h a l f b a k e r yOn the one hand, true. On the other hand, bollocks.
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The ACT device is attached to the cow with a belt round its girth.
A sensor, gyroscope or mercury tilt switch, detects a significant change in the cow's roll and deploys the stabilising device which could be an air bag or a metal stand. At the same time an alarm is relayed to the farmers home so
he can rush out to the stricken bovines aid.
Cows are, correct me if I'm wrong, generally upright creatures so hopefully it would be an easy matter to calibrate the system to ignore roll movements initiated by the cow itself and thus avoid deployment erroniously.
Weebles wobble but they don't fall down.
http://www.hasbro.com/playskool/weebles/ [DrBob, Dec 23 2004]
Subbuteo
http://freespace.virgin.net/j.shelley/ [rambling_sid, Dec 23 2004]
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Annotation:
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"Bessie, your udders have been in the customers' soup again - no tips for you this week..." |
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Why not strap on some training wheels. I do believe however that cows lie down to sleep. It is a well known fact that insomniac cows have vampiric tendencies. We dont want vampire cows rolling through the pasture do we. |
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By analogy with DrBob's link, I recommend sawing the legs off and putting weights in the stomaches. But I also love the idea of a cow with training wheels. |
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Or you could mount the cow on a large Subbuteo type base. See link if not familiar with Subbuteo |
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cows should be stored horizontally at night in special shelves, each marked with corresponding titles. |
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I never knew cows could tip over, that subbueto idea doesnt make any sense to me as they appear to have flat bases.I felt like working in a reference to the 1969 dodge charger, once voted the best muscle car ever. |
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I've never tipped a cow, but thinking about all the milk over the years, I think 10-15% is adequate. |
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