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9G test for pilots and astronauts

45,159 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

9 Comments

CVS's profile picture
CVS1 year ago

This would be so intense!! I wonder if I'd make it through??

Aesthetic Thoughts's profile picture
Aesthetic Thoughts1 year ago

Wow really

Q2Space's profile picture
Q2Space1 year ago

Me trying to hold in a sneeze during a meeting.

Q2Space's profile picture
Q2Space1 year ago

This is what it feels like when your crypto portfolio drops 50% in 10 minutes.

Iniabasi Paul's profile picture
Iniabasi Paul1 year ago

What an intense test

MathAndScience.com's profile picture
MathAndScience.com1 year ago

The highest G-forces a human has endured are tied to survival extremes: John Stapp withstood 46.2 g’s in a 1954 rocket sled test, surviving brief deceleration with injuries, marking the max in controlled settings. David Purley survived a 1977 F1 crash estimated at 179.8 g’s, a peak spike from a near-instant stop, with severe injuries but recovery. These show humans can take massive g’s briefly—46 g’s controlled, up to 180 g’s in crashes—thanks to short duration and luck, though normal limits are far lower (9 g’s for pilots, 4-6 g’s untrained).

MR. DARIUS ⚜️'s profile picture
MR. DARIUS ⚜️1 year ago

Gotta hit the gym before this💯

Buckomaniac's profile picture
Buckomaniac1 year ago

I want to try this out

Sorrow's profile picture
Sorrow1 year ago

The cute boy aged 15 years in that thing

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