Anyways, it seems like Amazingstoke local Craig has them properly dialled too...
On the subject of BlazingSmoke, Bruza has started a new T-shirt company called "Authentic". Tees are looking pretty good and the first batch has sold out! Check out www.myspace.com/authenticbmx. I'm sure if you ask Bruza nicely, he will sell you one of his nice T-Shirts! And Pijin has 2 left to sell too...
Here's a little vid of a Bruza attempt at a tailwhip over a massive gap... Make sure you have your volume turned up for the massive bang at the end!
If Bruza won't give you a Tee, then you could try fellow Tadley BMX clothing company Pointless. Hank has a nice new online shop where his designs are available in a miriad of colours, and all for a tenner too! - www.pointtless.co.uk.
Southampton's very own
And finally, can anybody tell me what the "CFC" prefix means???! [Check Basingstoke MySpacers...]
2 comments:
kentucky fried chicken - duh
Chlorofluorocarbons or CFCs (also known as Freon) are non-toxic, non-flammable and non-carcinogenic. They contain fluorine atoms, carbon atoms and chlorine atoms. The 5 main CFCs include CFC-11 (trichlorofluoromethane - CFCl3), CFC-12 (dichloro-difluoromethane - CF2Cl2), CFC-113 (trichloro-trifluoroethane - C2F3Cl3), CFC-114 (dichloro-tetrfluoroethane - C2F4Cl2), and CFC-115 (chloropentafluoroethane - C2F5Cl).
CFCs are widely used as coolants in refrigeration and air conditioners, as solvents in cleaners, particularly for electronic circuit boards, as a blowing agents in the production of foam (for example fire extinguishers), and as propellants in aerosols. Indeed, much of the modern lifestyle of the second half of the 20th century had been made possible by the use of CFCs.
Man-made CFCs however, are the main cause of stratospheric ozone depletion. CFCs have a lifetime in the atmosphere of about 20 to 100 years, and consequently one free chlorine atom from a CFC molecule can do a lot of damage, destroying ozone molecules for a long time. Although emissions of CFCs around the developed world have largely ceased due to international control agreements, the damage to the stratospheric ozone layer will continue well into the 21st century.
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