Quote (Santara @ Jul 25 2019 07:21am)
Compressed O² and O³ don't explode, pigeon.
Standard fuel tankers in the US carry 8,000 gallons. The number "of tankers" was the mathematical extrapolation of how many times 8,000 gallons would go into a 747. Yes, I'm aware how they fuel planes. No, it is not magic.
Sorry but i showed the safety warning that showed it does, if you have a Scientific Citation that supports the idea it never does, go for it.
Also could you explain what thunder is, does lightning make the clouds turn into fireballs? Can you explain the difference between detonations, deflagration and traditional Combustion?
I hardly think appealing to 4% of the world population accounts for what is considered "Standard"
and i've used this article https://www.reference.com/business-finance/many-gallons-tanker-truck-hold-98cd8f85aa0d92b4
that states Small tanker trucks have a maximum capacity of 3,000 gallons
which not only dramaticized my point perfectly [the point of prose], I've yet to see what you would consider a large tank on any runway.
[except for movie explosions which are done for dramatic effect]