[QUOTE=TankTank123;1852754]What happens if one loses control in the midst of the dual underneath and prematurely shoots at the other? Who then the winner is?[/QUOTE]Man that's the whole point of duel no? Who shoots at his opponent first wins.
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[QUOTE=TankTank123;1852754]What happens if one loses control in the midst of the dual underneath and prematurely shoots at the other? Who then the winner is?[/QUOTE]Man that's the whole point of duel no? Who shoots at his opponent first wins.
[QUOTE=Faceless78;1852743]They can simply have a duel with their "swords" underneath, loser has to hand over his weapon to the winner.[/QUOTE]Thats what I had in mind.
[QUOTE=Faceless78;1852781]Man that's the whole point of duel no? Who shoots at his opponent first wins.[/QUOTE]The one that shoots the other in the face wins extra points if it hits the mouth, haha
[QUOTE=Exodus8;1852817]The one that shoots the other in the face wins extra points if it hits the mouth, haha[/QUOTE]But then he has to pay him extra €50, so the extra points might not be worth it.
[QUOTE=TankTank123;1852980]But then he has to pay him extra 50, so the extra points might not be worth it.[/QUOTE]The Dual involve minimum a girl, I'm up for a mini reverse GB as well, LOL.
Is it just me or does it seem like a whole bunch of members have gay fantasies here?
[QUOTE=DaWong949;1852490]I don't speak German so to get sim from 7-11 type of store and install it by myself is beyond me.[/QUOTE]Just google "Telekom Shop" in Darmstadt under google maps, and look up which is the closest T-shop to where you'll be. English is good enough with the T-shops I've been to, and they will register the sim to any address you give them. The US T-mobile plan, the Roaming is 20 cents a min, hence Breadman pointed that out. The issue is, how often(and how long) would you be in De for it to be worth it, if T-mobile is not your carrier in the US. The US T-mobile does have non-contract monthly plan. My thing is getting data, and good coverage in case I need mobile internet at anytime, and you got funds in the sim for calls to make in the country. I don't have to look for a T-shop. I just go to a gas station to top up my sim. Dunno about international calls, but 15 Euros minimum to top up, and it will deduct 99 cents per 24hr limited to 25meg of high speed data(LTE if available), and real slow after. If you got wifi access, you can use google hangouts app to call back to the US, and how good the call depends on the wifi quality. I've used that at Dutch rest stops where they had free wifi.
Hessen clubs have wifi now. The ones I know that do. Oase, Mainhattan(this one is new to me), Palace. Quality depends on the traffic at the club. Reason for me to top up is I can access data anywhere any time, and don't have to rely on looking for wifi. Some clubs, wifi is not reliable(ie GT, Aca).
As a non-De resident tourist going on a monger mission. Two things I equip, mobile communication access, and car rental to get around for convenience as time is limited.
[QUOTE=PussyLiccker;1853116]Just google "Telekom Shop" in Darmstadt under google maps, and look up which is the closest T-shop to where you'll be. English is good enough with the T-shops I've been to, and they will register the sim to any address you give them. The US T-mobile plan, the Roaming is 20 cents a min, hence Breadman pointed that out. The issue is, how often would you be in De for it to be worth it, if T-mobile is not your carrier in the US. The US T-mobile does have non-contract monthly plan. My thing is getting data, and good coverage in case I need mobile internet at anytime, and you got funds in the sim for calls to make in the country. I don't have to look for a T-shop. I just go to a gas station to top up my sim. Dunno about international calls, but 15 Euros, it will deduct 99 cents per 24hr liimited to 25meg of LTE data, and real slow after. If you get wifi access, you can use google hangouts to call back to the US, and how good the call depends on the wifi quality.[/QUOTE]After 30th April roaming would be much cheaper, at lest for roaming in EU.
Very slow afternoon.
Girls: Roxana silicon with big car, Helli, Leya, Evita, Karin, blond Bianka, Ester, Melani Blanche beige is back, Lara, Sofi, Alessia, Patricia, Madalina, Paloma.
I keep my sunshine smell and taste with me for my white paradise, no future appointment because now it s time for maximum attack.
Party tomorrow.
[QUOTE=PussyLiccker;1853116]Just google "Telekom Shop" in Darmstadt under google maps, and look up which is the closest T-shop to where you'll be. English is good enough with the T-shops I've been to, and they will register the sim to any address you give them. The US T-mobile plan, the Roaming is 20 cents a min, hence Breadman pointed that out. The issue is, how often(and how long) would you be in De for it to be worth it, if T-mobile is not your carrier in the US. The US T-mobile does have non-contract monthly plan. My thing is getting data, and good coverage in case I need mobile internet at anytime, and you got funds in the sim for calls to make in the country. I don't have to look for a T-shop. I just go to a gas station to top up my sim. Dunno about international calls, but 15 Euros minimum to top up, and it will deduct 99 cents per 24hr limited to 25meg of high speed data(LTE if available), and real slow after. If you got wifi access, you can use google hangouts app to call back to the US, and how good the call depends on the wifi quality. I've used that at Dutch rest stops where they had free wifi.
Hessen clubs have wifi now. The ones I know that do. Oase, Mainhattan(this one is new to me), Palace. Quality depends on the traffic at the club. Reason for me to top up is I can access data anywhere any time, and don't have to rely on looking for wifi. Some clubs, wifi is not reliable(ie GT, Aca).
As a non-De resident tourist going on a monger mission. Two things I equip, mobile communication access, and car rental to get around for convenience as time is limited.[/QUOTE]Totally agree. Time is limited. I never tried to drive in Germany due to not understanding German. Maybe next tine, I will give a try.
Thanks for all your help.
Play safe!
[QUOTE=DaWong949;1853255]I never tried to drive in Germany due to not understanding German.[/QUOTE]No need. It's easy as pie. Germans makes things very obvious and easy to figure out. Signs are simple and abundant. If you've driven in the US, you should be able to figure things out, it's similar. It's kph instead of mph. They got no speed limit zones(looks like a grey do not enter sign). Arrows to point out which side of the road you should exit for the highway since they have highway exit and entry next to each other. You watch out for triangles signs that say radar in them, since that means camera is nearby to take a snapshot for a ticket. So, yes, they got speed cameras.
Other than that, the highway signs have the roads in code like A5, and it has the name of the destination the road is headed for. Something you'd get used to is European roads I'd call it, in the towns, there are narrow roads with cars parked along the road so narrows the pathway.
If you get a hotel with parking, no need to look for public parking or try to figure out the signs and risk getting towed. For paid parking, you see the machines around to drop money in for a printout. Clubs have parking.
You don't even need to know where you are going as long as you have GPS, it will lead you to your destination.
No Dina seen yesterday. Left later than planned at 6.30 pm.
Selena, small Monika, Melani Blanche neige, were there.
[QUOTE=PussyLiccker;1853378]No need. It's easy as pie. Germans makes things very obvious and easy to figure out. Signs are simple and abundant. If you've driven in the US, you should be able to figure things out, it's similar. It's kph instead of mph. They got no speed limit zones(looks like a grey do not enter sign). Arrows to point out which side of the road you should exit for the highway since they have highway exit and entry next to each other. You watch out for triangles signs that say radar in them, since that means camera is nearby to take a snapshot for a ticket. So, yes, they got speed cameras.
Other than that, the highway signs have the roads in code like A5, and it has the name of the destination the road is headed for. Something you'd get used to is European roads I'd call it, in the towns, there are narrow roads with cars parked along the road so narrows the pathway.
If you get a hotel with parking, no need to look for public parking or try to figure out the signs and risk getting towed. For paid parking, you see the machines around to drop money in for a printout. Clubs have parking.
You don't even need to know where you are going as long as you have GPS, it will lead you to your destination.[/QUOTE]I don't understand American, but I still drive in the US, remember in Europe you have to stop at the red light (district) it's not allowed to turn right during red light!
[QUOTE=DaWong949;1853255]Totally agree. Time is limited. I never tried to drive in Germany due to not understanding German. Maybe next tine, I will give a try.
Thanks for all your help.
Play safe![/QUOTE]I drove in the US, India, China, many others countries and now I live in Istanbul were I also drive, don t hesitate to drive in Germany it is very easy and quite comparable to the US, and easier than in Italy, Spain or France.
DaWong Driving in Germany is easy, and the drivers tend to obey the rules. The only thing you need to watch is that on the autobahn you may have drivers coming up behind you at 200 km an hour, so you need to watch your rear view mirror. Also when a vehicle indicates to change lane they will assume you will move over or slow down to let them out.
The accident rate is not the lowest, but that's because when there is a high speed accident on the autobahn quite a few cars get involved.
Very little aggression amongst German drivers.
Speed cameras are often hidden
As PL says, you don't really need German to understand signage
Give it a go, it's one of the best countries for driving.
Accident rates in Germany are quite low. Autobahn is the safest road type in Germany.
[URL]https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_traffic-related_death_rate[/URL]
I'm not so sure about the lane changing thing when indicating. Yes, lane changes are or should be indicated. But the vehicle on the left lane has the right of way. If the vehicle on the right lane is significantly slower it should stay on the right lane and let the faster vehicle pass. Passing vehicles on the right is forbidden.
HB.