Churba
Churba
Churba

Polyurathane steering rack bushings is a good one, and reminds me of a minor mod of my own - my vehicle took an odd size of bushing, and it was a pain to get. Using the wrong ones not only felt odd, but wore them out real fast. And worst of all, they were a titanic pain in the arse to replace.

Could just make it the current Hoonicorn. Drop a Ford GT replica body on the Hoonicorn’s custom tube frame, and it’s a Ford GT about as much as it’s currently a Mustang.

I’m pretty sure I can see what’s going to happen with this, and it’s the same thing that happens with most other H&H products - It’s going to be super cool, but also absurdly expensive, and outperformed in most situations by existing equipment so most of the people they’re selling to won’t bite.

Welcome to basically every Howe & Howe product video. They learned many lessons being on reality TV.

Hey Luke, I think I know a guy you’d want to talk to.

Dude is one of the better longsword trainers in Canada, one of the people that runs the canadian Historical Combat League. And he looks like he stepped right of a 50 pulp novel cover.

Hey, at least it’s better than the Hoonicorn.

Well, it’s a bit of a “How long is a peice of string?” question - Parts of it certainly are, but quite a lot of it is dismissive, condescending, and horrible. Particularly any part involving Games, any STEM field(particularly engineering or anything software), or any default subreddit.

I’ve heard pretty much all of them, at one point or another, from people who are supposedly adults, or at the least have a college education and jobs.

It’s not a matter of age - It’s a matter of people thinking they’re experts, when they’re not.

“People’s tastes are actually misconceptions! People who like things I don’t are fucking irrational, man!”

True that! We can do some absolutely mindbending shit, and for most people it just passes quietly, without notice. Sure, we’re standing on the shoulders of giants to a degree - but where you stand isn’t as important as what you can see from that height.

It’s been kind of hilarious to listen to the conspiracy theorists - who have mostly been swallowing the Russian disinfo campaign and asking for seconds - scrambling for excuses to dismiss this.

Well, good thing I only said it could detect them, and didn’t say it could provide an attack solution then, I suppose.

Sorry mate. I went a bit far there - Vented my general frustration on you when you certainly didn’t deserve it. I sincerely apologize for my dickhead behavior.

And I mostly agree on one point - While I’m quite sure it can do it, I have no idea of the range it can do it at, nor how useful that capability is beyond going

You’re half correct. It’s certainly capable(and has done similar on occasion in the past, primarily during experiments, though not with stealth aircraft - but I can’t see why it wouldn’t be the case, since they still produce a nice, hot wake), though I will grant that it’s likely not the primary method they’d use.

As

Nope. Jindalee Operational Radar network, it’s a large, extremely sensitive OTH array.

It is, I’m sorry. It’s called the Jindalee Operational Radar network. There are ways to defeat it(precisely none of which are built into any current stealth aircraft fielded by the US), but what I described is within capabilities of the system.

This isn’t the days of Duga-3 and Cobra Mist anymore, mate.

Here’s something even more interesting for you - It doesn’t work against Australia, either. They have a radar system that can detect and identify any stealth aircraft the US can field now or in the conceivable future - by finding and identifying the wake turbulence.

If you’re resting your balls on the rear wing, mate, no matter the size, I’d suggest you turn around and stop driving backwards.

Now playing

And here he is about ten years later, being interviewed after his wing snapped off mid-race -