Tuesday, December 28, 2010

2010 Hummer H2 213 Ultimate Six Front View

There is actually a pretty easy way of figuring out the internal volume of a box, without using and tape measures. Our weapon of choice in this, will be packing peanuts. The kind you see in packages sent to your house. Those little pieces of foam that help keep the contents of packages from breaking or being damaged in transit. You will want to get a couple bags of these little guys. Enough to fill the enclosure you plan to measure.

Now you want to get a cardboard box or make a small wooden box that has an internal volume of 6 cubic inches. That would be 6″h X 6″w X 6″d. Those are the internal measurements, not counting the walls of the box. That way if you could freeze the air inside the box and take it out, you would have a 6x6x6 inch cube of frozen air.

2010 Hummer H2 213 Ultimate Six Front Side View

Once you have your measuring box, start to remove the peanuts from the fiberglass box, and place them in the measuring box. Fill it to the top. Write down or mark somewhere how many times it takes to fill the measuring box. Say it takes 5 times, then your box’s airspace is 2 and ½ cu. ft. Every time you fill it, that represents 6 square inches of airspace.

Although the maximum seating capacity is eight, the Hummer H3 still has all the mod-cons of the H2 model. With the exclusive luminescent finish that gives the interior that extra sparkle and exudes luxury, two impressive bars and hidden TV screens, this model is without a doubt one of the flashiest.

2010 Hummer H2 213 Ultimate Six Rear Angle View

The H3 offers optimum luxury with its lavish additions, including champagne holders, decanters and glasses for those who like a tipple of the good stuff, a beautifully decorated interior including extravagant lighting (fiber optics and LEDs) to exude that intimate mood and comfortable but plush leather seats; mini-bars, starlight ceiling and vanity mirrors as part of the décor.

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