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Hmm, OCRV 137 is actually a pretty niche aviation term that most people won't recognize at first glance. It's about fuel slosh causing weird aircraft movements during takeoff and landing phases. The user seems to like the contrast between dry technical jargon and wet, messy reality – that's clever. Let me approach this in layers: First need to establish it's an obscure but deadly serious aviation term disguised as a punchline. Should explain what OCRV is (oscillations caused by rotating control surfaces) before mentioning fuel slosh specifically for OCRV 137. The humor comes from the dry, clinical way we describe something that sounds like science fiction. For the unsettling example... Ah! I can see they want maximum contrast between boring technical language and stomach-churning real-world terror. Something about a quiet neighborhood moment turning terrifying due to fuel slosh resonance would work perfectly. The challenge is making it both technically plausible while being deeply relatable in horror – like that "Quiet, Pleasant Drive" trope from urban legends combined with actual aviation physics. The final sentence needs to feel authentic enough that you're not laughing at the idea but screaming internally. User definitely has a taste for