Friday, December 20, 2013
2014 Buick LaCrosse Sedan Earns Five Stars for Safety!
The 2014 Buick LaCrosse four-door sedan has received the 5-Star overall safety score from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), as part of the agency’s New Car Assessment Program.
The new sedan earned full 5-star ratings in the frontal and side crash tests and four stars in the rollover try-out. Driver and passenger safety in both the frontal and side crash were given the top 5-star score as well, while the “risk of rollover” was rated at 11.8 percent.
For video coverage and more details on the 2014 Buick LaCrosse's safety features, check out the full article on Autoevolution.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Interesting Facts and the Science Behind Snow
1. The world’s largest snowflake: It was reported to be
15 inches across and 8 inches thick. According to the Guinness Book of
World Records, this beast of a snowflake was found at Fort Keogh,
Montana on January 28, 1887.
2. Snow is not white: It is actually clear and colorless. As the National Snow and Ice Data Center so eloquently put it,
3. World record snowfall: Mt. Baker ski area in Washington State has the world record for snowfall at 1,140 inches of snow in the 1998/1999 winter season.
4. Six sides or bust: All snowflakes must have 6 sides otherwise they are not considered snowflakes. In a nutshell,
Disclaimer: Not the largest snowflake in the world, but it sure is pretty!
2. Snow is not white: It is actually clear and colorless. As the National Snow and Ice Data Center so eloquently put it,
“The complex structure of snow crystals results in countless tiny surfaces from which visible light is efficiently reflected. What little sunlight is absorbed by snow is absorbed uniformly over the wavelengths of visible light thus giving snow its white appearance.”
3. World record snowfall: Mt. Baker ski area in Washington State has the world record for snowfall at 1,140 inches of snow in the 1998/1999 winter season.
You could've leaped out of an airplane and landed unharmed! Don't try that at home...
4. Six sides or bust: All snowflakes must have 6 sides otherwise they are not considered snowflakes. In a nutshell,
"The laws of electronegativity and molecular bonding between oxygen and hydrogen atoms dictate that the formation of positive and negative dipoles causes H2O to have a V-shape. Intermolecular forces between the oppositely charged ends of different particles cause them to join together in a very specific three-dimensional pattern with a six-sided symmetry."
Thursday, December 5, 2013
L.A. Auto Show Witnesses Debut of 2015 GMC Yukon and Yukon XL
The middle child of General Motors' trio of truck-based SUVs, the GMC Yukon and long-wheelbase Yukon XL, received their auto show debut at the 2013 Los Angeles Auto Show. Showing off a bigger, bolder look, particularly on its Denali trim, the Yukon sports prominent chrome grille instantly identifies GMC's new top-end SUV.
The Yukon is will come to market with a pair of engines. The base 5.3-liter V8 pumps out 355 horsepower and 383 pound-feet of torque, while the higher-end models benefit from the same direct-injected, 6.2-liter V8 as the Escalade. That engine makes 420 horsepower and 450 pound-feet of torque, with fuel economy seeing a likely boost thanks to an active fuel management system. Like the Tahoe, Suburban and Escalade, the Yukon takes advantage of a six-speed, column-mounted automatic transmission.
The cabin has seen significant upgrades in terms of materials and technology, with an eight-inch touchscreen display and IntelliLink standard in both Yukon and Yukon Denali. Fold-flat second and third-row seats come standard, while a power option is available, as well. Other techy features include active noise cancellation and standard Bose stereos.
You'll be the envy of everyone else on the road in one of these beastly rides!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Thanksgiving Cooking Safety Tips
Thanksgiving is all about food and family – turkey, stuffing, sweet
potatoes, pumpkin pie and family time. However, preparing holiday
goodies can lead to disaster - the kitchen is the setting of more fires
than any other room in the house, and cooking is the leading cause of
fires in the home. Here are some safety steps to use while preparing the
Thanksgiving feast.
Check food regularly while cooking and remain in the home while cooking. Use a timer as a reminder that the stove or oven is on.
Keep the kids away from the cooking area. Enforce a “kid-free zone” and make them stay at least three feet away from the stove.
Keep anything that can catch fire - pot holders, oven mitts, wooden
utensils, paper or plastic bags, food packaging, and towels or
curtains—away from the stove, oven or any other appliance in the kitchen
that generates heat.
Clean cooking surfaces on a regular basis to prevent grease buildup.
Purchase a fire extinguisher to keep in the kitchen. Contact the
local fire department to take training on the proper use of
extinguishers.
Always check the kitchen before going to bed or leaving the home to
make sure all stoves, ovens, and small appliances are turned off.
Install a smoke alarm near the kitchen, on each level of the home,
near sleeping areas, and inside and outside bedrooms. Use the test
button to check it each month. Replace all batteries at least once a
year.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
10 Spectacular Roads You Need To Drive On Before You Die
1. Rohtang Pass — Himachal Pradesh, India
2. Great Ocean Road — Victoria, Australia
3. Atlantic Ocean Road — Averøy, Norway
4. Hana Highway — Maui, Hawaii
5. Highway 99 “Sea to Sky Highway” — British Columbia, Canada
6. Los Caracoles “Snails Pass” — In the Andes between Argentina and Chile
7. Øresund Bridge — Denmark and Sweden
8. Going-to-the-Sun Road — Glacier National Park, Montana
9. Guoliang Tunnel — Taihang Mountains, China
10. Stelvio Pass — Eastern Alps, Italy
2. Great Ocean Road — Victoria, Australia
3. Atlantic Ocean Road — Averøy, Norway
4. Hana Highway — Maui, Hawaii
5. Highway 99 “Sea to Sky Highway” — British Columbia, Canada
6. Los Caracoles “Snails Pass” — In the Andes between Argentina and Chile
7. Øresund Bridge — Denmark and Sweden
8. Going-to-the-Sun Road — Glacier National Park, Montana
9. Guoliang Tunnel — Taihang Mountains, China
10. Stelvio Pass — Eastern Alps, Italy
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Is Your Car Ready for Winter?
As snow and ice begin to cover the roads, it's important for you-and your car-to be prepared for increased driving hazards.
- Cold temperatures can drastically reduce your vehicle's battery power by up to 50%. Have your battery tested if it's older than three years.
- Check lights, antifreeze, heater/defroster, belts, hoses, filters, oil, wipers and brakes
- Inspect tire pressure and tread depth to ensure sufficient traction on wet or icy roads. Add chains to your tires if necessary.
- Carry the following essentials in your car: ice scraper, a snowbrush, a small shovel, tow chains and jumper cables.
Friday, November 1, 2013
From One Second To The Next A Film By Werner Herzog
The film is a PSA sponsored by four major phone companies-- AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile, who originally approached Herzog to make the film in an effort to combat a growing cultural phenomenon where texting-related accidents are becoming increasingly all too common.
For Herzog, it's a sharp turn outside the norm from his usual works, which often focus on themes of isolation and wilderness, as can be seen in films like "Grizzly Man" and "Encounters At the End of the World". Nonetheless, "From One Second to the Next" is as much an accomplishment in cinema as it is an important message that should be adopted by anyone who gets behind a wheel.
Watch "From One Second to the Next" here
Friday, October 25, 2013
20 Things You Didn't Know About... Cars
1. In 1760 King George III housed around 30 horses in the Royal Mews stables in London. Today a typical compact car packs a 150-horsepower engine. So a suburban commuter has instant access to five times as much sheer muscle as the king who nearly crushed the American Revolution.
2. By the formal definition of horsepower (the power required to lift 33,000 pounds by one foot in one minute), a real horse musters only about 0.7 horsepower.
3. Not only has the horse been outgunned by the car, it faces the further indignity of not being able to keep up with itself.
4. Contrary to legend, Ford’s Model T originally came in a variety of colors…and black was not one of them. The “any color so long as it is black” philosophy arrived in 1913, as Henry Ford sought to simplify production.
5. Volkswagen had the good sense to change the original, Hitler-sanctioned name for its small car, the Kraft durch Freude Wagen (“Strength Through Joy Car”). You know it as the Beetle.
6. The first documented auto fatality in the United States was H. H. Bliss of New York City, who was struck by an electric taxicab on September 13, 1899, while alighting from a trolley car.
7. The motor vehicle fatality rate in the United States—the average number of deaths per passenger-mile of driving—has dropped by roughly 80 percent in the past half century.
8. Last year 32,310 Americans died in auto accidents. If the 1962 fatality rate still held, there would be an extra 150,000 deaths annually, equivalent to losing the population of Pittsburgh every two years.
9. Credit a mix of improvements, including crash impact standards, air bags, better tires, antilock brakes, and stability control.
10. One of the biggest factors? Seat belts. 84 percent of people now buckle up, compared with 14 percent three decades ago.
11. Please don’t kick the tires. The contact patches—the areas of the tires that actually touch the road at any given moment—cover an area of just over 100 square inches for an average family sedan.
12. In other words, all of the accelerating, cornering, braking, and everything else that your four wheels do, happens on a piece of ground scarcely bigger than your own two feet.
13. Lighting is one of the next frontiers in safety. BMW is developing headlights that highlight nearby people to help focus the driver’s attention, and a Carnegie Mellon University researcher has developed lights that can track droplets and avoid illuminating them, rendering rainfall nearly invisible.
14. In 2004 Nevada hosted the first Darpa Grand Challenge for autonomous cars. None of the contenders finished the course, and one lunged menacingly at spectators. Now Google’s fleet of self-driving cars has completed 140,000 miles on the road with only two small accidents—one of them caused by human error.
15. Betting all-in on robots: [Last year] Nevada became the first state to issue licenses for self-driving cars.
16. Many high-end vehicles are already partly autonomous, with brakes that activate if sensors indicate an impending crash, steering that prevents drifting, sonar systems that navigate into parking spaces, and cruise control that prevents following the next car too closely.
17. Self-driving cars could improve highway flow by regulating distances between cars and ease urban congestion by automating the search for parking (which causes up to three-quarters of city traffic).
18. Could they even eliminate dumb driver errors? “Crashless is the goal,” John Maddox of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recently told Automotive News.
19. The AMC Gremlin, often cited as one of the ugliest cars ever made, pioneered the high-hood, sloping-side-window look ubiquitous among today’s SUVs. Which makes AMC’s Bob Nixon perhaps the world’s most unsung designer.
20. What is the most beautiful car? Good luck getting any two people to agree, but the 1946 Cisitalia 202 GT was the first to be exhibited alongside the Picassos at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. If it does not make your heart jump, check your pulse.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Haunted Places!
As we all know, Halloween is quickly approaching. With it, comes haunted stories, places, and other ghoulish frights around your neighborhood town. What we'd like to know, is if anyone has been to the haunted places on this list! Did anything crazy happen there?
At the very least, check out some of the cooler places to go during this time of the year. Just don't be surprised if you encounter ghosts, ghouls, or other nightmarish creatures!
Check out a list of Haunted Places in Minnesota: http://bit.ly/1c2TnWx
Friday, October 11, 2013
101 Things to do in the Winter
Brace yourselves, winter is coming… however, that
doesn’t mean you should just sit inside and bundle up the entire time!
(Definitely bundle up a little…) I mean, look at all these cool things that you
could be doing with your friends or family! If you’ve never made a snowman, or
never knitted a scarf, these are some of the exciting things you’ll find that
winter brings out… let your creative juices flow!
- Go ice skating.
- Go sledding.
- Have a movie marathon.
- Ski on your Wii.
- Go skiing.
- Build a snowman.
- Make a snow angel.
- Build a snow fort.
- Have a snowball fight.
- See this year’s cool Christmas/Winter movie.
- Watch last year's cool Christmas/Winter flick on DVD.
- List your ten favorite Christmas carols in your journal.
- Shovel off the porch or driveway for your family.
- Write a poem about ice or snow in your journal.
- Make a winter journal.
- Go on a winter hike with friends.
- Go ice fishing.
- List your ten favorite Christmas television specials in your journal.
- Eat an icicle.
- Drink hot chocolate.
- Knit a scarf.
- Babysit for someone for free.
- Donate blood.
- Sketch a winter scene.
- Decorate your bedroom door for the Holidays.
- Make a snowflake card for a friend who lives far away.
- Start a new jigsaw puzzle – then finish it.
- Make a cinnamon ornament.
- Try and make a fun family or winter recipe.
- Start a snow shoveling business.
- Snow shovel for those in need for free.
- Play a game of basketball.
- Go watch your high school basketball team.
- Go watch your high school ski team.
- Go watch your high school wrestling team.
- Drink some hot cider.
- Make origami ornaments.
- Make and use an advent calendar.
- Go snow tubing.
- Learn to use a snow board or learn a new trick.
- Make a snowflake.
- Take a walk while it’s snowing and catch snowflakes on your tongue.
- Friend someone famous on your social networking page.
- Decorate your social networking page with a holiday or winter theme.
- Sit or look outside and write a song.
- Sit or look outside and write a play.
- Start your winter fantasy novel.
- Take your dog/pet for a mile-long walk.
- Clean out and organize your junk drawer so you have room for this school year's junk.
- Read something that warms your heart.
- Read something that makes you laugh out loud.
- Go to a museum.
- Start a new healthy habit.
- Add or add to a folder for homework help sites to your favorite links.
- Add or add to a folder for sites on a new interest to your favorite links.
- Create a family newsletter to send to your whole family.
- List ten thing you like about winter in your journal.
- Hug your parent, a friend and yourself.
- Learn a card trick.
- Make place cards for your family’s holiday meal.
- Create an About Me scrapbook album or add a page to the one you have.
- Send holiday cards to your friends.
- Join a book club.
- Play with Magnetic Poetry.
- Take a bath in Glistening Winter Nights Bath Salts.
- Make Vanilla Lip Gloss.
- Make a Winter Beaded Safety Pin.
- Make a Decoupage Snowman Bookmark Craft.
- Make an Ice Candle.
- Go Christmas caroling.
- Volunteer to read to children at the library.
- Create an imaginary teen from the future.
- Go on a winter photo scavenger hunt.
- Plan a board game or video game tournament.
- Make friendship bracelets in winter blue colors.
- Learn a yoga position.
- Play ice hockey.
- Rearrange your bedroom.
- Organize your closet: Bring out your cold weather clothes and store your warm weather clothes.
- Go through your socks and underwear. Pitch the old and ask for new.
- Go snowshoeing.
- Go cross-country skiing.
- Bake your favorite cookie.
- Make a snow mural with squirt bottles, water, food coloring and a yard full of snow.
- Post winter greetings on your friend’s social networking pages.
- Make a New Year’s resolution, and a plan that will help you stick to it.
- Make a gel candle mug.
- Make a heats and pearl choker.
- Start or update your checking or savings account.
- Plan a Holiday Party.
- Plan a Valentine Party.
- Go snowmobiling.
- Learn a new make-up trick.
- Get a new haircut or style.
- Volunteer at your community food pantry, soup kitchen or church.
- Go winter camping – learn survival skills.
- Make a snowflake mobile – use glitter.
- Make a crazy music video to your favorite song.
- Write five facts about your favorite animal/rock star/person in your journal.
- Grunge up a pair of jeans.
- Play outside with flashlights after dinner.
(Source: http://abt.cm/19qn8e7)
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