User talk:Diceman87345

Mouse Trap Car
Building a mouse trap car has three basic needs, good weight in front(more in front). this could be some sort of paper weight or paperclip. axles are best lite but long big so they stay straight and do not stray away from the course. Second bigger is always better when it comes to mouse traps big mouse traps, big wheels, big axels, and big spinners this gets weight going in the front. I find jar tops to work best in compotitions. Last cutting down on sides is good for arrow dinamics. other keys are to adjust the snapper spring in to high mode for more power, and shaving some wood of the bottom.

Competion Rules Mouse trap car races are very intense and exhilerating its the most fun ive had in years. there is a bunch of hot chicks and much fun to be had in the back room. one time i had three subway sandwiches and i thru up right before my race with a new car ive been working on the z550 with a class A motor system, i won btw. then these chicks came up to me and showed me there cars. we went back to there apartment and looked at designs and stuff next day i won 150 bucks for 2nd place it was sweet/pimpalicious. I was on my game that day it was ballin 10 yards 12.4 second biznotch. He arrived at the hotel room, where our cameras were set up, in a T-shirt and jeans. "I'm nervous," he said, surveying our lights and camera equipment. "I've never done anything like this before."

Our confidential source said he's been involved in dogfighting for more than 30 years. He has trained and fought -- by his estimation -- about 2,000 pit bulls and was poised to tell "Outside the Lines" about the time in 2000 when his dog squared off against a dog owned by someone he referred to as one of the "heavyweights" of the dogfighting world: Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick.

"He's a pit bull fighter," the source said of Vick. "He's one of the ones that they call 'the big boys': that's who bets a large dollar. And they have the money to bet large money. As I'm talking about large money -- $30,000 to $40,000 -- even higher. He's one of the heavyweights."

On April 25, authorities raided a house in Surry County, Va., owned by Vick and reportedly found -- among other things -- 66 dogs (most of which were pit bulls), a dog-fighting pit, bloodstained carpets and equipment commonly associated with dogfighting. Vick was not at the scene and denied knowledge of dogfighting at the property. To this point, no charges have been filed against him. But questions about Vick and his possible connection to dogfighting linger.

This source -- who required anonymity as a condition of our interview -- has helped law enforcement by supplying information on dog fights that has led to dozens of felony arrests.

"I've fought dogs, I pitted them, I bred them and I've done everything with them," said the source of his three decades in dogfighting. He then went on to describe the scene from that night seven years ago, as he took his 42-pound dog into the pit (the area dogs fight in) to face off against Vick's dog. He says Vick did not get into the pit but had a member of his entourage handle his dog while Vick placed bets with the 20 or so people in attendance.

Outside The Lines Michael Vick's role in dog fighting's hidden society and a look at why some athletes participate in the brutal and illegal activity are examined Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. ET on OTL.

"Then he started, you know, waving money," the source said. "He was betting with everybody … He said he got $5,000. He said he's betting on his animal."