A quick question?

220 Kibwits. :thumbup:

I know, I know. Before you ask, I'll give you the standard definition of a kibwit.

A kibwit is a unit of weight measure that amounts to 1/220th of the total weight of a yellow (or orange) Game Warden. :cool:
 
220 Kibwits. :thumbup:

I know, I know. Before you ask, I'll give you the standard definition of a kibwit.

A kibwit is a unit of weight measure that amounts to 1/220th of the total weight of a yellow (or orange) Game Warden. :cool:

True statement! :D :D
 
220 Kibwits. :thumbup:

I know, I know. Before you ask, I'll give you the standard definition of a kibwit.

A kibwit is a unit of weight measure that amounts to 1/220th of the total weight of a yellow (or orange) Game Warden. :cool:


If that is the definition of a kibwit then you must mean the total weight of all orange and yellow wardens. In addition, there are only a total of 220 yellow and orange wardens in existance!!!!:eek:

Even though this is mathmatically possible it is highly unlikely because there are a few HOGs who have each bought more than 220 yellows and oranges:D
 
Partial answer: Weight in red

I just spec'd mine right at the spine just in front of the slabs.

SMOG PE - 0.133" 4.80 oz
LE - 0.141" 4.75 oz
Orange - 0.149" 4.80 oz
Skelly - 0.180" 3.20 oz
Tiger - 0.180" 5.40 oz
 
good info paddling man ! Do you have a black tie, mine feels lighter than my LE or smog, much thinner handles.
If you or anyone know black tie wieght, please let me know. Thanks
 
Partial answer: Weight in red

I just spec'd mine right at the spine just in front of the slabs.

SMOG PE - 0.133" 4.80 oz
LE - 0.141" 4.75 oz
Orange - 0.149" 4.80 oz
Skelly - 0.180" 3.20 oz
Tiger - 0.180" 5.40 oz

I am trying to come up with a lanyard that will allow them to float if dropped in water, so if I use 6 oz for testing it looks like it would work for any of them. thanks
 
"Jigawatts! Doc, What the Hell is a Jigawatt?" -Marty McFly to Doc Brown in "Back to the Future"

I got an email recently asking if "jigawatt" was a real term, and what terms were used to describe large numbers of watts. Well, is "jigawatt" real? The answer is "yes" and "no"!


At first I thought, like many fellow scientists, "Surely, Christopher Lloyd is just having fun with us! That's not how you pronounce gigawatt!"Shortly thereafter, I got a nice laminated sheet from IUPAC with units and prefixes on it. They took special care to point out that giga- (the correct spelling!) was pronounced with the first g as a hard g, and the second, as a soft one! According to my Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (1993) the first (preferred) pronunciation is " 'ji - ge " (as in jiggle) and the alternative pronunciation is " 'gi - ge " (as in giggle)."

http://www.deloreanmotorcar.com/ec/jigawatts.htm
 
QUOTE=idahoskunk;4257686]what's a jigawatt ? :confused:[/QUOTE]

one point twenty one gigawatts????!!!!
 
Isn't that what the Deloreane used...to transverse time?

its the flux capacitor.
Not my shirt but its the only img i found of it.
99-0063r.jpg

:D :D :D
 
Back
Top