h a l f b a k e r y"It would work, if you can find alternatives to each of the steps involved in this process."
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
SO! You're thirsty. You just ran a marathon. You take some water, and you drink it. That water is NOT coming out fast enough. BUT with my accelerated water drinking bottle, you pull out the rubber plug on the bottom of the bottle. The vacuum is removed from the bottle, and the water FLOWS out, at a super
fast rate. This is the same concept that college students use to drink beer SO FAST. Except it's water, and except that the hole is designed into the bottle instead of cut there with a knife. You get a lot of water fast. You're so hydrated. SO MUCH! It's great!
3 pints? in a record time of 5 seconds?
http://www.drinkstu.../product.asp?ID=126 [po, Oct 04 2004]
Accelerated Water Drinking
http://www.michaelh...ct.asp?pfid=6931232 There, that should do the trick! [DrCurry, Oct 04 2004]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
Did you come up with this idea from drinking the bong water? |
|
|
baked years ago. babies milk bottles used to have a hole at each end. |
|
|
A one way valve... This probably works better. I'm concerned--will it let air in fast enough to get the SO-FAST effect? |
|
|
Po: Do you know of any water bottles that use the concept though? I suppose you could drink water out of a baby bottle... But the thing is, the idea is great with water bottles. Really--try it. You put that water bottle to your mouth, and the water is in you within seconds. |
|
|
how big a bottle are you talking about. if I take a swig from a 2 litre bottle, it comes out a whole lot quicker than my throat can cope with. |
|
|
The Federal whatever that pronounces on drinking water has recently changed is mind. After promoting "hydration" for years for marathon runners and other sportspeople, now they just recommend drinking only to sate your thirst. (Apparently some people were drinking so much water when running marathons, they would pass out.) |
|
|
I heard once that drinking water fast is good for you. Then I heard that drinking water too fast is bad for you. This is not going to turn into Goldilocks
|
|
|
I, when I was young, drank water straight from a garden hose, and I can say it is possible to get an upset stomach from too much water too fast. |
|
|
As quick as Frappucino goes down the hatch, Starbucks may be on to something with their bottle shape. |
|
|
We called this a shotgun in high school. You open a can of beer, then open the other end and drink it down in about three seconds. |
|
|
[swamilad]:
I drink.
I drank.
I have / had drunk. |
|
|
I don't understand, snarfy, how it don't all end up on the carpet. |
|
|
I think you hold it upside-down, ready to drink. A can opener is used to puncture the (raised) underside, which acts as an air intake when the pull tab is pulled. |
|
|
I never quite saw the point of this way of drinking & so didn't participate. But it's my understanding that it was a popular thing to do. |
|
|
linky winky to a yard of ale |
|
|
Thanks snarfyguy, I fixed it. Now I can go to sleep and forget the rule, and come back tomorrow and post something else wrong. ta ta. |
|
|
Another important aspect of the shotgun is to initially suck as much air/beer out of the can as possible. Then you open the other end. Since nature abhors vacuums and sober students, the beer rushes down the throat. |
|
|
For a few dozen good examples of this process in action, go rent the mockumentary "Fubar". Actually, go rent it anyways. Funny flick. |
|
|
if you pull a plug on the bottom wouldn't the water run out of the bottom. Think about it. |
|
|
Swirl it into a vortex and it will drain much, much faster. |
|
|
Depends on the shape of the bottle.
Often, the swirling actually slows the
egress of the water by thowing it
centripugally outward and hence up the
sloping neck of the bottle (ie, it can't go
down and out the hole because the
centripugal force is throwing it
outwards). This often counteracts the
advantage of having an open air
channel in the middle. Experiment
time, I think. |
|
|
OK, data is/are in. You're right for wine
bottle (square or slopey shouldered).
Swirling is only slower for a wide 5l
container with squarish shouders and a
relatively narrow (about 4cm) neck. |
|
| |