**Official Breaking Bad Finale Thread**

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
I was rooting for Jesse to make it. Didn't think he would when he ran by the camera. Must have that set to motion detect
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
over an hour - all of it commercials. I understand AMC making money on this - what? 5 million viewers? but..... they could just charge ungodly sums for a few commercials and not break the continuity of the show, which is what happened last night. I can't recall ever having to think "now, what happened before the commercial" while watching Breaking Bad before. Otherwise, looks like Walt is out in the cold now. Wow.... Todd is just a wonderful character.
wonder what lydia was up to?..
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
Question for all the characters

When is enough money enough?
I don't know about money, not really. A pallet stacked 3 feet high? is that 80 million? I've seen a million (in the movies) in a brief case. Is that 80 brief cases? CAN you put 80 million in 10,000 dollar bricks in 7 barrels? That's 8,000 stacks of hundreds, right? each 3 inches high, That's a 2000 foot high stack, what's the volume here? how long is a bill? 6 inches? 4 inches wide? (I should measure one), but.... what is the total volume of 80 million dollars in hundreds? I wonder if anyone went to figureing this.
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
US bills are 2.61" x 6.14" x 0.004 3 "
Each bill has avolume of 0.069 cu. in. or 000 0399 cu. ft
$1 000 000 in ones has a volume of 39.88 cu ft (if all bills are new, flat and packed tightly in neat stacks). Before you ask it would weigh 2040 lb. (just over a ton)
Divide the above weight and volume to get values for 5s 10s 20s 50s 100s


1 Gallon [Fluid, US] = 231 Cubic Inches
 

Fungus Gnat

Well-Known Member
US bills are 2.61" x 6.14" x 0.004 3 "
Each bill has avolume of 0.069 cu. in. or 000 0399 cu. ft
$1 000 000 in ones has a volume of 39.88 cu ft (if all bills are new, flat and packed tightly in neat stacks). Before you ask it would weigh 2040 lb. (just over a ton)
Divide the above weight and volume to get values for 5s 10s 20s 50s 100s


1 Gallon [Fluid, US] = 231 Cubic Inches
Will this be on the test?
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
Well 80 million would be 80,000 x $100 bills, are $100 bills the same size and weight as $1 bills?

(Havnt been to the US in about 5 years so havnt held any dollars in a while).
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
it never is..the more you have the more you want..you want to continue the lifestyle that money brings..it does not bring happiness, it just makes life easier.
doesn't seem to have made life easier for the whites, or pinkman for that matter.
 

RPM371

Well-Known Member
US bills are 2.61" x 6.14" x 0.004 3 "
Each bill has avolume of 0.069 cu. in. or 000 0399 cu. ft
$1 000 000 in ones has a volume of 39.88 cu ft (if all bills are new, flat and packed tightly in neat stacks). Before you ask it would weigh 2040 lb. (just over a ton)
Divide the above weight and volume to get values for 5s 10s 20s 50s 100s


1 Gallon [Fluid, US] = 231 Cubic Inches
 
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