Weights Jokes

  • Funny Jokes

    It's a simple feat to format and reuse AOL disks... but with a little imagination, a truly useful purpose can be found for those pesky white platters invading our mailboxes and magazines.
    Mini cutting board (great for the office or the car, use metal door for knife).
    Attach it to a ruler and presto! - you've got a fly swatter.
    Construct a life size replica of Stonehenge.
    At a restaurant, shove one under a wobbling table leg.
    Money clip (use the metal door and discard the plastic case... the "rich nerd" look is IN this year).
    Eye patch (for one-eyed software pirates).
    Christmas ornaments (the more the merrier).
    Give them to young children to use as building blocks.
    Glue them to the bottom of the space shuttle and use them as re-entry burn tiles.
    Dentures (melt & form them into new teeth for grandma).
    Room dividers for hamsters.
    Drink coasters.
    Use multiple disks to create an ideal door stopper.
    Ice scraper.
    Bathroom more...

    A husband and wife were driving down a country lane on their way to visit some friends. They came to a muddy patch in the road and the car became bogged. After a few minutes of trying to get the car out by themselves, they saw a young farmer coming down the lane, driving some oxen before him.
    The farmer stopped when he saw the couple in trouble and offered to pull the car out of the mud for $50. The husband accepted and minutes later the car was free. The farmer turned to the husband and said, “You know, you’re the tenth car I’ve helped out of the mud today. ”
    The husband looks around at the fields incredulously and asks the farmer, “When do you have time to plough your land? At night? ”
    “No, ” the young farmer replied seriously, “Night is when I put the water in the hole. ”
    Once upon a time, there was a little old man that really took care of his body. He lifted weights and jogged 6 miles everyday. One morning he looked in the mirror and was more...

    During a business trip to Boeing's Everett, Washington factory, I noticed several 747 and 777 airliners being assembled. Before the engines were installed, huge weights were hung from the wings to keep the planes balanced. The solid-steel weights were bright yellow and marked "14, 000 lbs."
    But what I found particularly interesting was some stenciling I discovered on the side of each weight. Imprinted there was the warning: "Remove before flight."

    During a business trip to Boeing's Everett, Washington factory, I noticed several 747 and 777 airliners being assembled. Before the engines were installed, huge weights were hung from the wings to keep the planes balanced. The solid-steel weights were bright yellow and marked "14,000 lbs." But what I found particularly interesting was some stenciling I discovered on the side of each weight. Imprinted there was the warning: "Remove before flight."

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