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Topic: Safe Landing (Read 1340 times) |
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maryl
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A man falls 150 feet without a parachute. He flips upside down six times and lands safely on the ground. How does he do this?
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Lightboxes
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #1 on: Aug 18th, 2003, 12:16am » |
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I say:: bungee
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A job is not worth doing unless it's worth doing well.
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maryl
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Lightboxes, when you bungee jump you don't land, you are suspended in the air, then I guess pulled back up-(have wanted to do that for years). Anyway, you do have the correct theme of things in mind.
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Lightboxes
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #3 on: Aug 18th, 2003, 6:45pm » |
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Well, here are some (obviously not correct) answers but posting this might help the true solution to be found: He is 151 feet from the center of the moon's gravational pull (center of mass) and lands on the ground of a gigantic hole. He is dreaming and wakes up lieing on the floor. He's actually Tom Cruise from Mission Impossible or George Clooney from Ocean's Eleven. He was swimming, then blew out all the air from his lungs and landed on the ocean floor.
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« Last Edit: Aug 18th, 2003, 6:45pm by Lightboxes » |
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A job is not worth doing unless it's worth doing well.
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maryl
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Well, I can't tell you the answer but I could scream if I needed to.
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turtler7
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #5 on: Aug 20th, 2003, 3:10pm » |
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a rollercoaster? Something like that. like drop zone at Kings Island in Ohio(i live in ohio so i realize some of u might not be familiar with it). Drop zone will let a man fall nearly 400 feet and land safly on their feet. This is my guess or gist of the idea.
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That Don Guy
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My answer: >he is in an airplane while all of this is going on.]< At first, I thought: >he was a lot higher than 150 feet, so he fell 150 feet and then opened his parachute< However: >if "without a parachute" means he does not have a parachute with him, then he could also be a stuntman who falls 150 feet onto a large air bag.<
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Sir Col
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impudens simia et macrologus profundus fabulae
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #7 on: Aug 21st, 2003, 4:20pm » |
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Perhaps... :: The plane is performing aerial stunts, dropping 150 feet before performing six rolls. After this amazing performance, the pilot safely lands the plane. ::
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mathschallenge.net / projecteuler.net
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Speaker
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #8 on: Oct 6th, 2003, 7:38pm » |
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He falls 150 feet without a parachute. Well, is a parachute even effective at 150 feet? Anyway, maybe he had two parachutes, which is the standard arrangement. So, he fell with two parachutes, one was open. But, that does not seem to satisfy the spirit of the riddle. How about: he is an olympic class skier. He goes off the jump and spins six times then lands gracefully and slides to a dramatic stop in front of the camaras. I have never seen them do six flips, but they do fall more than 150 feet.
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They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. <Ben Franklin>
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mistysakura
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #9 on: Oct 7th, 2003, 4:01am » |
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on Oct 6th, 2003, 7:38pm, Speaker wrote:He falls 150 feet without a parachute. Well, is a parachute even effective at 150 feet? Anyway, maybe he had two parachutes, which is the standard arrangement. So, he fell with two parachutes, one was open. But, that does not seem to satisfy the spirit of the riddle. |
| I think what he meant was that he fell for 150 feet, then opened his parachute with about 1000 more feet to go.
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Speaker
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #10 on: Oct 7th, 2003, 11:16pm » |
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Mistysakura, is that the official sanctioned answer? That Don Guy got it a few posts back. Anyway, if it is official, okay.
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They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. <Ben Franklin>
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maryl
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Turtler had my answer, I hope he covers it up next time though.
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Speaker
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #12 on: Oct 9th, 2003, 7:53pm » |
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Hence the scream
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They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. <Ben Franklin>
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Jess_13
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #13 on: Feb 21st, 2004, 10:27am » |
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ok :: Larry is on a giant roller coaster>? Is that right?::
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Icarus
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Re: Safe Landing
« Reply #14 on: Feb 22nd, 2004, 1:27pm » |
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Jess_13, if you will read the thread, you will find the answer already given and confirmed, so why are you asking if yours is right? Alternative answer: The man is on a small planetoid with light gravity. The moon might work (roughly the same as a 25 ft fall on earth), but something even lighter would be better. For instance, Vega.
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"Pi goes on and on and on ... And e is just as cursed. I wonder: Which is larger When their digits are reversed? " - Anonymous
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