• IninewCrow
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      348 months ago

      Thanks for that … I can never understand those freedom units.

      • Rolivers
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        268 months ago

        That’s alright. Americans don’t either.

    • @[email protected]
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      08 months ago

      Not really hot enough to burn you instantly if you fall on it, usually only if you lose consciousness. Could be a heat stroke or something else.

      • @[email protected]
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        128 months ago

        This guy was in Phoenix, AZ. The pavement he fell on was bare minimum that hot this summer. Multiple people, including kids had severe burns after falling this year.

        The biggest problem is it isn’t instant. Every try to stand up by pushing your hands down on 100°C pavement? How about when you fall hard on your side and then the skin on your leg, as you try to stand, sticks and doesn’t come up with the rest of you? It’s pretty fuckin brutal.

      • @[email protected]
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        88 months ago

        You think can there be anything much worse than being in a motorcycle crash? Yeah, being seriously injured in a motorcycle crash, stuck laying on the asphalt in Phoenix in the Summer. Like cooking in a frying pan.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 months ago

        Yeah, I was wondering as well, if there’s something more to it.

        If my cup of tea is at 70°C, that does burn my tongue, but that’s in particular, because water conducts heat very well. I guess, if it’s very smooth asphalt and he gets full contact with naked skin, then it would conduct heat well, too…