|
Post by mmi16 on Apr 19, 2020 18:44:13 GMT -8
Let it grow and then donate it to cancer folks That's a good idea. But if I get too hot this summer, it's going to have to come off.
I stopped cutting my hair in 1990 when I went to Jacksonville - didn't cut it until 2004 for my daughters wedding. Chemo treating my colon cancer in 1996 seriously thinned it out and it looked straggly thereafter.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2020 4:24:32 GMT -8
Guys - I just had a great idea. It's the perfect time to resurrect Grand-Am since it never had any fans. Once went to a Grand-Am race at Sonoma attended by 14 people and a goat. This came to mind since apparently North Carolina wants the Coke 600 run without fans. How well does your whiskey mix with Coke?
|
|
|
Post by wilmywood8455 on Apr 20, 2020 4:44:43 GMT -8
Guys - I just had a great idea. It's the perfect time to resurrect Grand-Am since it never had any fans. Once went to a Grand-Am race at Sonoma attended by 14 people and a goat. This came to mind since apparently North Carolina wants the Coke 600 run without fans. How well does your whiskey mix with Coke? The whiskey always makes my sinuses burn ...
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2020 7:19:33 GMT -8
We could have "The Sabrina and Coke 600".
|
|
|
Post by olderguysrule on Apr 20, 2020 10:13:03 GMT -8
this is some real crazy s+++. The NYMEX crude oil price per barrel is less than $2.00 a barrel. The Brent price is around $26 a barrel. A lot of oil guys are going broke in the states. I remember the gas war prices of the late 60ies in the suburbs of minneapolis. $.16 for regular, and $.18 cent for premium, per gallon. At the time I was driving a 67 plymouth GTX. 440 CID. It was a gas guzzler. But at those prices it didn't matter. :-) London (CNN Business)The spectacular collapse in oil markets is showing no signs of easing, as the coronavirus crisis saps demand and producers run out of places to store all their excess barrels of crude. What's happening: US oil prices plunged 94%, falling as low as $1.02 per barrel Monday. That's the lowest level since NYMEX opened oil futures trading in 1983.
|
|
|
Post by wilmywood8455 on Apr 20, 2020 10:15:24 GMT -8
We could have "The Sabrina and Coke 600". I used to snort Coke but the bubbles always made me sneeze
|
|
|
Post by Sabrina81 on Apr 20, 2020 10:50:07 GMT -8
Guys - I just had a great idea. It's the perfect time to resurrect Grand-Am since it never had any fans. Once went to a Grand-Am race at Sonoma attended by 14 people and a goat. This came to mind since apparently North Carolina wants the Coke 600 run without fans. How well does your whiskey mix with Coke? It's fancy so we usually drink it with whiskey cubes.
|
|
|
Post by ChemEng on Apr 20, 2020 11:10:20 GMT -8
this is some real crazy s+++. The NYMEX crude oil price per barrel is less than $2.00 a barrel. The Brent price is around $26 a barrel. A lot of oil guys are going broke in the states. I remember the gas war prices of the late 60ies in the suburbs of minneapolis. $.16 for regular, and $.18 cent for premium, per gallon. At the time I was driving a 67 plymouth GTX. 440 CID. It was a gas guzzler. But at those prices it didn't matter. :-) London (CNN Business)The spectacular collapse in oil markets is showing no signs of easing, as the coronavirus crisis saps demand and producers run out of places to store all their excess barrels of crude. What's happening: US oil prices plunged 94%, falling as low as $1.02 per barrel Monday. That's the lowest level since NYMEX opened oil futures trading in 1983. The oil markets are very complex. West Texas Intermediate is actually selling at MINUS 37.63 a barrel. That's right, they will pay you to take it. The reason is that storage capacity is all filled up and someone has a contract to purchase and no place to put it. It is a situation that is local to that market. I do not understand commodities trading, but I do know there are times when the crack spread is negative which means that a gallon of gasoline or diesel is cheaper than a gallon of crude oil. In effect, with negative crack spreads which happen in the winter, the refiners cannot simply shut the place down. That is more expensive than giving away gas at below their direct cost.
|
|
|
Post by ChemEng on Apr 20, 2020 11:22:19 GMT -8
For those who have nothing better to do, here is a description of refining crack spreads. Many complain about the price of gas, but there are times when refiners lose money, and I suspect this is one of those times. Shutting down a refinery is very expensive and usually only happens in a bankruptcy. I know a lot about how to make a gallon of gasoline or diesel out of a barrel of crude oil, and do is safely. I know very little about how it is traded in the marketplace, but here goes:
|
|
|
Post by olderguysrule on Apr 20, 2020 11:46:21 GMT -8
The oil markets are very complex. West Texas Intermediate is actually selling at MINUS 37.63 a barrel.
When I wrote the comment it was above zero. and falling. :-) And it's the futures price for late may (I think). The price will prolly be up close to plus $20 tomorrow. As tomorrow they start trading the later June futures. But yes, this was a crazy day.
|
|
|
Post by Carlo_Carrera on Apr 20, 2020 11:54:24 GMT -8
The WTI price today doesn't matter much, the contracts are expiring tomorrow. The Brent price today shows the true market.
|
|
|
Post by ChemEng on Apr 20, 2020 12:43:01 GMT -8
I wrote too soon that they will not shut down a refinery. Marathon is shutting down two of them, and others may follow. It is a game of chicken. Each one that shuts down makes it easier for the others to keep running. They have marketing contracts with various branded gas stations. They have to provide fuel, and if they can't make it, they have to buy it from a competitor. It seems that Marathon will be sending fuel by ocean transport to the Bay Area from Washington and Los Angeles. The reason it takes so long is they have to cool, drain, vent, and clean all of the equipment. The other option for a short term shut down is to put the refinery in a recirculation mode. That makes it easier to start back up, but costs money for pumps and things like that. Most of the equipment cannot be left in place without some amount of draining and cleaning.
|
|
|
Post by mikey on Apr 20, 2020 15:12:06 GMT -8
Is all this oil stuff a result of Saudi Arabia and Russia having a slug fest over the price? If so my money is on Saudi Arabia as they have oil they know about but haven't tapped yet and probably areas where they haven't even fully explored yet as well. Also alot of Russia's oil is in the ice cold areas and that means ALOT of extra work to get it out and to a place that they can then transport it from. Yes I was watching the NatGeo Channel the other night about Russia'a oil fields.
|
|
jmjgt
Member
Posts: 3,311
|
Post by jmjgt on Apr 20, 2020 16:19:41 GMT -8
Is all this oil stuff a result of Saudi Arabia and Russia having a slug fest over the price? If so my money is on Saudi Arabia as they have oil they know about but haven't tapped yet and probably areas where they haven't even fully explored yet as well. Also alot of Russia's oil is in the ice cold areas and that means ALOT of extra work to get it out and to a place that they can then transport it from. Yes I was watching the NatGeo Channel the other night about Russia'a oil fields. The main problem is as basic as supply vs demand, the world being effectively shut down means energy usage has tanked to where's there's more oil in circulation than is being consumed. As the price drops the countries with higher production costs (like the US) get hit the hardest, in short the oil isn't worth taking out of the ground. Add to that the investors that bought into oil futures, those contracts are coming due and i'm pretty sure the majority of them are not ready to take delivery of a couple of thousand barrels of crude. The mass dumping of those maturing futures is reflected is the falling prices. What went on between the Saudi's and Russian's was due to the mild winter (and other factors) demand was soft and just before China shut down OPEC and Russia had agreed to production cuts. When Russia saw the prospect of china's demand evaporating they reneged on those cuts and fired up production which started the initial price fall. Some say it was done to bring the costs to a point lower than what would be profitable for US oil companies effectively taking them out of the world market.
|
|
|
Post by Sabrina81 on Apr 20, 2020 17:43:14 GMT -8
Reminds me to gas my Porsche.
|
|
|
Post by hairyscotsman on Apr 21, 2020 2:54:03 GMT -8
|
|
|
Post by montybriscoe on Apr 21, 2020 4:28:00 GMT -8
So is the state gonna pay Eddie Gossage for lost revenue since tix sales are a large part of a track promoter's revenue?
|
|
|
Post by loudpedal on Apr 21, 2020 15:37:07 GMT -8
Just got around to watching 'Uppity'.
Gotta say, there are several people whom I used respect in varying degrees that I now hate from the bottom of my heart. Hobbs, Roush, Leffler, Pruitt, etc. Still loving Humpy Wheeler.
|
|
|
Post by hairyscotsman on Apr 21, 2020 18:43:31 GMT -8
So is the state gonna pay Eddie Gossage for lost revenue since tix sales are a large part of a track promoter's revenue? I hope not. The only reason this race will happen is because NASCAR gives the tracks a portion of the TV revenue. They're gonna make money...
|
|
|
Post by hairyscotsman on Apr 21, 2020 18:45:34 GMT -8
Just got around to watching 'Uppity'.
Gotta say, there are several people whom I used respect in varying degrees that I now hate from the bottom of my heart. Hobbs, Roush, Leffler, Pruitt, etc. Still loving Humpy Wheeler.
Wow. Haven't watched this one yet. Guess I need to check it out. I was shocked to find out Willy T. lives literally right down the road from me.
|
|