h a l f b a k e r yNo, not that kind of baked.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
The events of hurricane Sandy made me think that it would be useful to have a heavy duty plastic bag I could wrap my car in.
It would be double-sealed such that little or no water could leak in. In the event of a major flood event, you just drive your car onto the bag and seal it up. Your car stays
nice and dry until the waters recede.
Such a bag could be probably be sold for about $100.00, which is obviously much cheaper than replacing the entire vehicle.
Injury reported with prototype testing
http://www.google.c...,i:170&tx=115&ty=86 [normzone, Oct 31 2012]
This would probably work.
http://undergroundb...ortableshelters.htm Enourmous freezer bag for storing paranoid people. [DIYMatt, Oct 31 2012]
[link]
|
|
A vehicle will float in as little as seven inches of
water (depth on the frame/body, not the tires). It
will wash away in as little as two inches of flowing
water (total). |
|
|
So your car might stay dry, but unless it was parked
in a garage or similarly restricted, it might go visiting
Lord Buchanan. |
|
|
The bag vacuum-seals after you exit, and the bottom is
lined with ten tons of shot. |
|
|
Floating and dry is still better than floating and wet (or sunk). |
|
|
Well, the $100 is short of the mark, but it's a great idea. Drive into it and inflate / seal it, one time use. Tether it to something not too scary. |
|
|
How about one of your ideas? They never go
anywhere
|
|
|
//sold cheaply, printed on rice paper,//
Haven't had food in days... so hungry! but I can't eat this insurance policy because I'll lose my claim... |
|
|
It shouldn't be too much more expensive to tether the bag
by cable to a concrete-embedded anchor. [+] |
|
|
This is a great idea. As far as the floating issue, just
chain it so something. |
|
|
If the car and whatever it was chained to floats
away,
move to California.* |
|
|
*(Please don't move to California.) |
|
|
I second that - it's difficult enough already to find a parking place to unroll my Bag-loon in. And I have seen evidence of injuries in prototype testing (link). |
|
|
See my link. If you had one of those with a reenforced floor you could pop it up, drive your car in, and seal up the door. It's been voted "product most likely to cause death by suffocation" ten years in a row! |
|
|
+ OK, now how about one for the house? |
|
| |