http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/24/japan-pump-idUSL3E7EN0YA20110324

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IkemenTommy wrote:BTW, has any FG been getting pulled over for bicycle registration lately?
Yokohammer wrote:I know there are a gazillion photos of the aftermath all over the media, but here are a few I shot this afternoon just a few km from my house. Can't stop at or get into some areas yet. But really, you have to see it in person. It's almost impossible to describe. I couldn't bring myself to shoot images of people forlornly picking up the bits and pieces ... what's left of their lives
"A bright red Putzmeister pump"? It sounds like a penis enlargement device.CrankyBastard wrote:http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/24/japan-pump-idUSL3E7EN0YA20110324
ichigo partygirl wrote:I can't imagine seeing that devastation literally up the road. The feeling of being there must be indescribable. Thank you for sharing the photos with us.
Yokohammer wrote:I should show you a photo of my street. It looks as though nothing ever happened. Peaceful, quiet ... not a sign of disaster anywhere. But then you go a couple of km eastward and the scenery starts to look pretty grim.
Here's fate (and a good dollop of luck) for you: when we were looking for a house to buy up here, all of the places we looked at are in what is now the disaster zone ... except for the one we bought.
AML wrote:If you ask me, it's embarrassing that they don't have equipment like the putzmeister on hand somewhere in japan
Yokohammer wrote:I know there are a gazillion photos of the aftermath all over the media, but here are a few I shot this afternoon just a few km from my house. Can't stop at or get into some areas yet. But really, you have to see it in person. It's almost impossible to describe. I couldn't bring myself to shoot images of people forlornly picking up the bits and pieces ... what's left of their lives.
AML wrote:If you ask me, it's embarrassing that they don't have equipment like the putzmeister on hand somewhere in japan
That gives me a sinking feeling. I always knew that the cops in Chiba were crooked, but this is ridiculous.Mulboyne wrote:
Koban affected by liquefaction in Chiba.
FG Lurker wrote:In some vertical markets (pun not intended) there are only one or two manufacturers in the world that make products to fit the niche. Sometimes its because there isn't enough demand to have more competition and sometimes its due to trade secrets or other technological hurdles.
canman wrote:On a note, my daughter lives in Yokohama, and I am thinking about driving down to pick her up, does anybody know if the rest areas on the express highways have gas? We heard that the shinkansen will be out of service for another month.
legion wrote:I'd be looking for a jerry can.
Greji wrote:You gotta be joking, there ain't any kind of can to put gas into in Tokyo. I even tried R&D looking for a jerry can or two and they ain't to be found. It's about like trying to find "D" batteries.
Greji wrote:You gotta be joking, there ain't any kind of can to put gas into in Tokyo. I even tried R&D looking for a jerry can or two and they ain't to be found. It's about like trying to find "D" batteries.
canman wrote:Speaking of cars,I teach a company lesson and this company is right beside the ocean. When the tsunami hit all of their cars were washed away or completely flooded. Is there any way to rescue these cars, or do they have to be scrapped. I know of two students who had just bought new cars. One a Honda Insight, the other a Nissan X-trail. I remember hearing about cars being pulled from Hurricane Katrina and being sold in other areas after they were refurbished, but some dealers weren't telling the customers about their histories.
OR could you at least use them for scrap, pull the tires, and other parts. Man there is going to be a huge demand for cars in the next little while!
canman wrote:Speaking of cars,I teach a company lesson and this company is right beside the ocean. When the tsunami hit all of their cars were washed away or completely flooded. Is there any way to rescue these cars, or do they have to be scrapped. I know of two students who had just bought new cars. One a Honda Insight, the other a Nissan X-trail. I remember hearing about cars being pulled from Hurricane Katrina and being sold in other areas after they were refurbished, but some dealers weren't telling the customers about their histories.
OR could you at least use them for scrap, pull the tires, and other parts. Man there is going to be a huge demand for cars in the next little while!
Kanchou wrote:Just drive to Miyagi and siphon a few hundred liters. Those cars will never run again anyway.
Greji wrote:You can't quite compare them with "flood cars" because it is the ocean in this instance. Saltwater will do in the best of mechanical seals. If they spent any amount of time in the water, you got a metal brick at best.
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