If you were one of those hands-on children, who would cut in half their new toys just to see what's inside - this list is for you. Bored Panda already did a list on how common objects look from unusual perspectives - but this time, we're making the list solely on things that are cross-sectioned. There are number of random objects about which we were all wondering "what if I'd cut it open just to see what's hiding within?" Well, you can put away your knife and scissors now as there are people around the world who have already done it and took pictures of it so that you don't have to. Everything from bullets to hockey helmets, from pearls to baseballs - we've got it covered in this extensive list. Scroll down below to see the photos for yourself and don't forget to vote for those, which you liked the most.
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Fukang meteorite
This stunning piece of meteorite was found in the mountains near Fukang (hence the name), China back in 2000. The space rock is a pallasite - a type of stony-iron meteorite with olivine crystals. Fukang meteorite is estimated to be approximately 4.5 billion years old - almost the same age as our planet Earth.
Phew, I was thinking I'm the only one here who's struggling with dysgraphia. :p
Load More Replies...D FOR....Hahahahaha. didn’t know this thing would make me so happy, LOL
Load More Replies...Cut banana tree trunks
Interestingly, the banana tree is not even a tree per se as the stem does not contain true woody tissue. It is actually a big herbaceous plant with leaves rolled up one over another. The tender core of the banana stems (the so-called banana tree trunk) is widely used in South and Southeast Asian cuisines and the local people there consider the trunk to be a nutritious vegetable.
Yhea we usually eat this like vegetables! It's pretty yummy! We call it "UBOD ng saging"- ubod- core, ng-of and saging-banana. -love from: Philippines
If these could be preserved, sliced cross sections would make beautiful jewelry and pendants, etc. Nature is beautiful.
Bananas don't grow on trees. It's more like a giant stalk of grass. I grew a few bananas for personal use while I was stationed in Hawaii.
Banana is a giant plant, not really a tree. I grew up with them all over my grandmas back yard. Really pretty pattern. :)
Rattle snake rattle
Native to North and South America, rattlesnakes are large venomous snakes, that are experts at hissing as well as their bone-chilling rattle. The rattle itself is hollow and is made of keratin (just like human's fingernails) that is located at the end of the serpent's tail. When the rattlesnake erects its tail and vibrates its muscles, these segments collide with each other, thus producing the rattling sound.
That can't be life-size - otherwise it would have come from a really huge snake!
It is probably just a replica. Here is a video where a man cuts a real rattlesnake rattle half: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pyfMnF6j_g
Load More Replies...Every time the rattlesnake sheds its skin it gets a new section on its rattle, making it longer
That part is creepy, I'm cool with everything else. :)
Load More Replies...Pearls
Throughout the centuries, people have deemed pearls as one of the finest materials for jewelry. Their beauty is undeniable and they have become the epitome of rarity and refinement. However, what many people may not know is that the inside of the pearl looks just as beautiful, if not prettier, as the outside of it. Essentially, a pearl is formed when an irritant (usually a parasite) works its way into some type of mollusk. The animal then defends itself by coating the irritant in a fluid. The coating is called 'nacre' and layer upon layer of this coating forms a lustrous, glistening pearl.
I became curious about the rings, wondering if they were like tree rings and used to tell a pearl age. After a bit of poking around, I learnt that they were a result of rotating in the mouth of a mollusk as it grows. The rings are also sometimes visible on the outside (pearl #3 is a pretty good example of this.)
You haven't been learning about pearls in high school? I remember that lesson very vividly. :D
Load More Replies...Neat! I've never seen the inside of a pearl before. I guess I've never thought to Google it.
Bloodwood tree (Pterocarpus angolensis)
Native to southern Africa, the bloodwood tree is a deciduous tree, meaning that it sheds its leaves seasonally. The sap of the bloodwood is bright red, which leaves no surprise in how the tree got its name in the English language. The Pterocarpus is much valued in Africa, as it provides a beautiful timber which is easy to work with. People use it for building furniture as well as canoes, as the wood does not shrink or swell that much.
Maybe if all trees would bleed like that people would respect them a bit more :(
Load More Replies...That's beautiful! I would love to have that as furniture, but I'm sure it costs a fortune!
Load More Replies...Where are these trees found? (Just curious, I'm not planning on killing one.)
This is African, there are other bloodwood trees in Australia. Are they distant cousins - of ours?
The bloodwoods in Australia are a number of trees in the Corymbia genus. I don't know if all have red sap but a number do. They're not at all related to African bloodwoods (Pterocarpus genus) but a number of different plants exude a red sap or juice. There's even a fungus (mushroom) that 'bleeds' red when young. It's called the Bleeding Tooth fungus (Hydnellum peckii). :)
Load More Replies...Adding machine
An essential part of almost every office up until the 1970s, an adding machine is a class of mechanical calculator and was usually used for bookkeeping calculations. As the 70s approached calculators became more widely used and by the early 90s, personal computers took over. Thus, the adding machines were phased out and left most American offices completely by the year 2000.
There's a robot out here ... He says he's looking for his shoe.
Load More Replies...I once bought one of those in a thrift store and tore it apart to try to figure out how it worked. Didn't get any clue on the operation, but was seriously impressed by the number of parts!
These still exist in many offices, they're just more modern now and use ticker tape. Still very important in the accounting and auditing world.
The office where I used to work still uses these extensively. When we paid invoices by check, we'd have to add up all the invoices paid on a single check and attach the tape when we turned in the paperwork at the end of the day. It's to verify that we actually entered everything correctly in the system and would be checked against the check that printed the next morning. It's much faster to chunk the numbers out on an adding machine than to put all the numbers on a spreadsheet and then print it.
'Mark Twain Tree' sequoia section with historical notations from year 550 to 1891
The first documented sighting of the giant sequoia took place in the spring of 1852, when a hunter named Augustus T. Dowd, entered North Grove woods while chasing down a bear. The trees gained a lot of popularity and a lot of people came forward who wanted to make money out of these wonders of nature. In 1891 the giant "Mark Twain Tree" was cut down. A slice of its trunk was sent to the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and another slice to the British Museum of Natural History in Kensington, London.
Me too. Like wow this is amazing, look how big it is! Let’s cut it down to show everyone.
Load More Replies...Human scum destroying what took hundreds of years to make again and again
The "Mark Twain Tree," a sequoia in General Grant National Park (now Kings Canyon), was cut down in 1891, so that slabs of its 16-foot diameter trunk could be displayed in New York and London museums. A similar giant was felled so that a 30-foot tall section, hollowed out to create a two-story house, could be shown at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.
Load More Replies...Thankfully the wood in these ancient trees didn't make good lumber otherwise they would have truly been decimated. The surprisingly early adoption and protection of national parks helped too. Some of the ones cut down were turned into damn TOOTHPICKS!
Why do some people think it is ok to kill so many things? Heartbreaking!
Wonder why it had to be cut down. I love the man on the side to show how big this tree was. Impressive.
It didn't have to be cut down at the time. People during that time did not understand how precious the forests were and were cutting them down for lumber. One tree could build several houses, and it was easier to cut down one tree than it was to clear a forest. Of course they did not know the damage they would do, science of the day had not begun to understand how ecosystems fully worked and they were still learning. That is why it is such a tragedy today when someone does something like this because we now know better.
Load More Replies...Tortoise skeleton
Tortoises as well as turtles are in fact the only reptiles with hard and bony shells. To no surprise, the shell works as a protective armor from the harm of the environment. The outer layer - carapace - is the shell that we see on the animal and beneath it hides the inner bony layer, then followed (looking down) by the rib bones. The lower shell of the tortoise is called plastron. If you ever were wondering why these lovely animals walk so slow - try imagining walking around yourself with a heavy protective armor, as it most certainly weighs the animal down.
Yes , it does.... like "Where have I gone?" "What happened to me?"-
Load More Replies...Would have been cool to have 2 pictures for this.. One with head and legs out... One with head and legs in.
The softshell turtle does not have the lower shell plate and can run as the legs are not kept straight out to limit movement .
Here's proof that a turtle can't leave its shell. Its spine is actually fused with its shell.
Poppy capsule
The cross sectioned capsule of a poppy may look pretty for some, while for others it may cause an irrational fear just by looking at it (the image is a perfect way to check whether you have trypophobia). Poppies are herbaceous flowering plants, known not only for their looks, but for the drug-producing abilities, as well. Just recently, some rascal parrots have made the headlines, for they have been reportedly rampaging through the poppy farms in India, sometimes making 40 visits a day. The farmers believe that the birds might have become addicted to opium and are flying to farms frequently to get their daily fix of the drug.
Here in South Mexico it's not common thing, and when I first discover the seeds where edible and you could actually buy them I was legitimately marvelled! Hahaha you know, we think in poppies and just imaging drug-related stuff
Load More Replies...Well, it doesn’t cause an irritational fear, but I wouldn’t say it’s pretty either... interesting, yes, pretty? Eh.
I'm glad you find it at least interesting. Jewelry designers, especially in the Art Nouveau style, would take images and idea from nature at transform them into beautiful jewelry. Can you imagine this with some filigree around the edges and sprinkled with tiny pearls, diamonds and dark green gemstone like tsavorite? It could be a brooch, used as a centre focus for a necklace, earrings or all three.
Load More Replies...The thing with the parrots is actually very interesting. As when parrots are together, they're noisy. But they make these raids in complete silence.
I just read that a few days ago. Had a picture of all these parrots eating them in the fields!
Simulation to what happens when a small space debris object hits a spacecraft
The photograph shows the results of a lab test impact between a small sphere of aluminum travelling at approximately 6.8 km per second (approximately 4.2 miles per second) and a block of aluminum 18 cm (around 7 inches) thick. The diameter of the impact crater is 9cm (3.5 inches), while the depth is 5.3 cm (around 2 inches).
Even more as it's needed a many times smaller object to make a enough of a mess.
Load More Replies...This illustrates how dangerous even VERY small bits of debris can be to astronauts who need to do space walks. If this happens to a thick piece of metal, imagine how it can rip through a space suit and astronaut alike, causing their death. And in Earth's orbit, there are 500,000 pieces the size of a marble or larger that NASA tracks for safety reasons. There are literally millions smaller that can't be tracked because they're too small. https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/news/orbital_debris.html
there's a long theorized 'death of the space age' caused by debris cascading into a giant cloud of orbital destruction. Also, impacts of very small stuff (like grain of sand small) have happened. it's part of why the suit's as bulky as it it is. (lots of cloth to absorb that energy)
Load More Replies...What a nice illustration of what is known in ballistics as the Hopkinson mechanical effect - a projectile hits a plate of armour and, even though it doesn't penetrate, it creates a shock wave in the metal which then reflects back off the free surface and into the next coming wave creating an area of high compression which then tries to eject a flake (called "spall") at high speed off the back surface of the plate. In this case, the material being aluminium, and thus elastic, it didn't spall completely, but were this steel, it would have definitely thrown a flake of metal at very high speed into whatever it was behind it. This effect can be used against bunkers and armoured vehicles by the so called HESH (High Explosive Squash Haad) ammunition, which is why most of them have what's called a "spall liner" - an extra layer of armour on the interior of the plate to catch those spalled pieces.
Was this test performed in a vacuum? Would be interested in comparison photos with/without vacuum...
This is also happening at speeds of BULLETS. Its like 2 bullets hitting each other
Considering that works out 24,480km/h (15,120mph), it would be moving fast as hell.
Rock in New Zealand
The rock, called Tokangawhā or Split Apple Rock, is located in a Tasman Bay off the northern coast of the South Island of New Zealand. The fracture of the rock (in geology, it is called joint) has formed naturally - such joints are common in granite and occur due to the exposure to rain and waves. However, the traditional Maori mythology says that the fracture occurred when two gods broke the rock apart.
Erosion. If it were anywhere else, I would say it's water that got in the crack and froze but it doesn't get cold enough in NZ for that, so I'm not 100% sure.
Load More Replies...Tree fern
It is believed that ferns are some of the oldest plants in the world, and a staggering number of 10,560 species of fern are known at the moment. These plants are members of vascular plants group that reproduce via spores. Tree ferns can grow big - up to 25 meters (or 82ft) in height. One of the more interesting facts about ferns is that people during the Victorian times were absolutely obsessed with them. These plants appeared in pottery, wood, metal, textiles, printed paper and sculptures and the obsession has even got its name - a Fern-Fever or Pteridomania.
'Lasagna' style bulb planting
This type of planting is also called double decker bulb planting and it refers to the placement of bulbs within the container. Different bulbs bloom at different points of time, and by planting them all in the same container, the planter is guaranteed to have a whole spring’s worth of successive blossoming.
I don’t think this is what Garfield has in mind when he hears the word “lasagne.”
I've grown bulbs in clear glass containers and it really looks very cool!
I did that once. I caught a squirrel stealing the bulbs and replanting them elsewhere, one by one.
Too bad you can't just throw the bulbs out in the yard and let the squirrels do all of the work.
Load More Replies...I'd never heard about this, but it's very interesting. I'm going to find out more! Thanks for sharing!
I use daffodils (March/April), tulips (April/May) and lilies (Summer) to layer my pots but there must be other good seasonal combinations out there - good luck!
Load More Replies...This is freakin brilliant, and I can't believe this is the first I'm hearing of it! <3
You could only do this for a couple of season, after that the bulbs would multiply too much.
Hedgehog
This tiny and incredibly cute creature has somewhere between 5000 and 7000 quills. Muscles along the animal's back can raise and lower them as a response to threatening situations. The inside of the quills are mostly hollow, with a series of complex air chambers making them light but strong.
I've never seen a hedgehog skeleton before. This is so fascinating for me in a design sense.
It looks like a bond villain in a 1960s elaborate luxury chair. All it needs now is a white cat on its lap for panache. Gosh, it's cute though.
It looks like the skeleton is just sitting in one of those egg chairs
Firework shell
While we all know that the Chinese had invented fireworks, it seems as if Italians don't get enough credit for the fact that they were the ones who actually introduced colorful fireworks. Not only that, but the Italian pyrotechnicians have also developed aerial shells back in 1830s. As far as the modern fireworks are concerned, the inner anatomy of the aerial shell is the one responsible for the produced firework shape.
I heard the arrangement inside is what gives them those different colors and shapes when they explode in the sky :3
the colors are from additives to the black powder. magnesium burns white, copper halids blue, strontium red, calcium orange, caesium indigo, gold is charcoal (carbon), lampblack (carbon... :\) or iron. yellow is sodium. The shape of it is determined by where the stars (the balls of blackpowder,) are arranged around the bursting charge. (the stuff in the middle)
Load More Replies...Section of Golden Gate bridge cable
The Golden Gate Bridge has two main cables. Each cable is composed of an overwhelming amount of 27,572 wires which are bundled into 61 strands. It is not that easy to wrap your head around this fact, but if the wires were one continuous length, they could wrap around the earth over three times.
I've crossed that bridge many times and never had any idea the cables were this big.
Next time you're in the area stop at Golden Gate Park and you'll see this display next to the bridge (this photo was taken with the bridge at the photographer's back).
Load More Replies...Did anyone read the sign? I'm curious. While it may look like a solid metal cable, it says each cable consists of 27,572 wires. The total length of all the wires if joined and laid out is 80,000 miles! Very impressive.
I AGREE WITH PAUL, I HAVE NEVER BEEN THAT CLOSE TO THE CABLES NOR DO I WANT TO BE.
Man, that is some tensile strength! That should make you feel safer crossing the bridge.
Wow. Way to give fantastic perspective. If you don't know, now you know!
Wasp nest
It is commonly believed that the wasps are not the friendliest animals out there - but in fact wasps are rarely aggressive unless provoked. There are also a lot - a whole lot - of them, as they live in every corner of the world, except for the icy Antarctica. These buzzers make their papery nests from tree bark. They strip it from certain trees, chew it all up, add certain enzymes and regurgitate it in a pulp form to create their magnificent-looking nests.
Eww - huge wasp-phobia.Although I give them credit for building this from scratch.
I got stung only the once. Luckily I took my wedding ring off immediately - before my finger swelled up to 3x normal size.
Load More Replies...BALD-FACED HORNETS! The wasp's bigger angrier brother. Good news though, Blue Jays will raid the nests and eat the larvae.
I'd like to trade about half of the world's wasp population for those adorable honey bees.
No. Their saliva is definitely used but it's to cement the tiny plant fibres together that they gather by chewing and shredding woody plants. I love watching them do so. Years back, we had an old blue styrofoam cooler we kept on our porch. I watched a wasp chewing on it and was amused that she even tried. But I later found the small nest and there really were tiny bits of blue styrofoam that she had incorporated into the paper nest!
Load More Replies...Military tank
Most us are familial with the concept of the military tank - however, it is not widely known that the polite Brits were the ones who introduced it during the World War I. By the early 1916 the prototype of the future tank was introduced. The heavy armored vehicle was used in combat for the first time in the Battle of Flers-Courcelette on 15 September 1916.
I would never want to be inside a tank anyway. A "fast" tank might go 50 mph which is A LOT slower than any anti-tank missile. As far as I'm concerned tanks are just targets.
Load More Replies...It's horrible that the technology, materials and work that's gone into things meant for the sole purpose of killing one another.
Yep- crammed into a tiny metal box - waiting to be blown up
Load More Replies...Bowling ball
Inside the ball, you can see an oddly shaped structure, which is called a weight block. It gives the ball the momentum it needs to roll down the lane properly. However, not all manufacturers make the same cores, therefore some are light bulb-shaped, while others are elliptical, and some are even a combination of both.
One of MANY different core shapes. This is on the higher performance end, but the sub $200 balls often just have an off-center spheroid core.
True, but a lot of people think they're all just solid plastic.
Load More Replies...CT Scanner
The scan itself is know as computed tomography scan (formerly referred to as computerized axial tomography scan or CAT scan). It allows the user to see inside the object scanned without doing any actual cutting. The scanner makes use of computer-processed combinations of many X-ray measurements that are taken from different angles - thus, cross-sectional or tomographic images of the scanned object are produced.
Scary thing - can see the other part of it in the background. However am sure it has not actually been cut in half - just the outer cover removed.
Yeah, from the level in the middle and the temporary 'sign' taped to the wall, I'd guess it's being put together.
Load More Replies...You're talking about a MRT scanner. Those make lots of loud noise. CT scanners just buzz a bit.
Load More Replies...I get CT scans a lot (I had neuroblastoma), and always wondered what this looks like
CT Scanner...sounds like the protagonist of an 80s prime time cop show...like TJ Hooker. Neat pic.
Old style Zippo lighter
The iconic American brand Zippo has been around since 1933 and due to the quality of its windproof lighters, it is no wonder why they are still so wildly popular all across the globe. The inventor of the lighter - George Blaisdell - was smoking a cigarette on the porch of the Bradford Country Club back in 1932. He noticed a man using a strange lighter from Austria, which had a protective top. George asked the man why he used such a clunky lighter, to which the man replied: “Well, it works.” George then decided to make his own version of the lighter and he called it Zippo, simply because he liked the way word 'zipper' sounds. The first Zippo models were sold in 1933 for $1.95 (a little over $35 in today's money).
My uncle used to fill his lighters with English Leather cologne so the ladies would rememder him. ;)
I used to lick the roller part of my dad's Zippo. I owe everything I am today to that device.
Nope, you lift the cotton and squirt lighter fluid in it. If you're like me you overfill it and the whole lighter goes up in flames the first time you strike it. Painful but it's the price you pay for owning a classic.
Load More Replies...People keep these for decades because they STILL WORK! Not many products can make that claim.
Subsea power cable
It is essentially a transmission cable for carrying electric power below the surface of the water. Such cables are usually carrying electric power beneath salt water - hence the name subsea, or submarine. However, such cables can be used beneath fresh water also, e.g. like they do to connect the mainland with the islands in the St. Lawrence River in US. The installation of such cables is a hard, tedious and super expensive work and, if necessary, they can be buried as deep, as the mountain Everest is tall.
More interesting is the fact that they often times build the cables on the boat itself especially in the case of transatlantic cables..
Think it was amazing when they laid the transatlantic cables
Load More Replies...I wish whoever wrote the copy on these did a better job of basic grammar.
BP is a Lithuanian based company who probably employ many people for whom English is not their first language. You're probably going to have to just get used to it.
Load More Replies...Cactus
There are approximately 2000 different species of cactus and they differ in size, shape, color and their type of habitat. Obviously enough, cacti have spines instead of leaves. The spines have two major functions: they prevent loss of water via transpiration and keep the plant safe from animals. What is interesting though, is that certain cacti produce substance called mescaline which induces hallucinogenic effects.
I was looking for someone who would make this reference
Load More Replies...The cool thing is to see a saguaro skeleton. It's light woody tube with regular big holes in it.
Huh, I thought it looked like what you would see when you cut it up
It was so hot here recently in Victoria Australia that my cactus wilted. It is *probably* an Aloe Vera, but it is definitely a cactus. and it went brown and the "leaves" went soft and curled down and out.
aloe vera is not a cactus it's a succulent and a member of the lily family. They don't do well in extreme heat.
Load More Replies...How old is this cactus? I hope it was not destroyed for curiosity purposes.
Canon camera
Back in 2014, the very first Canon camera celebrated its 80th birthday. At first, the camera was called Kwanon and it was named after Kwannon, the Buddhist goddess of mercy. The engineers hoped this would entice the god to, “share her benevolence as they pursued their dream to produce the world’s finest camera.”
It looks like it has a lens that does image stabilization, too. So many brains on lenses. I like using my old minoltas.
I actually still have a working SLR Pentax film camera, purchased in 2001.
Load More Replies...Fragmentation grenade
This type of grenade got its name for a reason - such hand grenades send out lots of very fast and very small fragments when they explode. Its body is usually made of a hard synthetic material or steel - the materials provide some fragmentation as shards and splinters. However, in modern grenades, a pre-formed fragmentation matrix is often used.
I've known how these are made for a long time and it always cracks me up in the movies when a fragmentation grenade causes a massive explosion and firebomb. They're actually pretty boring when they blow up - just a bang and some smoke. Then the fragments fly everywhere with the intent of putting enemy soldiers out of the fight.
There was a wooden fence around the range where we practised with grenades. We'd go look at the shrapnel stuck in it afterwards. Really nasty irregular corkscrew shapes, almost razor sharp, embedded a good centimetre into the wood. A radius of 3 metres around the detonation was called the 'guaranteed death' or 'mincemeat' zone. They really are a lot different, and a lot nastier, than what's shown in the movies.
Load More Replies...Sadly it is indeed an everyday object is in this violent world!
Load More Replies...Vaccine Container (The "Keg Of Life")
The container has two metal layers between which there is a high vacuum, which helps in reducing the convective heat losses. The material which resembles foil, is used to reduce radiative heat losses. The foam in the corners absorbs the shock from drops, while the blue plastic containers are filled with ice, and the foam in the middle is a removable element which allows the healthcare worker to reach in and access the vaccines.
They are probably holding up crosses and hissing at this..
Load More Replies...I can hear people yelling with pitchforks and aroma candles at this
Mechanical calculator
As incredible as it sounds, the mechanical calculator with a sophisticated carry mechanism, was invented back in 1642 by Blaise Pascal. After producing fifty prototypes over the course of three years, he finally introduced it to the public. This machine could add and subtract two numbers directly and multiply and divide by repetition.
Now that IS complicated. How on earth did anyone even begin to invent this?
By starting with something extremely simple and slowly adding more complications over years and decades by different people all over the world. Nobody just did all of this in one go.
Load More Replies...I either take my hat off for the one who could put this mess together without guidance, or feel sorry for the one who had to do this every day for 20 years.
In my first job at age 16, I worked on one of these mechanical calculators. It actually started adding incorrectly, and we got the electric models. I still use one of the electric ones for my bookkeeping chores.
Leica Summicron lens
The full name of the lens is Leica Tri-Elmar-M 28-35-50mm and it was released back in 1998. What is special about the lens, is that they are aspherical (a lens whose surface profiles are not portions of a sphere or cylinder). They were only produced for 9 years, from 1998 through 2007, due to the incredibly complicated design and expensive manufacture of it. You can still buy used lens on Ebay, but, as you can guess, the price of it is quite steep.
Expensive lens - can see now why they cost so much. Just googled it - the most costly Summicron lens I saw was $22,000. Not exactly an "everyday object"
A cross section of much less expensive lenses would be very similar.
Load More Replies...The cost to a photographer is often irrelevant. I should know. I'm married to one!
Accordion
It is a musical instrument which falls in the wind family. Accordion was invented in Germany, in the early 19th century by Friedrich Buschmann. In German the instrument was referred to as the Akkordeon, a name derived from the word 'Akkord' which means 'musical chord, concord of sounds'.
Never saw the insides of accordions, but used it extensively in my childhood.
That's a piano accordion but what about a Button accordion? Very complex
Land Rover
The original Land Rover was designed by an engineer Maurice Wilks who modeled it after the US-made Jeeps from the Second World War. Maurice decided to keep the vehicle's layout simple and more tractor-like, as it was conceived as an agricultural vehicle, so he put the steering wheel in the middle. It also meant that Rover could dodge the nuisance of building two different versions of the same vehicle for left-hand and right-hand drive markets.
machines are needed to make all those parts and those machines need machines to fabricate them :o
Land Rover.. crappy vehicles since they got bought by China. used to be so good..
Wow can I buy that at a discounted price when you put it back together? I always wanted one...(a whole one, that is) lol
What do you do for a living? Saw things in half. Like what? You know, everyday items, bombs, animals, human hearts...
I'd love to know how they managed some of these, particularly the explosives.
If I were to guess, I'd say they do it with precision lasers.
Load More Replies...These were cool! I just dont exactly see how most of these were everyday objects...
more than likely, these creatures passed on -before- and weren't killed for a picture
Load More Replies...If I cut my male part in half it would be 50% it's normal size but still larger than the average American males.
He wants to be downvoted. Don't downvote. Don't upvote. Just let him be.
Load More Replies...What do you do for a living? Saw things in half. Like what? You know, everyday items, bombs, animals, human hearts...
I'd love to know how they managed some of these, particularly the explosives.
If I were to guess, I'd say they do it with precision lasers.
Load More Replies...These were cool! I just dont exactly see how most of these were everyday objects...
more than likely, these creatures passed on -before- and weren't killed for a picture
Load More Replies...If I cut my male part in half it would be 50% it's normal size but still larger than the average American males.
He wants to be downvoted. Don't downvote. Don't upvote. Just let him be.
Load More Replies...
