PDA

View Full Version : Tricks or Treat



NA4BH
10-31-2011, 08:41 PM
We had 350+ kids come through tonight and had to shut down. We ran out of candy. There were some very good costumes this year, they really used their imaginations. I told her we didn't have enough candy. LOL..............

W3MIV
11-01-2011, 05:19 AM
I would move.

suddenseer
11-01-2011, 06:40 AM
I took my 3.5 year old granddaughter out trick-or-treating for her first time. She tagged along with her 2nd cousin. Can anyone guess her character?
http://i1192.photobucket.com/albums/aa328/suddenseer/P1010481.jpg

suddenseer
11-01-2011, 06:49 AM
I can't get enough...She is sooo damned cute, she has me wrapped around her finger.

http://i1192.photobucket.com/albums/aa328/suddenseer/P1010479.jpg

K7SGJ
11-01-2011, 08:43 AM
That's their job, and they do it very, very well. She's a cutie.

KG4CGC
11-01-2011, 08:49 AM
OK, I don't know but I suspect it has to do with a children's character that has a helmet for hair?
I kid, I haven't a clue. I was a cow lick until age 13.

n2ize
11-01-2011, 09:38 AM
Nobody trick or treats around here anymore except for very young children and they are escorted by their parents and mainly trick or treat only at the homes of people they know from school or whom the parents are friends with. Older kids don't trick or treat anymore. They just walk around the neighborhood in large throngs talking on their cell phones, texting each other, and squirting shave cream at each other. The most original costume I saw yesterday was this one little girl dresses up as a crayon. It was so cute.

In the old days of my youth a lot of older kids used to go trick or treating. There was a lot of hard drinking, fights and vandalism. Homes were egged or spray painted and people who were out walking alone were egged and spray painted and even attacked and beaten. Sometimes you would just stop and break something for no reason other than the fact that it was there. A friend of mine nicknamed "The Insect" devised a system where he attached some extra hose to a fire extinguisher and ran the hose through the engine compartment of his car and out the front grill at which point he attached a nozzle. As he drove around when he encountered a group of people he would point the car at them and squeeze the handle on the extinguisher blasting everyone in his path with water. Only problem was that there wasn't enough pressure left after the first few blasts. We were thinking of devising a system that ran off a pump and a refillable reservoir but we graduated and lost interest in Halloween. M-80's, Ash-Cans, and Block Busters were a staple part of every Halloween.Then there was this one guy we knew who used to dress up in drag every Halloween and this girl who used to dress herself to look like a ho.

One Halloween me and my brother stuck a fluorescent tube in the ground near the sidewalk and attached it to an ignition coil and a transformer and ran the whole thing up to the window. The idea was that someone walks by and we turn it on and they see this discarded fluorescent tube mysteriously light up. At one point during the evening my brother turned the thing on but accidentally forgot to shut it. After a while the ignition coil overheated and started smoking like crazy and leaking oil. he wound up disconnecting it and throwing the whole thing out the window.

Halloween these days can't hold a candle to the Halloweens of yesteryear.

Halloween is also my Dad's birthday.

W3WN
11-01-2011, 09:45 AM
We had 350+ kids come through tonight and had to shut down. We ran out of candy. There were some very good costumes this year, they really used their imaginations. I told her we didn't have enough candy. LOL..............We had a banner year.

14.

That's up from 12 last year, according to the boss.

Little Miss Field Day informed us that she's "too old" at 15, besides, none of the other kids in the neighborhood in her age group go out. Pity.

Meanwhile, around the corner in Mount Lebanon, there were a lot more kids walking around, including a lot of teenagers. I pointed this out to her, but she felt awkward about it, and I didn't push it.

KG4CGC
11-01-2011, 01:13 PM
John, you should have used a simple theremin. Small speakers strategically planted in concealed areas. Disguise the trigger rods by using a downspout gutter or whatever nearby metal work. When people walk near the field .... EERIE!

W2NAP
11-01-2011, 03:13 PM
we had 0. like last year and the year before.

but this isnt the 90s anymore and the city has been taken over by thugs and crackheads

K7SGJ
11-01-2011, 03:21 PM
We didn't get any this year either, but then we never do. Out this way, the bobcats and coyotes go trick or treating for kids.

W3MIV
11-01-2011, 03:23 PM
We didn't get any this year either, but then we never do. Out this way, the bobcats and coyotes go trick or treating for kids.

My kinda place. Any spare room?

K7SGJ
11-01-2011, 03:26 PM
You bet, there's a spare bed in the radio room.

n2ize
11-01-2011, 03:34 PM
John, you should have used a simple theremin. Small speakers strategically planted in concealed areas. Disguise the trigger rods by using a downspout gutter or whatever nearby metal work. When people walk near the field .... EERIE!

Yeah, that would have been a much more clever idea. I might even try that nowadays. :)

I don't know what we were thinking when we set up the fluorescent lamp thing. We were trying to come up with something to bug people out really quick and we figured that the thing lighting up like that out of nowhere would scare people. But that year Halloween fell on a Sunday night and it was also very cold and the streets were empty. So nobody saw it. Probably was for the better, if some kids did see it they probably would have said "hey, look at that shit !!" and smashed it. Or gotten electrocuted and their family sued us.

I do like the theremin idea.

Oh and I meant to write "ran the whole thing up to the window" and not "ran the whore up to the window". :mrgreen:

NQ6U
11-01-2011, 03:39 PM
Oh and I meant to write "ran the whole thing up to the window" and not "ran the whore up to the window". :mrgreen:

I figured, but I like it better the way you wrote it. You slut.

K7SGJ
11-01-2011, 03:42 PM
Hell, if I had a whore in the room I'd forget to turn the sumbitch off and let it smoke, too.

suddenseer
11-01-2011, 07:14 PM
OK, I don't know but I suspect it has to do with a children's character that has a helmet for hair?
I kid, I haven't a clue. I was a cow lick until age 13.She is well known on Nick.http://i-love-cartoons.us/snags/clipart/dora-clipart/Dora-the-explorer-logo1.jpg

al2n
11-01-2011, 09:14 PM
Bit of a snow storm up here kept the kids away. Only a dozen or so came through so I am stuck with a big bowl of candy plus the 15+ pounds the kids brought home with them.

No Heath bars though. That sucks. Those things are the crack of the candy world.

K7SGJ
11-02-2011, 12:20 AM
Bit of a snow storm up here kept the kids away. Only a dozen or so came through so I am stuck with a big bowl of candy plus the 15+ pounds the kids brought home with them.

No Heath bars though. That sucks. Those things are the crack of the candy world.


Every time I see those, I always want to call them health bars. God knows they're anything but that.

W3WN
11-02-2011, 08:42 AM
Bit of a snow storm up here kept the kids away. Only a dozen or so came through so I am stuck with a big bowl of candy plus the 15+ pounds the kids brought home with them.

No Heath bars though. That sucks. Those things are the crack of the candy world.I miss Heath bars.

kb2vxa
11-02-2011, 09:56 AM
"The Insect" devised a system where he attached some extra hose to a fire extinguisher..."

Reminds me of an adventure with a 30lb dry chemical extinguisher, better than water and it doesn't run out of fizz for a LONG time.

KG4CGC
11-02-2011, 12:25 PM
She is well known on Nick.
Ah yes, and has been around for a long time.

suddenseer
11-02-2011, 08:16 PM
Ah yes, and has been around for a long time.Right now, my granddaughter is in 'all Dora all the time' mode. It's really fun when all 3 Dora dolls are singing at once.

suddenseer
11-02-2011, 08:18 PM
I miss Heath bars.They're gone?

n2ize
11-02-2011, 08:25 PM
"The Insect" devised a system where he attached some extra hose to a fire extinguisher..."

Reminds me of an adventure with a 30lb dry chemical extinguisher, better than water and it doesn't run out of fizz for a LONG time.

Dry chemical ?? You mean a "chalk". I worked for a local company that serviced extinguishers and we used to refer to the dry chemical kind as "chalks". Handheld extinguishers were in general referred to as "oils". I think that name was a throwback to the wetting agents (surfactants) employed in certain wet fluid based extinguishers. The large wheeled or automated stationary CO2 systems were awesome. we used to have to test them now and then. Those things would blow you across a room.

As far as Halloween goes the best extinguishers to steal were the CO2's, or "snows". They were loud and gave a wicked blast of ice cold snow. Second best were the pressurized water or pressurized foams or anti-freeze, also called loaded streams. The chalks basically sucked. They were a one shot deal. Once you fired them the pressure would keep running out. The ones that sucked the most were the older soda acid or foam kinds, that you had to turn upside down. Once activated that was it. You couldn't stop them. Once when I was in high school we were up in the attic and my friend Zaffo fired off a soda acid out the window and onto the hippie flunkies sitting smoking pot out in the bleachers. That damned thing was going for like an hour and the spray was like a fucking oil.

kb2vxa
11-02-2011, 09:11 PM
I used to work for a company that makes fire extinguishers and never heard those odd names before now. Anyway, the little 1 & 2lb babies are one shot deals but the big ones go on and on, about a gazillion dustings or a single blast lasting a couple of minutes. CO2 and Halon don't produced the desired effect, water based solutions don't either and some contain nasty chemical surfactants although protein foam could be interesting. Super K (potassium chloride) is really nasty stuff and that's going WAY over the line when it comes to a prank, even as dry powder it corroded the heck out of the filling equipment in very short order so you can imagine what it would do to the lungs, eyes and mucous membranes. That's why my twisted brain came up with using an ordinary dry chem ABC extinguisher, (sodium bicarbonate) tricky treaters and assorted innocent bystanders become instant ghosts. About a second is all it takes and a 30 pounder shoots about 20 feet effectively... MUAHAHAHAAAaaa.

n2ize
11-03-2011, 04:08 AM
I used to work for a company that makes fire extinguishers and never heard those odd names before now.

No surprise there. Our boss used to like to make his own names for everything. We would use those same names on the outside to confuse people...


Anyway, the little 1 & 2lb babies are one shot deals but the big ones go on and on, about a gazillion dustings or a single blast lasting a couple of minutes.

Yeah, most of the "chalk" ones we got hold of were of the smaller 2 - 5 lb kind. They basically sucked, once you fired it the pressure would keep leaking out the nozzle. Some has a booster hose others just had a fixed nozzle. Best place to get them was at the shop classes in school. This guy we called "Duke" used to wear a long coat to school just for that purpose. I remember we had two of those types in the electronics lab. One morning we come to class and the teacher unlocks the door and we step in and everything is covered in white powder. looked like a indoor blizzard happened. Turned out that over the weekend the football team was using the room to watch movies (since all the schools AV equipment was stored and serviced there). A fairly expensive microphone was stolen as well. So they clean up the mess. 2 weeks later we walk in and... you guessed it, the football team used the room again. It was indoor blizzard # 2. After that the football team was excluded from that room.


CO2 and Halon don't produced the desired effect, water based solutions don't either and some contain nasty chemical surfactants although protein foam could be interesting. Super K (potassium chloride) is really nasty stuff and that's going WAY over the line when it comes to a prank, even as dry powder it corroded the heck out of the filling equipment in very short order so you can imagine what it would do to the lungs, eyes and mucous membranes.

I was always wary about using a halon for pranking. I suspect the agent in them could be toxic. Besides we didn't have many of those in my school. Didn't come across many halons until I started working in the computer lab in college. Most of the extinguishers we had in high school were the smaller CO2 kind. The science labs were the best places to acquire those. Otherwise they mostly had the class A pressurized water or old soda acid kinds. The CO2''s and the water's were pretty good for Halloween pranking. No "instant ghost" effect but still fun.



That's why my twisted brain came up with using an ordinary dry chem ABC extinguisher, (sodium bicarbonate) tricky treaters and assorted innocent bystanders become instant ghosts. About a second is all it takes and a 30 pounder shoots about 20 feet effectively... MUAHAHAHAAAaaa.

I could imagine... instant blizzard...insta-ghosts...

Years ago when I was working for Duracell we had class D extinguishers in areas where metals like lithium, magnesium, powdered zinc, etc were frequently used. Those metal fires can be nasty and ordinary extinguishers won't put them out. Thing is they never showed us how to use them. They were painted yellow and they had no squeeze handle on them. I suspect they might have had an attached cartridge to supply the pressure. I guess in the event of a metal fire I would have either 1) figured out very quickly how to use them or, 2) gotten the hell out of there fast...

W3WN
11-03-2011, 07:37 AM
They're gone?They are for me. Along with $100,000, Snickers, Milky Way, 3 Musketeers, Almond Joy, Mounds... *sigh*

kb2vxa
11-03-2011, 03:33 PM
Amid Snickers and along the Milky Way trekked 3 Musketeers to Almond Joy and her Mounds. It cost $100,000 though, she not a cheap ho bro! Almond Joy has nuts, aw, you finish it.

n2ize
11-03-2011, 04:06 PM
And on this Mega-Moment
She raised her hands to the Milky way
She finds her dream in a story book
Of the Mounds she never had
In heaven a troubled countess
And the wife of a Snickers man
Such a darling and ever so friendly
Just like the 3 Musketeers band.

K7SGJ
11-03-2011, 08:02 PM
There once was a hermit named Dave..................... never mind.