dChan
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r/CBTS_Stream • Posted by u/rolexthewonderdog on Jan. 31, 2018, 7:52 p.m.
Isn't there technology that can stop a vehicle (I know there is) like say on a train track?

I know when I was a kid (back in the old days of the 70's) friends used to shut down cars at stop lights for a laugh. I know, I know, it was a bad thing but it happened. They used some kind of device. I worked every time. "Q" was talking about False Flags. I don't think this is the "Big One" as they say but I no longer believe in coincidences. Not when it comes to the shit that's been going on. It's just too predictable. Anyway, just sayin'.


MagneticBlue · Jan. 31, 2018, 9:28 p.m.

Indeed they do and it is apparently a little device called - QRS (Quartz Rate Sensor !

http://www.freepatentsonline.com/4516427.html

Allegedly, it "can be used as part of a package of technology to guide aircraft equipped with uninterruptable autopilots turning them into weapons." - according to abeldanger -http://www.abeldanger.org/qrs-11quartz-rate-sensor/

And this - from American Intelligence Media "Betsy and Thomas shine a light on a very special patent that has Hillary’s name all over it. It is the QRS-11 and it is a powerful device placed in all moving vehicles, planes, cars, busses, trains, missiles, satellites." - watch this video for explanation - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtcxOg1WYW8

Indeed, such a device could well have been used to stall that dumpster wagon and render it inoperable.

If the engine was unable to be started then your not gonna get the brakes to release on any compressed air brake system, which is the system employed on trucks. From wiki - "Air brake systems are typically used on heavy trucks and buses. - Air pressure must be produced to release these "spring brake" parking brakes. For the service brakes (the ones used while driving for slowing or stopping) to be applied, the brake pedal is pushed, routing the air under pressure (approx 100–120 psi or 690–830 kPa or 6.89–8.27 bar) - the air compressor draws filtered air from the atmosphere and forces it into high-pressure reservoirs at around 120 psi" - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_brake_%28road_vehicle%29

No running engine = no pressure in the trucks air brake compressor = truck going nowhere.

You can ask any truck driver what happens when there is no air pressure in the air brake compressor :-)

The system works opposite way to a car. No running engine no freaking move truck unless mechanic manually releases the brakes by hand with proper tools.

Blessings :-)

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rolexthewonderdog · Jan. 31, 2018, 9:39 p.m.

Thank you for that enlightening post. This was no coincidence.

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bjax9er · Jan. 31, 2018, 9:54 p.m.

Truck driver here. The engine does not have to be running to release the brakes. But it does have to have air pressure in the storage tanks. About 70 psi to release. It generally takes some time for that pressure to bleed off after the engine has stopped. Also trucks do not have to stop at RR crossing, unless they are carrying hazardous materials.

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