A drinking competition originating in the city of Coquitlam, just east of Vancouver B.C. Canada. It is going global with online broadcasts for big competitions (like the March 11th G10-off, live from the Jones garage). Named for the infamous G. Robson, competitors have one, 2 ounce shot of beer the first minute, 2 the second, 3 the third... etc. All the way up to 10 shots in the 10th minute.
A time keeper must keep precise time. Each drinker will need 5 cans of beer, an assistant to pour the shots and 2 shot glasses so that one is always full.
Last rule, NO PUKING. Any puking duringand up to 5 minutes after the competition is a DQ.
Don't underestimate a G-10
Holy **** you finished the G-10!" or, "You're disqualified you puked on the table Big BA"
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One of numerous gangs in the city of Orinda, California. They are infamous for their school bus drive-bys. Weapons used in such drive bys usually included things like apple sauce, oranges, apples, and occasionally tennis balls.
"Oh shit, G-10 is comin' by in their bus, GET OUT THE WAY!"
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Unwritten rule amongst drug dealers: Never spend more than 10 g's in one place. The reason being that an expenditure of over $10,000 in cash requires filling out an IRS form.
"I want to buy that mercedes, but then I'd have to break the 10 G limit."
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G-10 or garolite is a high-pressure fiberglass laminate, a type of composite material.1 It is created by stacking multiple layers of glass cloth, soaked in epoxy resin, then compressing the resulting material under heat until the epoxy cures.23 It is manufactured in flat sheets, most often a few millimeters thick.
G-10 is very similar to Micarta and carbon fiber laminates, except that glass cloth is used as filler material. (Note that the professional nomenclature of "filler" and "matrix" in composite materials may be somewhat counterintuitive when applied to soaking textiles with resin.)
Fenhar G-10 is the toughest of the glass fiber resin laminates and therefore the most commonly used.