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-   -   OT Space rock hits house- For John S. (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/17443-ot-space-rock-hits-house-john-s.html)

PrecisionMachinisT June 14th 04 07:02 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 

"Gunner" wrote in message
...

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.



I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.

Any takers ???

--

SVL




Gunner June 14th 04 07:14 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 


http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,2939788a10,00.html
Space rock hits house

American collectors with open chequebooks are expected in New Zealand
within days to bid for the 1.3kg meteorite which exploded through the
roof of an Auckland house yesterday.

The hit is a billions-to-one event which adds thousands to the value
of the grapefruit-sized rock which plummeted through the tiled roof of
Phil and Brenda Archer's Ellerslie home at 9.30am.

Collectors are also expected to begin combing the suburb for other
pieces which may have survived the molten descent.

It is only the ninth meteorite ever found here and the first to hit a
home. The last one was found in 1976 but it is not known when it
landed. Worldwide, such strikes happen only once every three or four
years.

"I was in the kitchen doing breakfast and there was this almighty
explosion," said Brenda Archer. "It was like a bomb had gone off. I
couldn't see anything, there was just dust. I thought something had
exploded in the ceiling. Phil saw a stone under the computer and it
was hot to touch."

The rock hit her leather couch and bounced back up to the ceiling
before rolling under the computer. The Archers' one-year-old grandson
Luca was playing nearby just minutes before the impact. "He must have
a guardian angel," she said.

Experts have told the Archers to keep the rock in the oven at 100C to
dry it out. They plan to take it to Auckland University tomorrow.

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.

snip
--
W§ mostly in m.s - http://members.1stconnect.com/anozira
"no free man shall be taken or imprisoned...except by the
lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land."
--Magna Carta 1215


That rifle hanging on the wall of the working-class flat or labourer's
cottage is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays
there.
- George Orwell

Jan Nielsen June 14th 04 08:49 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 23:02:24 -0700, "PrecisionMachinisT"
wrote:

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.



I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.


My thoughts exactly. Somewhere in the policy, buried in fine print, there's
bound to be a clause excluding damage due to falling space rocks and garden
gnomes.

Any takers ???


Forget it!!!
--
- JN -

geoff m June 14th 04 12:40 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 23:02:24 -0700, "PrecisionMachinisT"
wrote:

I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.

It happened just along the road from where I used to live. I wonder
if this woudl come under "Acts of God" fine print in the policy?
Bet the owners were glad they weren't sitting n the couch at the time
it arrived...
Geoff

Alan Black June 14th 04 02:23 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
.. I wonder
if this woudl come under "Acts of God" fine print in the policy?



Hailstones, lightning, fallen trees and such are usually covered by a
homeowners policy here in the US

Alan



Stanley Dornfeld June 14th 04 04:34 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
I think all you people are cynical. *G

Regards,

Stan-




Stan Schaefer June 14th 04 04:54 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
"PrecisionMachinisT" wrote in message ...
"Gunner" wrote in message
...

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.



I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.

Any takers ???


"act of God" is the usual clause. On the other hand, an insurance
company that did pay up on the claim would have a bonanza in
advertising.

It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan

bill sykes June 14th 04 07:32 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
Space rock hits house


http://www.nzherald.co.nz/latestnews...toryID=3572616

One up for sale, slightly soiled, found in a long drop...

Dave June 14th 04 09:00 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 


Stan Schaefer wrote:


It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan


From the blurry media shots I saw, it wasn't metallic, but looked like
a chondrite. Ancient stone; silica, aluminum, whatnot.

But hay, what silica, aluminum, whatnot is NOT ancient?

~D

jim rozen June 14th 04 09:35 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
In article , bill sykes says...

Space rock hits house



http://www.nzherald.co.nz/latestnews...toryID=3572616

One up for sale, slightly soiled, found in a long drop...


Damn this **** keeps falling right out of the sky. Next
it's gonna hit something in *my* driveway:

http://www.nyrockman.com/pages/peekskill-nyc.htm

Time to get a hard hat or something.....

Jim

==================================================
please reply to:
JRR(zero) at yktvmv (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com
==================================================


steve walker June 15th 04 01:29 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
C'mon. I would think that a meteorite would have enough energy to go through
more than just the roof. Kind of like shooting through a thickness of wood
with a rifle, and slowing the slug down enough to catch it with a gloved
hand. Volcano eruption in Indonesia ejecta maybe?


--
Steve Walker
(remove wallet to reply)



Matt June 15th 04 01:46 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
A New Orleans meteorite hit story/pics.

http://www.meteoriteguy.com/Neworleanasfall.htm


Tim Williams June 15th 04 02:14 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
"steve walker" wrote in message
...
C'mon. I would think that a meteorite would have enough energy to go
through more than just the roof.


Not in that size, especially if it was ejected from a larger mass:

Collectors are also expected to begin combing the suburb for other
pieces which may have survived the molten descent.


Whence it may have been given an upwards kick on breaking up, slowing it
within more natural speeds rather than the initial interplanetary velocity.
Especially if it's rock... 1.3kg would be like 4" across.

Tim

--
"I've got more trophies than Wayne Gretsky and the Pope combined!"
- Homer Simpson
Website @ http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms



Shiver Me Timbers June 15th 04 02:24 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
Interesting that when they contacted the experts,
they were told to dry it in their oven.

I wonder how it got wet.??????

Santa Cruz Shop Dog June 15th 04 02:29 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On 14 Jun 2004 08:54:22 -0700, (Stan Schaefer)
wrote:

"PrecisionMachinisT" wrote in message ...
"Gunner" wrote in message
...

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.


I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.

Any takers ???


"act of God" is the usual clause. On the other hand, an insurance
company that did pay up on the claim would have a bonanza in
advertising.

It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan



He they pay up for earth quakes in Ca, tornadoes in Lubbock TX and
floods in the Delta...

Maybe it was a hot chip fying off a big ass lathe!!

MIke

Ron Moore June 15th 04 02:40 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
I'm SURE the insurance company will pay for the damages..... They will,
of course, have to take the damaged furniture and clean up the scrap
bits from the ceiling and other repairs; oh yeah, that "rock" that did
the damage will also have to go.
Respectfully,
Ron Moore

Santa Cruz Shop Dog wrote:
On 14 Jun 2004 08:54:22 -0700, (Stan Schaefer)
wrote:


"PrecisionMachinisT" wrote in message ...

"Gunner" wrote in message
...

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.

I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.

Any takers ???


"act of God" is the usual clause. On the other hand, an insurance
company that did pay up on the claim would have a bonanza in
advertising.

It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan




He they pay up for earth quakes in Ca, tornadoes in Lubbock TX and
floods in the Delta...

Maybe it was a hot chip fying off a big ass lathe!!

MIke



Stanley Dornfeld June 15th 04 03:57 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
Just give 'um a chunk of granite. Insurance people anen't geologists. *G

Regards,

Stan-
"Ron Moore" wrote in message
...
I'm SURE the insurance company will pay for the damages..... They will,
of course, have to take the damaged furniture and clean up the scrap
bits from the ceiling and other repairs; oh yeah, that "rock" that did
the damage will also have to go.
Respectfully,
Ron Moore

Santa Cruz Shop Dog wrote:
On 14 Jun 2004 08:54:22 -0700, (Stan Schaefer)
wrote:


"PrecisionMachinisT" wrote in message

...

"Gunner" wrote in message
...

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.

I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company

dont pay
up.

Any takers ???

"act of God" is the usual clause. On the other hand, an insurance
company that did pay up on the claim would have a bonanza in
advertising.

It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan




He they pay up for earth quakes in Ca, tornadoes in Lubbock TX and
floods in the Delta...

Maybe it was a hot chip fying off a big ass lathe!!

MIke





Tim Williams June 15th 04 05:30 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
"Shiver Me Timbers" wrote in message
...
Interesting that when they contacted the experts,
they were told to dry it in their oven.

I wonder how it got wet.??????


Maybe after being vacuum dried for so long, it would be in their best
interests to keep it dehydrated. If nothing else there could be hygroscopic
salts that would ruin the rock if they got wet.

Tim

--
"I've got more trophies than Wayne Gretsky and the Pope combined!"
- Homer Simpson
Website @ http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms



Eric R Snow June 15th 04 03:36 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 00:29:42 GMT, "steve walker"
wrote:

C'mon. I would think that a meteorite would have enough energy to go through
more than just the roof. Kind of like shooting through a thickness of wood
with a rifle, and slowing the slug down enough to catch it with a gloved
hand. Volcano eruption in Indonesia ejecta maybe?

Years ago, I saw a picture of a woman who had been struck by a
meteorite. The piece that struck her was small, pea sized. This woman
was hugely fat and had a giant bruise on her side. I looked at the
picture with horrible fascination. I wonder now if it was a hoax? I
know pieces of meteorites can be moving slow enough to stop once they
crash through a roof, but that lady being struck by one has always
rankled.
ERS

[email protected] June 15th 04 07:33 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 20:14:32 -0500, "Tim Williams"
wrote:

"steve walker" wrote in message
. ..
C'mon. I would think that a meteorite would have enough energy to go
through more than just the roof.


Not in that size, especially if it was ejected from a larger mass:

Collectors are also expected to begin combing the suburb for other
pieces which may have survived the molten descent.


Whence it may have been given an upwards kick on breaking up, slowing it
within more natural speeds rather than the initial interplanetary velocity.
Especially if it's rock... 1.3kg would be like 4" across.

Tim



and remember- velocity is relative. Earth is moving, as is the chunk
of space rock. if both are moving at about the same speed in about the
same direction it will have an impact speed about what gravity gives
it as it falls... still enough to bust through your roof.

Tim Williams June 15th 04 08:20 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
wrote in message
...
and remember- velocity is relative. Earth is moving, as is the chunk
of space rock. if both are moving at about the same speed in about the
same direction it will have an impact speed about what gravity gives
it as it falls... still enough to bust through your roof.


Even so, you have the gravitational potential energy (wow that's an
incredibly long couple of words for something so simple) of falling to Earth
a few thousand miles... that's a generous acceleration and will have it
streaking hypersonically through the atmosphere anyway.

Tim

--
"I've got more trophies than Wayne Gretsky and the Pope combined!"
- Homer Simpson
Website @ http://webpages.charter.net/dawill/tmoranwms



Gary Coffman June 16th 04 05:33 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 14:20:55 -0500, "Tim Williams" wrote:
wrote in message
.. .
and remember- velocity is relative. Earth is moving, as is the chunk
of space rock. if both are moving at about the same speed in about the
same direction it will have an impact speed about what gravity gives
it as it falls... still enough to bust through your roof.


Even so, you have the gravitational potential energy (wow that's an
incredibly long couple of words for something so simple) of falling to Earth
a few thousand miles... that's a generous acceleration and will have it
streaking hypersonically through the atmosphere anyway.


Neglecting air friction (which you can't) an object falling from rest at
infinity will acquire a final velocity of 7 miles a second at impact with
the Earth's surface (same velocity as escape velocity for something
going the other way).

Relative orbital motions can boost that into the 20 to 40 miles per second
range, or slow it to only a few miles per second, depending on the exact
geometry. But even an object at relative rest at 200 miles above the surface
would acquire a final velocity of around 5 miles a second by the time it
reached the surface.

However, you can't ignore air friction. An object with a fairly poor drag
coefficient will be slowed greatly by atmospheric friction. Most relatively
small meteors are moving relatively slowly by the time they get deep into
the atmosphere, often subsonic.

They also often break apart as they plow deep into the atmosphere.
That's why you can often pick pieces of one up and find them *cold*
rather than hot (these pieces came from the interior of a larger meteor
which broke up after spending most of its energy against the atmosphere).

I'd note that the large amount of relatively intact debris which reached
the ground from the Shuttle Columbia is another example of this.

Gary

JMartin957 June 16th 04 03:42 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 

Relative orbital motions can boost that into the 20 to 40 miles per second
range, or slow it to only a few miles per second, depending on the exact
geometry. But even an object at relative rest at 200 miles above the surface
would acquire a final velocity of around 5 miles a second by the time it
reached the surface.


Gary



Gary:

You didn't mean 2,000 miles, or maybe .5 miles/second, did you? I did some
quick back-of-the-envelope calculations, with the assumption that gravity is a
constant regardless of altitude. Which of course it isn't, but it makes things
easier.

Not that I normally check things like that, but when I saw 200 miles and 5
miles per second, and thought "OK, that's 80 seconds", it seemed like too high
a final velocity for only 80 seconds.

Agree with all your other points, though.

John Martin

Gary Coffman June 16th 04 06:28 PM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On 16 Jun 2004 14:42:37 GMT, (JMartin957) wrote:
Relative orbital motions can boost that into the 20 to 40 miles per second
range, or slow it to only a few miles per second, depending on the exact
geometry. But even an object at relative rest at 200 miles above the surface
would acquire a final velocity of around 5 miles a second by the time it
reached the surface.


Gary:

You didn't mean 2,000 miles, or maybe .5 miles/second, did you? I did some
quick back-of-the-envelope calculations, with the assumption that gravity is a
constant regardless of altitude. Which of course it isn't, but it makes things
easier.

Not that I normally check things like that, but when I saw 200 miles and 5
miles per second, and thought "OK, that's 80 seconds", it seemed like too high
a final velocity for only 80 seconds.

Agree with all your other points, though.

John Martin


Yeah, you got me on that, John. 5 miles a second is orbital velocity at 200
miles. An object at relative rest won't have orbital velocity, of course. I get
a value of 257 seconds for the fall, with a final velocity of 1.557 miles per
second. Of course that ignores the atmosphere. It won't actually reach
that speed due to the effects of drag.

Gary

Gunner June 19th 04 02:44 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 01:29:31 GMT, Santa Cruz Shop Dog
wrote:


It'd be interesting to know what kind of meteorite it is, the metallic
ones can sometimes be forged into decent cutlery.

Stan



He they pay up for earth quakes in Ca, tornadoes in Lubbock TX and
floods in the Delta...

Maybe it was a hot chip fying off a big ass lathe!!

MIke


Ive heard tornados called The Lathes of God...

Or was it Budda's Mixmaster...

Ill havta get back to you on that...

Gunner

That rifle hanging on the wall of the working-class flat or labourer's
cottage is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays
there.
- George Orwell

DoN. Nichols June 19th 04 06:08 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
In article ,
Gunner wrote:

[ ... ]

Ive heard tornados called The Lathes of God...

Or was it Budda's Mixmaster...

Ill havta get back to you on that...


Glad to see you back on the net,

Get well soon,
DoN.
--
Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---

Malcolm Moore June 20th 04 02:41 AM

OT Space rock hits house- For John S.
 
On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 09:49:50 +0200, Jan Nielsen
wrote:

On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 23:02:24 -0700, "PrecisionMachinisT"
wrote:

Their insurance company will pay for the hole in the roof and couch
and two holes in the ceiling.


I bet Hamei's dollar to the first ten takers that insurance company dont pay
up.


My thoughts exactly. Somewhere in the policy, buried in fine print, there's
bound to be a clause excluding damage due to falling space rocks and garden
gnomes.

Any takers ???


Forget it!!!


As a follow up check

http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/sundays...2a6442,00.html

quote

"The Archers have been paid out by their insurance company for the
damage."

But

"They will meet two representatives from Wellington's Te Papa next
week to talk about how to make a professional display with the
meteorite.

Phil Archer said the display was likely to include the couch and
ceiling which was damaged by the rock's entry into their home."

Sheesh! Has interest in science descended to the point where the human
factor and experience has to be emphasised?
--
Regards
Malcolm
Remove sharp objects to get a valid email address


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