h a l f b a k e r yFewer ducks than estimates indicate.
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,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
When one commuting cyclist overtakes another on the
road, a covert glance passes between them in which they
size each other up, gauging such variables as age and
gender, and a host of factors relating to how fancy the
other's bicycle is. This judgement is used to assess
whether it is a 'worthy'
overtake, demonstrating your
physical prowess, or whether it is nothing to be proud of.
This idea then is to fit one's bicycle with
something that looks like a bulky child-seat with a heavy
toddler in, but which is in fact a super-realistic carbon
fibre shell, weighing only a couple of hundred grams.
Then, when you effortlessly glide past your lycra-clad
opponent on a steep uphill incline, they will feel suitably
crushed.
Annual_20child_20lacquering
[calum, Jun 28 2019]
[link]
|
|
"...but which is in fact a super-realistic carbon fibre
shell..."
...containing batteries for your concealed motor. |
|
|
<psst - [hippo] - typo in title> |
|
|
That's not a typo.... It's a speedy light eight,
meaning it doesn't have the 'w' to slow it down. |
|
|
// your concealed motor. // |
|
|
Now, that clears up a mystery; [hippo] is operated by a concealed motor - animatronics - rather than the arm-up-the-posterior muppet-type operation which seemed the previous most likely explanation. |
|
|
Some of the energy could also be used by a hub motor fitted to the bicycle. |
|
|
oops - typo now untypofied |
|
|
Aghhhh it was more fun without the 'w'. W's should get a day off every now and again. |
|
|
You don't need an expensive carbon fibre child, just use the
shell from some earlier lacquering of the child. This will
preserve the familial likeness and so enhance verisimilitude. |
|
|
Actually, it's now possible to have your (preferably deceased)
pets freeze-dried in lifelike poses. Should work for children. |
|
|
[calum] and [MB] have suggested a further improvement. |
|
|
Take an existing child and remove the operating mechanism, leaving just the skin. Treat this with a flexible polymer compound. |
|
|
The unit can then be attached to the "child seat" in a deflated state; when wishing to impress other riders, a pushbutton activates a small air pump which inflates the skin to normal size. |
|
|
Once the overtake is complete, the pump reverses, deflating the skin until it is next required, and reducing air resistance. |
|
|
Children are plentiful, cheap, and easy to produce, so this seems by far the most cost -effective solution. |
|
|
Note that the carbon-fibre moulding techniques can also be employed to produce a super-lightweight facsimile of a large sack of onions, to complement the
beret-resembling bicycle helmet you're wearing and your stripy t-shirt. |
|
|
//it's now possible to have your (preferably deceased) pets freeze-dried in lifelike poses// |
|
|
Am I the only one who finds this horrific? |
|
|
<Decides that [Voice], freeze-dried in a lifelike pose, would look quite good over in that corner between the Brough Superior and the cutaway Wright Twin Wasp/> |
|
|
Cue audio of [8th] giving birth. |
|
| |