5936 1st Gear July 6, 2010 Share July 6, 2010 Aiyoh, you all so naughty. No wonder some of my friends in workshop complain of different coloured fluid at the bottom of engine compartment. Must be some clever guy forgot to remove, dropped off when kenah rough bumps. ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kopites Supersonic July 6, 2010 Share July 6, 2010 Aiyoh, you all so naughty. No wonder some of my friends in workshop complain of different coloured fluid at the bottom of engine compartment. Must be some clever guy forgot to remove, dropped off when kenah rough bumps. Wrong.... Not that we have forgotten to remove (unbutton) or whatsoever. During the nite when nature call, strategically the best spot is standing on top of the engine compartment and pee. Probably the yellow fluid due to not probably zero. SOP taught us not to sleep infront of vehicle. Left and right out of bound area as they are likely to be taken up by mates. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
5936 1st Gear July 6, 2010 Share July 6, 2010 OMG Thats... uric acid Maybe the BTO and workshop enchik and his mechanic used their hands to feel and also taste it.. Lucky no lady drivers around, if they see red liquid in the engine comp. they may think it's ATF leaked. Oops.. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cootie-Monster Neutral Newbie July 9, 2010 Share July 9, 2010 Can't wait for SAF to get this type of rations. Wonder if anyone will ask where to buy outside? Would you eat food cooked in your own urine? Food scientists working for the US military have developed a dried food ration that troops can hydrate by adding the filthiest of muddy swamp water or even peeing on it. The ration comes in a pouch containing a filter that removes 99.9 per cent of bacteria and most toxic chemicals from the water used to rehydrate it, according to the Combat Feeding Directorate, part of the US Army Soldier Systems Center in Natick, Massachusetts. This is the same organisation that created the "indestructible sandwich" that will stay fresh for three years (New Scientist print edition, 10 April 2002). The aim is to reduce the amount of water soldiers need to carry. One day's food supply of three meals, weighs 3.5 kilograms but that can be reduced to about 0.4 kilograms with the dehydrated pouches, says spokeswoman Diane Wood. The pouch - containing chicken and rice initially - relies on osmosis to filter the water or urine. When two solutions of different concentrations are separated by a semipermeable membrane, with gaps that allow only water molecules to pass through, the water is drawn to the more concentrated side. LINK Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
5936 1st Gear July 9, 2010 Share July 9, 2010 (edited) This is space technologies. Good stuff, dont waste urine. Even the filtrate of urea acid can use to made ammonia... and stink bomb lah Edited July 9, 2010 by 5936 ↡ Advertisement Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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