greatbear: (born to drive)
Rally car driver Ken Block is back with "GYMKHANA 4", his latest crazy-assed showcase of unbelievable driving skill, humor and destruction of tires. This time around, it's a full-on Hollywood-style production, the only thing not done with special effects is the driving. Maximize the frame, crank up the sound, and enjoy this hoon-fest.

greatbear: (glasses)
Sometimes, in the midst of some potentially disastrous FAIL can come a little bit of win. In this case, however, the way the win presents itself is pure WIN.

Imagine, you are a driver in a fast, tight road course. You have mechanical problems and manage to get your car off the track, but one of your wheels comes off and rolls along the traffic. The race can't be stopped instantly in order to clear the hazard. In the absence of that ideal solution, I present you with something even better:



There are some things that would never happen no matter how hard one tries that instead happen by pure chance. This is one.
greatbear: (face)
...Because anyone who knows me well enough would know I would So. Do. This.



For maximum effect, click through and play this in high definition mode, full screen.

Another version, set to Livin' On A Prayer... )

These are U.K. Cadbury chocolate ads, of all things. The ads are totally random and almost the last thing you'd expect for selling candy bars. The two versions are identical in every way except for the music beds. That change alone completely alters the 'feel' of the ads.

I'm hungry for chocolate now.
greatbear: (blackness)
Paul Newman died today. I will miss him, as will countless others. He was truly a class act, on screen and off.


Paul Newman - 1925-2008
greatbear: (forearms)
Long day at work that was actually pleasant and productive. I hope the next three days are like that. After coming home and having a bite, I started getting things fixed up and ready for the trip. Our 10x10 easy-up canopy we take camping suffered a broken strut when it was used for a function where Jeff works. Tonight I brazed up the broken metal piece, cleaned and painted it and reassembled the frame. Good as new. I packed the truck with some sundry items and gave it a mechanical once-over. It's good to go, though I'd really like to wash the thing before the trip. It's a mess inside and out. I have a pair of folding reclining chairs that need repair after a rather large individual from LJ that shall remain nameless bent part of the mechanism. That will happen tomorrow. Most everything else is ready to go.

Put a 500GB drive in an external enclosure and am currently backing up this laptop. The new server has settled down and is behaving nicely (click on wood), though I still have to find out why the DNS service wont load properly at startup, yet runs without issues after starting manually. The server itself has it's own automatic backup schedule, so it takes care of itself. I realized that in the past several months I have accumulated nearly 11TB worth of hard drives. Newegg loves me. I await the inevitable day that I can look back and call that ridiculous amount of storage 'quaint'.

N.B. All those drives are not part of one computer, instead some are library drives for the HTPC, a couple small ones and one big one for the new server, a couple external drives, and about half that will make up the uber file/media server. The same data in a bunch of locations. And I promised myself no more god boxes. Sheesh.

I am reading where the NHRA, the sanctioning body behind professional drag racing (with cars, not with heels and dresses) is considering shortening the track from it's historical 1/4 mile (1320 feet) to 1000 feet in wake of the death of one of it's more famous drivers, Scott Kalitta. I'm sorry, but that is total BS. Yes, the cars are hitting record speeds again and again, and it's getting tough to haul them down from 340+ mph in the remaining track length, even more so when the cars or their systems are damaged. Racing of all kinds has always evolved the safety aspects as speeds increased. Much of this safety tech works it's way into our everyday cars. Time has come to advance the safety technologies once again to keep pace. Making the track shorter reduces trap speeds and leaves more room for stopping. But changing the track length invalidates comparisons of past record achievement with what will happen in the future. And some things should remain sacred anyway.
greatbear: (born to drive)
(Yet another in a series called "This Isn't Me Driving, But I Sure Wish It Was")

What follows is an underground classic among driving enthusiasts. Take one Ferrari 275GTB, an early August morning in Paris, an unnamed F-1 race car driver, and a new-for-it's-time (1976) gyroscopic mount and camera and combine. What you have are the perfect ingredients for an amazing, bumper's-eye view of French cobblestone streets and scenery, bewildered motorists, frightened pigeons, shocked bystanders as well as the soundtrack of the Ferrari's sweet music and screeching tires greeting the day at speeds over 130mph. While those who know me well are certainly aware of my need for speed (rarely a day passes where I dont exceed 90mph for at least a short distance to sate my addiction), a run like this one would alas only be a dream for me. Mainly because I hate getting up early.

Without further adieu, C'etait un Rendezvous.

(35MB Quicktime Movie file)

Backstory of the film... )

I have the urge to go for a drive now...

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Phil

December 2016

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