For a Good Night's Sleep

It would be the biochemical attack unleashed from inside that would concern me the most.
 
Looks about like a vision of my personal hell. I'd rather be dead than live in that thing.

John
 
Mr Bad I assume you don't mean a dutch oven like i used in scouts.....


:barf: :barf: :barf: :barf: :barf: :barf: :barf: :barf:
 
My wife complains now about my snoring...I'd need protection if she were locked inside that thing with me. :eek: :eek: :eek:

Protection against a "57 Magnum"...and I'm going to trust the quality of the unit? They can't even proof read their website... :confused:
 
You've never heard of a 57 Magnum? Well I haven't either but it sounds horrible!!

They must be counting on a inherited rich and mentally ill consumer segment of the population...
 
John Trout said:
You've never heard of a 57 Magnum? Well I haven't either but it sounds horrible!!
It was.:( :barf: The .57 -.58 calibre muskets used during the Civil War could be considered a magnum round couldn't it?
Even when hit in the leg, which 'could' be a minor wound with a .357 Mag, with a .50 some odd calibre round ball or Minnie it almost always, if not always, meant amputation even by todays medical standard's.:(
The old black powder 44-40, I've been told, is more powerful or just as powerful as a .44 Mag.
I wonder where the old .50 + calibre muskets would be rated?

Edit:
You wouldn't catch me sleeping in the damned thing either!:barf:
It used to be that close spaces didn't bother me, no longer though!
 
If I run into a problem that I can't solve with a khukuri, the Mrs., the dog and the Baja I don't think a human footlocker is going to be much help.

Frank
 
I've lived in travel trailers not much bigger than this. I think all it needs is a set of wheels and a hitch -- seems to have everything else.
 
Bill Martino said:
I've lived in travel trailers not much bigger than this. I think all it needs is a set of wheels and a hitch -- seems to have everything else.
Bill I didn't see a propane tank.;)

Never mind. For a moment there I forgot that a lot of the really old ones didn't always have a propane stove.:rolleyes:
My aunt and uncle had one where the dinky, but semi-complete kitchen with storage pulled down from the back of the trailer. It was equipped with an old coal oil two burner stove and was open to the elements. A fair weather trailer you might say.;) :D
I say semi-eqipped because it didn't have a water tank or a sink, but at least you could cook a meal even if it was bacon and eggs and it's damned hard to screw them up.
All that was inside was a bed and a small place to stand to get undressed and dressed.
When they were living in it in Yakima Washington we had it made!
We lived in a big US Army tent with carboard and dirt floors and fruit crate kitchen cabinets.
Mom always had a way of fixing things up to make a home.:D
 
I always sleep with the bedroom door and windows open so I can hear what's going on around me. I'm also a bit claustrophobic and don't care too much for riding in elevators, so I imagine that sleeping in one of these boxes would not be a very pleasant experience for me.
 
Spectre said:
Looks about like a vision of my personal hell. I'd rather be dead than live in that thing.

John


If you're dead you will be in one of those things...

Well unless you get cremated. Talk about my vision of hell.
 
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