work in series just fine, they just won't be as bright. You don't want to run an AC motor on decreased voltage though, that's really bad. It will instead increase the amps that it's pulling in an attempt to hit its intended speed, and amperage is the primary driver of waste/lost heat, so the motor will very quickly burn itself out. Never try to run a fan on any kind dimmer unless it specifically mentions being designed to do so, is what I'm saying. You can get PWM dimmers now which theoretically should work but it's still not the best idea
Where series circuits tend to be more useful is when you're working with batteries. Rather than dividing your voltage like with a consuming device (bulb, blender, etc) you can multiply it to hit a specific power target. If you have a 20v power tool, as an example, rather than a 20v cell, you'll have 5 3.7v batteries in series (and potentially multiple 5x3.7v series in parallel for larger packs, they're nominally 20v because that's what they have at full charge but that drops almost immediately as you start using it), giving you approximately 18v at 10-30 amps for most of the pack's runtime
If you wire two car batteries in series, you can use jumper cables to hold a rod and perform emergency field weldsI hate to be that guy but if you don't know that you shouldn't be wiring things up in your house in series you really shouldn't be wiring things up unless you're following directions and double checking yourself every step of the way. I'm actually kind of bamboozled as to how he could have managed to do that based on the image he posted. That fixture should have been wired up in parallel internally and all he should have needed to do was to hook up the live and neutral leads to the proper loose wires on the top of the fixture. Even if he got it backwards it still should have worked fine. Unless he built that fixture himself, or if it was specifically designed to undervolt incandescent bulbs to achieve a target color temperature (which would work fine but it'd be easier and more versatile to use a dimmer switch since you could crank them up to full brightness at will), it should have just worked. You really have to go out of your way to wire something up in series as household electrical stuff is pretty much as idiot proofed as it can be
I'm not an electrician or anything but for a very basic run-down of series vs parallel, if you wire up a set of devices, lightbulbs in this case, in series, you're splitting the voltage between them. If you were to wire them in parallel, as intended, you're splitting your amperage instead.
Anything that plugs into your house is going to be designed to run on 110-120 or 208-240v, usually tolerating anything between those two or even a bit lower, and pulling anywhere from a fraction of an amp up to 12-13 for standard 120v plugs (or 15 amps for brief durations). As you'll notice, you've got pretty narrow ranges on the voltages, but quite a wide range on amperage that you can play with. Very simple devices, incandescent bulbs for example, will work in series just fine, they just won't be as bright. You don't want to run an AC motor on decreased voltage though, that's really bad. It will instead increase the amps that it's pulling in an attempt to hit its intended speed, and amperage is the primary driver of waste/lost heat, so the motor will very quickly burn itself out. Never try to run a fan on any kind dimmer unless it specifically mentions being designed to do so, is what I'm saying. You can get PWM dimmers now which theoretically should work but it's still not the best idea
Where series circuits tend to be more useful is when you're working with batteries. Rather than dividing your voltage like with a consuming device (bulb, blender, etc) you can multiply it to hit a specific power target. If you have a 20v power tool, as an example, rather than a 20v cell, you'll have 5 3.7v batteries in series (and potentially multiple 5x3.7v series in parallel for larger packs, they're nominally 20v because that's what they have at full charge but that drops almost immediately as you start using it), giving you approximately 18v at 10-30 amps for most of the pack's runtime
I audibly 'What in the actual fuck'd until I realized all those little tendrils are just the remnants of vines from remaining untended for far too long that he was unable to remove before the news van arrived because those fuckers are almost impossible to get off even when you're not pressed for timeNow do his security camera:
And I still would not have sex with himPatrick is still fat.