Author Topic: how long is your pecker? inb4 bird  (Read 23288 times)





yes

taboo doesnt fully grasp the concept of what a snake is

be patient with him

first of all
your richard's a cube?


and second
5 1/2", 5.5" girth
why did you use fraction for one and a decimal point for the other


5 1/2", 5.5" girth

It's a shame that this isn't a cube. To get the width from this you actually need to divide by pi, so you're 5.5 inches long and 1.75 inches wide.

7.3 inches long

haven't attempted to measure girth

first of all
It's a shame that this isn't a cube. To get the width from this you actually need to divide by pi, so you're 5.5 inches long and 1.75 inches wide.
sorry i don't obsess over richard size enough to know the technical terms ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

sorry i don't obsess over richard size enough to know the technical terms ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

It's got very little to do with richards, it's actually basic geometry. You know, 2*pi*r and pi*r2? Using the commutative property of multiplication you can figure out that 2*pi*r is the same as (2*r)*pi, and 2*r is the same as diameter, which is how wide a cylinder is. So you get pi*diameter = circumference (girth), and use some basic algebra to get circumference/pi = diameter.

And they said you'd never use this stuff in real life.

sorry i don't obsess over richard size enough to know the technical terms ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
lol girth is not a term specific to richards

use the word girth in a serious context and just see what happens

Why are we doing this? Like really...

trinick posted a weirdly in-depth study on average richard sizes; he is hell bent on asserting his mediocrity