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...but these are puffy crisps!
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Ahh but they fracture soooo easily. What with Sherlocks weight despite not eating very often, combined with the trajectory and speed, I am afraid they would be more crumbs than crisp
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Nadezhda wrote:
Ahh but they fracture soooo easily. What with Sherlocks weight despite not eating very often, combined with the trajectory and speed, I am afraid they would be more crumbs than crisp
Actually not completely true. (I'll explain in simple terms)
If in fact you gathered quite a few air-inflated packets of crisps & crammed them in a completely airtight vacuum sealed bag, there is no movement of the packets inside the outer bag. When something with a large surface area (such as a body) connects with it at a fast speed, very little breakage of damage will occur.
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kazza474 wrote:
Nadezhda wrote:
Ahh but they fracture soooo easily. What with Sherlocks weight despite not eating very often, combined with the trajectory and speed, I am afraid they would be more crumbs than crisp
Actually not completely true. (I'll explain in simple terms)
If in fact you gathered quite a few air-inflated packets of crisps & crammed them in a completely airtight vacuum sealed bag, there is no movement of the packets inside the outer bag. When something with a large surface area (such as a body) connects with it at a fast speed, very little breakage of damage will occur.
See post above... If you reseal the bag to ensure it doesn't burst on impact, it could work, but why bother using crisps in the first place?
You could just as well use an air-filled cushion or any other type of bag...
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hypergreenfrog wrote:
kazza474 wrote:
Nadezhda wrote:
Ahh but they fracture soooo easily. What with Sherlocks weight despite not eating very often, combined with the trajectory and speed, I am afraid they would be more crumbs than crisp
Actually not completely true. (I'll explain in simple terms)
If in fact you gathered quite a few air-inflated packets of crisps & crammed them in a completely airtight vacuum sealed bag, there is no movement of the packets inside the outer bag. When something with a large surface area (such as a body) connects with it at a fast speed, very little breakage of damage will occur.
See post above... If you reseal the bag to ensure it doesn't burst on impact, it could work, but why bother using crisps in the first place?
You could just as well use an air-filled cushion or any other type of bag...
You are questioning the use of Quavers?
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Alright, you got me there, I just really dislike Quavers
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Crisps... yeah, very simple.
I'm going to agree, that the solution is as simple as possible, but without becoming implausible, unrealistic and stupid. But „it was something really simple“ is not a theory, it's a lazy nothing. Going down from the rooftop and being simply not dead would be a solution, but not a plan. Also, going down from the rooftop and being simply not dead is not simple. It would be simple if Sherlock were a superhero from outer space, but he isn't. So what was the simple plan of Sherlocks and what is the simple solution of this situation?
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You're absolutely right, but it'd be a huge cop-out if they just decided "No, he really did jump."
"It was off a roof!"
"Yeah?"
"He should have died!"
"...He got better."
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"more crumbs than crisp "
I just spluttered tea all over the keyboard.. uh-oh.