Inexperienced marijuana users will often have great difficulty driving and should not attempt it. Research with experienced marijuana users shows that it has no significant effect on their driving. They feel the effects of the marijuana but are able to effectively compensate for them. One example is an article titled "Puff the Dangerous Driver" done by Road and Track in 1980. They set up a driving course and had two groups of people drive it. They gave one group increasing doses of alcohol and the other group increasing doses of marijuana. The group taking alcohol was quickly and obviously unsafe on the course. The group taking marijuana actually did slightly better on the course when stoned on marijuana. This is not because marijuana improves performance, but simply shows that it doesn't diminish performance so that they got better with practice.
It depends on a lot of factors; quality of the marijuana, number of times you have used marijuana (a veteran smoker doesn't stay as high as long). My first time smoking marijuana I smoke some high grade stuff and was high for over 3 hours.
this COMPLETELY is based on the person , the type of weed , how much weed you smoked , etc . me , personally , when i smoke a dime , by myself , im high for at least an hour , when i smoke a dub , im high for 2 hours , and when i smoke an eighth , im high for 6-8 hours .
That varies from immediately to about 24 hours, depending on your size, gender, how much you drank, and how quickly you drank it.
You can legally drive when your BAC drops below .08. How long that takes depends on high high your BAC got.
:O dude, it stays in the system for MONTHS! (dw, im not judging)
5 seconds!
Height is one factor that can influence the BAC resulting from consuming a set amount of alcohol.
As soon as you get your G1 you can drive one.
The only one that anyone should drink (in appropriate amounts) is ethanol. Consuming any other kind of alcohol (isopropanol/isopropyl alcohol: "rubbing alcohol", methanol: "wood alcohol") will be really bad for your health.
There is no amount of alcohol one can drink and still SAFELY drive a car.
It can depend on the wording of the statute in your particular jurisdiction. In some, if you drink alcohol in plain view of passers-by, you are considered to be "consuming alcohol in public."
Consuming food and non-alcoholic beverages such as water reduce the rate of alcohol absorption into the bloodstream.
Fainting, more often called "passing out," is a common symptom of consuming a significant amount of alcohol. Other symptoms include "blacking out" and impaired motor skills. "Alcohol poisoning" tends to refer to more severe alcohol intoxication, in which one's health is legitimately at risk. Alcohol poisoning may require hospitalization.
Disease is a biggun. Livers give out among other things, such as kidneyism. One can also die from consuming too much alcohol and their body can't take it.
glycerol
one half....A+
Consuming one or two beers or other alcoholic beverages each day is associated with better health and living longer than is abstaining from alcohol.
Although one can drive the very next day, since the procedure these days is very advanced.. Still it is advised to not advised to drive for 2-3 days, since the inflammation takes time to subside