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I beg to differ.
I beg to differ.
Along the same lines, if your pan's seasoning has become spotty or scrached and you want to start over from unseasoned, place the pan in the oven before initiating a self-cleaning cycle. The very high temperature will turn the current coating to ash, and you will be left with a clean, light grey pan to season again.
This is why I always carry a bomb when I fly, because what are the odds of TWO people on a plane, both with bombs...
You are correct. I was not considering space-based weapons; we all know that meteors streak through the atmosphere at supersonic speeds (shooting stars) and, if big enough, can impact the ground carrying those velocities. Although, I wonder about any space-based kinetic weapon's ability to withstand reentry yet…
You are correct. I was not considering space-based weapons; we all know that meteors streak through the atmosphere at supersonic speeds (shooting stars) and, if big enough, can impact the ground carrying those velocities. Although, I wonder about any space-based kinetic weapon's ability to withstand reentry yet…
Interesting. I based my statement on my knowledge of our Mk-84 2,000 pound bombs, which we dropped at 600 knots (KIAS) in 60 degree dives from around 25,000 feet. Firstly, to get that much speed on them, we would throttle the jet UP in the dive, adding energy the whole time. Second, they would decelerate once off…
Yeah, wouldn't it be super-neat if everybody just rode their rainbow-colored unicorns down to the hug convention and gave each other free cotton candy all day? I'm glad people everywhere are all so nice and gentle.
Terminal velocity on any free-falling bomb will be subsonic, e.g. below about 660 knots indicated airspeed, regardless of the height from which or speed at which it was dropped. So, dropping a bomb from space wouldn't be any better than from 5,000 feet.
The green strips are formation lights. Low in intensity, they are not visible more than a couple hundred yards away. They are to help pilots fly near each other in the darkness.
I've been using Windex and paper towels for thirty years to clean electronics of every sort and have yet to harm a single component: TVs, stereos, computers, Walkmans, flat screens, monitors, modems, keyboards, routers, iPods, tablets, watches, sunglasses; you name it, Windex doesn't hurt it.
I tried this and it worked perfectly. Great app.
Ooh Rah, Marine. To pilot UAVs would keep all the stress and difficulty of actual piloting (with more, actually, due to the lack of sensory input) with few of the benefits.
I see. Go ahead and prove the one I stated.
Here's something to think about. When you fire a blank, you have just declared a fight to the death. The bad guy doesn't know it's a blank, and he doesn't know your next shot might only wound him. He just knows he's in a gunfight, and he may now try to save his own life by ending yours.
Because one cannot prove a negative, such as "Personal electronics will never be causal factor in a commercial aircraft mishap."
For the $4.00 a case costs, I'd rather have the convenience of individual servings that each last well over a year. Also, a shrink-wrapped case of water is an efficient use of space, occupying little more volume than the volume of water carried. A jug and bottle system has neither of those attributes.