Hard luck, something that might take your mind off it (for a minute): Upside down carQuote:
Originally Posted by GerH
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Hard luck, something that might take your mind off it (for a minute): Upside down carQuote:
Originally Posted by GerH
Is this the bumper you mean?Quote:
Originally Posted by Lucifer
http://www.turnermotorsport.com/imag...-410-488_1.jpg
No but that does look cool :)Quote:
Originally Posted by EndaC
Endac I've change my mind think that must be it
Meanwhile in feltspec land:
http://forums.vwvortex.com/showthread.php?6106026-Ive-gone-crazy-RWD-swap-in-3-weeks
I worry about this guy dying
White E36 above has an OEM Aero bumper. Very, Very rare.
Just noticed our newest member
Kdevitt :cool:
How's this for random. I read the below question (always been an interest of mine) online and had a think on it while in work this morning. So I wrote up a little answer below it.
"Despite the discovery of the existence of the Higgs Boson on July 4, 2012 at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, puzzling questions about the nature of the universe remain unanswered. For example, the essential properties of neutrinos are still a mystery. And dark matter and dark energy, which together constitute 95 percent of the universe, are today still astonishing enigmas. The Higgs particle is unlike any other particle we have ever encountered. Why is it different? Are there more?Neutrinos are very light, elusive particles that change their identity as they travel. How do they fit into our understanding of nature? Are there new hidden dimensions of space and time? Known particles constitute 1/6 of all the matter in the universe. The rest we call dark matter. But what is it? Can we detect these particles in our labs? Are there other undiscovered particles in nature? There are four known forces in nature. Are these manifestations of a single unified force? Are there unexpected new forces? Both matter and anti-matter were produced in the Big Bang, but today our world is composed only of matter. Why? Why is the expansion of the universe accelerating?"
So my answer:
Dark matter is space time. This would account for the reason matter is only 5% of universe's total mass.
Also the two are the same (matter and dark energy/matter) as in they are energy but they are opposing charges which is why matter bends space time and does not interact as we would conventional sense as we understand it.
The constant movement and energy of mass creates the illusion of expansion by warping space time outward from the center of the mass from a local perspective in three dimensional space. This would explain expansion and also answer why infinity seems to run both negative and positive. As we are three dimensional creatures actually living in a four dimensional universe (the fourth being time) and we cannot observe space time in it's true sense of being.
Neutrinos and other particles with little to no mass are in a state of phase (at the speed with which they travel passing through the boson less than that of a more stationary object) which allow them to traverse matter as we perceive it. Conversely those with a greater mass and more stationary (ie black holes) are also in a state of phase where they can traverse (curve) space time as we understand it.
Smokie: Are you fucking crazy? Go back in the house.
Walt Kowalski: Yeah? I blow a hole in your face and then I go in the house... and I sleep like a baby. You can count on that. We used to stack fucks like you five feet high in Korea... use ya for sandbags.
Eastwood:cool:
Going through the NCT as we speak!
PASSED WITH FLYING COLOURS :)Quote:
Originally Posted by GerH