User Controls
BREAKING HORROR IN SAN FRANCISCO
-
2023-11-16 at 5:40 AM UTCBREAKING BAD
-
2023-11-23 at 2:44 AM UTC
-
2023-11-23 at 4:16 AM UTCbreakin' duh law...
-
2023-11-23 at 9:57 AM UTCDid the tents ever come back?
-
2023-11-23 at 12:25 PM UTCgiven a long enough timeline ....
-
2023-11-25 at 8:53 AM UTCthey have these tough sheds going up under the freeways but one of the encampment the city runs burned down recently. I think this is the second time this has happened. I would of thought they would have sprinklers inside. they could just fill a giant bucket and mount it to the roof and have a sprinkler inside. this would cost more money but they would have saved the majority of the sheds you would think.
they should just fucking buy 10 footer containers and deck them out instead. steal doesn't burn so easily. -
2023-11-25 at 5:23 PM UTCI hear that outside the west, in places like Chiner, they still make actual buildings for the population to live in.
-
2023-11-25 at 5:30 PM UTC
Originally posted by Third Temple they have these tough sheds going up under the freeways but one of the encampment the city runs burned down recently. I think this is the second time this has happened. I would of thought they would have sprinklers inside. they could just fill a giant bucket and mount it to the roof and have a sprinkler inside. this would cost more money but they would have saved the majority of the sheds you would think.
they should just fucking buy 10 footer containers and deck them out instead. steal doesn't burn so easily.
steel doesnt have to burn. when that stuff is made and used in a building project its designed under certain specifications and design strength. once that steel reaches the temperatures of a major fire it loses the specs it had at ambient temperature and even if it doesnt fail catastrophically it loses its temper permanently.
structural aluminum exposed to a fire is useless and has to be completely replaced -
2023-11-25 at 5:36 PM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock steel doesnt have to burn. when that stuff is made and used in a building project its designed under certain specifications and design strength. once that steel reaches the temperatures of a major fire it loses the specs it had at ambient temperature and even if it doesnt fail catastrophically it loses its temper permanently.
structural aluminum exposed to a fire is useless and has to be completely replaced
He's talking about unstacked shipping containers, dumbass -
2023-11-25 at 5:50 PM UTC
Originally posted by I Live In Your Crawlspace Secretly4 He's talking about unstacked shipping containers, dumbass
thats literally what i was talking about.
shipping containers are built with weaker sides and reinforced/strengthened corners. if they get hot enough theyll collapse
theres a video somewhere of a shipload of them tumbling over after a fire weakened the structural strength of the lower tier and caused the upper tiers to tumble off