Home > categories > Rubber & Plastics > Rubber Sheets > Is it true that when lightning strikes sand with a metal rod in it, it creates glass?
Question:

Is it true that when lightning strikes sand with a metal rod in it, it creates glass?

Like what they showed in the movie sweet home Alabama. Is that stuff really true? Can that really happen, if so, what’s it called?

Answer:

your all wrong, I heard it slows down respiratory !
maybe beacuse they think that since you can see under water then obviouly you would be disrespecting girls and cecking them out under water! thats what they think i mean ur a guy! right? so what do guys like? exactly thats why:)
Get that carpenter back right now and make him fix his error. The noise is not your real problem. The battery leaking or the unit overheating and starting a fire, now that is your problem. By the way, if your carpenter is that careless, I'd double check all his work.
I would expect that the same places which ban scuba masks allow swimming goggles too, to add to the puzzlement a bit. Though the X-ray powers of swimming goggles aren't quite as good as a scuba mask—if privacy has anything to do with the restriction, then swimming goggles should be banned as well. I suspect it more to do with perceived liability. There exist cheap scuba-style masks which lack tempered glass, and have rigid frames. A collision with a such mask is likely to be event-free for the wearer, but injure the other swimmer. My expensive scuba masks aren't going to hurt anybody, and they certainly aren't going to send flying shards of glass anywhere for any cause. But pool administrators seem to be universally clueless about the characteristics of quality scuba equipment—especially masks. That's my best guess for the restrictions.

Share to: