I felt squeeze'y just watching the video, wow.
First time I saw the ad I assumed it was CGI....seems I was wrong.
https://youtu.be/1m5lPITfMQc
Balls of steel...well.
I’d have to have a gun to my head to do that, even then I’d just say pull the trigger, fair play to that person…
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yep, I assumed it was CGI. How does she manage to look so nonchalant about it?
Yet another thing I wish I hadn't been tempted to watch. Just imagine all those grimy builders having their BigMacs delivered by a MacDrone all the way up there.
Not a chance in hell!! I was sure I was going to fall off the Empire State Building.
Although I spent a lot of my working life atop turntable ladders and hydraulic platforms without batting an eyelid that made my toes tingle somewhat.
F.T.F.A.
That's just awesome on so many levels
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
I guess that once you're about what, 30 feet high, you're going to die, so it doesn't matter how high you are. At least, that what I'm telling myself.
I bet that wouldn't have impressed Fred Dibnah that much.
Couldn’t do that however much money you offered me.
Uhhh. Ahhh. No thanks.
I doff my hat, what a brave gal.
Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.
Wow, I also assumed it was cgi!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I wouldn't have done that in those heels. They're lethal!
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
I’d love to get up there. What a great tale to be able to tell, and imagine the photos you could get.
Andy
Wanted - Damasko DC57
All things create a gravity around them and a building that size will create a reasonable one at that so you are likely to collide with it, at least once on the way down.
Nicole Smith-Ludvik, she's a skydiver
Funny how different things bother different people. I'd do that any day of the week over clambering into a confined space. Wouldn't even need to think about it.
Wo
w
w
w
w
w
Ouch!
Didn’t Tom Cruise do something similar?
Whilst I think it’s impressive, if you’re not afraid of heights I guess it’s just another day in the office. As a skydiver she must fall into that category - so not surprised she looks so relaxed, probably more focussed on the pay cheque and what she’s having for lunch!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I have jumped off the top of the Burj Khalifa. We went to Dubai for a holiday, had to visit the Burj which is well worth seeing.
On the 125th Floor they have a VR game in which you climb up the outside of the Burj on a mission of some sort which culminates in you parachuting off the top.
By the time I got to the ‘top’ I was so freaked out I was saying to anyone who would listen ‘I’m not jumping! I’m not jumping!’. The family have never let me forget it.
Kudos to the whole team.
Yea I worked at height for many years, its fairly easy to get conditioned to it as a normality. Obviously this is extreme but as others have said once your above 60 feet the outcome is pretty much fateful. The only time I fell (from an untied ladder) in 25 years was from 15 feet broke my leg and arm!
The scariest thing I saw were two drunk Irish labourers throwing themselves into the safety nets on Top of the Post Office Tower, that was in the early 80's H&S was not so big in those day's, I rarely remember wearing a harness?
As an apprentice I was asked by my supervisor to walk out on an 8" steel and clip on a wheel and fall. That was at 80ft on Barking Power Station. I declined, a steeple jack did it for £10, no harness.
Watch the clips of Fred Dibnah on U Tube they are awesome but it was just a days work to Steeple Jacks.
Last edited by wildheart; 3rd September 2021 at 11:01.
Health and safety PPE at 60 feet in the 1980’s!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Would be surprised if the gravity exerted by the building was sufficient to have a significant influence on a body of substantial mass and momentum. But I'm not a physicist and have no idea how to do the maths. I will say though that I'd be surprised to feel a gravitational force from a large building from standing next to it at the base.
Now this is scarey...
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=417211795577530
Blimey .. that’s some gutsy trolley dolly
Brave girl, I nearly fell off the couch watching it.
Yes in his bare feet
https://youtu.be/z8ietmnBmAQ
Sent from my iPad using TZ-UK mobile app
Fred's exploits were never less than toe tingling . . .
F.T.F.A.
For some reason I can't post a link to a URL so you'll have to search for it.
I wonder if the BBC offered life insurance back in the 70's, clearly their EHS team were having a day off when it was filmed
Sent through the ether by diddling with radio waves
Fred Dibnah what an absolute legend!! I’m pretty sure he’s climbing in hobnail boots as well, can you imagine how slippery those ladder treads would have been….
And that John Noakes clip is a painful watch as well, he’s climbing in flares and a pair of Clarkes best, fair play
I can't begin to imagine the mental strength or capability needed to conquer such heights. I know I don't have it!
Aye, Fred was a one-off. The 'old school' manual work he performed while hanging off the side of towers was mind boggling to watch.
Many steel fixers used to wear bowling shoes or gym pumps, especially when it was raining or icy!
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
This makes me queasy
Sent from my SM-A750FN using Tapatalk
I’m sure I read somewhere that the picture of New York steelworkers having lunch was faked?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Staged maybe, but not faked:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QCYDzsQ_yM
There's a more up-to-date version of that image.
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
The air hostess on the top of the tower may have been brave, but posting the above image with that hairstyle tops it for me.
You have balls of steel Wildheart!
I say that as someone who sported a similar mullet at the time but would NEVER release that image for public view.... !