Agree with you.
Moreover, the CofE should be disestablised and all the Lords Spiritual removed from the HoL.
Agree with you.
If this flight is successful would this mean to keep the planes flying we'll all be condemned to eating McDonald's deep fried food for the rest of our lives???Felix wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 11:41 amEvery diesel motor could be adapted to run on chip fat. Think its McDonald who run there trucks on recycled chip fat.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 8:53 am https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67548961
Flying to America using used chip fat, I bet it smells great!
They could probably develop the idea to pulp fatties and feed them into jet engines....irie wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 1:27 pmIf this flight is successful would this mean to keep the planes flying we'll all be condemned to eating McDonald's deep fried food for the rest of our lives???Felix wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 11:41 amEvery diesel motor could be adapted to run on chip fat. Think its McDonald who run there trucks on recycled chip fat.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 8:53 am https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67548961
Flying to America using used chip fat, I bet it smells great!
It’s ironic that aeroplane food is so much worse than McBurgers.irie wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 1:27 pmIf this flight is successful would this mean to keep the planes flying we'll all be condemned to eating McDonald's deep fried food for the rest of our lives???Felix wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 11:41 amEvery diesel motor could be adapted to run on chip fat. Think its McDonald who run there trucks on recycled chip fat.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 8:53 am https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67548961
Flying to America using used chip fat, I bet it smells great!
JackyJoll wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 3:24 pmIt’s ironic that aeroplane food is so much worse than McBurgers.
Now why didn't I think of that?
I do all my transfer inside Revolut. So that if I transfer money to my French bank, I do it from the euro account in Revolut. Equally, anyone that sends me money in GBP I get them to send it to the Revolut GBP account.Pirahna wrote: ↑Mon Nov 27, 2023 10:48 pmThe charge is to do with money deposited from a UK IBAN account, I've been caught twice recently, both from Revolut. The first time was my own Revolut account, something changed in the Spanish banking system to target UK IBAN's, I'm far from the only person to get caught out. Today's charge was from a person wifey sold something to on Facebook Marketplace, they then popped the money into our Sabadell account using Revolut. They're newbies to Spain and won't be doing it again.mangocrazy wrote: ↑Mon Nov 27, 2023 9:52 pm Can you not open a €uro-denominated account elsewhere in the EU? My French bank doesn't charge a fee for accepting incoming €uro payments, but I don't send it from a UK bank, I use Currencyfair. Conversion from £ to € is done on Currencyfair's site, and the transfer is €uro to €uro.
Which brings me to Wise. My Wise account has a UK IBAN for GBP transactions and a Belgian IBAN for Euro transactions. This means I can pop money into Wise from my UK account, change it Euro with a small transaction fee and move it to my Spanish bank with no transaction fee.
If the French banks aren't charging you for money movements from the UK yet then they will soon. Another Brexit benefit.
An American cosmetic surgeon was jailed for converting liposuction fat into biodiesel a few years back.gremlin wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 1:39 pmThey could probably develop the idea to pulp fatties and feed them into jet engines....
You didn’t patent it in time.
Regular JP4 is about $2.80/gal, the *sustainable* stuff they used is about $10/gal on a good day & about $25/gal on a bad day. So the price of airline tickets will be just a bit more expensive...KungFooBob wrote: ↑Tue Nov 28, 2023 8:53 am https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67548961
Flying to America using used chip fat, I bet it smells great!
Those are Zeppelins.MyLittleStudPony wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2023 6:48 am
Hydrogen planes are in the pipeline and not that far away.
I saw a thing on LinkedIn yesterday about the 'worlds first' wind assisted cargo ship, saves loads of CO2 apparently.MyLittleStudPony wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2023 6:48 am I was working with one of the major aircraft manufacturers before I knocked the old work on the head.
Hydrogen planes are in the pipeline and not that far away.
Ticket prices must go up however. I'd least triple them now to steel is for what lies ahead.
The first ever commercial crop of British-grown baked beans have been canned in a Lincolnshire factory.
Specially modified haricot beans designed to grow in the UK climate were harvested in September at a farm in the county.
It is hoped that the baked bean breakthrough will reduce the reliance on imports.
More than two million tins are eaten every day, with all the beans grown in the US, Canada, Ethiopia and China.
The project was developed by scientists at the University of Warwick, who took 12 years to produce the seeds.
A smaller-scale trial to grow them in 2022 failed due to the summer heatwave.
Even wind 'assisted' feels familiar.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2023 9:23 amI saw a thing on LinkedIn yesterday about the 'worlds first' wind assisted cargo ship, saves loads of CO2 apparently.MyLittleStudPony wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2023 6:48 am I was working with one of the major aircraft manufacturers before I knocked the old work on the head.
Hydrogen planes are in the pipeline and not that far away.
Ticket prices must go up however. I'd least triple them now to steel is for what lies ahead.
Now, I'm not an in depth expert on shipping, but I'm pretty sure wind powered ocean transport has been done before.
Well I suppose that if all you eat is baked beans then baked beans qualify as everything.Lutin wrote: ↑Wed Nov 29, 2023 10:01 am Well hip, hip hooray for British Baked Beans - First British-grown baked beans get canned in Lincolnshire
The first ever commercial crop of British-grown baked beans have been canned in a Lincolnshire factory.
Specially modified haricot beans designed to grow in the UK climate were harvested in September at a farm in the county.
It is hoped that the baked bean breakthrough will reduce the reliance on imports.
More than two million tins are eaten every day, with all the beans grown in the US, Canada, Ethiopia and China.
The project was developed by scientists at the University of Warwick, who took 12 years to produce the seeds.
A smaller-scale trial to grow them in 2022 failed due to the summer heatwave.
Hmmm, warmer summers you say? Yep, that'll be climate change - and it's going to get worse.
Seriously, when will the UK finally realise that there is no way that they will ever be self sufficient in everything we eat?