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Does CSI apply to used car sales?

Isn't that completely counterproductive nowdays? I assume the reason to escort an enemy aircraft is to say "if you try anything, I'll shoot you", but with beyond visual sight weapons, the fighter jet is actually making itself vulnurable by getting close and slowing down. It would be in a considerably better position a

Do you know where I could find more information about this system? I'm a tad confuse how one can have a hydraulic system without a pump. Something has to pressurize the fluid.

Are you sure it was hydraulic fluid? Why were they running out of that?

Those guys are frauds. They grab a bunch of headlines, produce something that can't qualify as a product, and reap in the government grants. It's no better than the assholes pumping up worthless stock.

Its and injection machine nozzle mounted up on a gantry mill. The drool it produces is close to a quarter inch in diameter.

Thats the theory, but in order for it to work printed parts need to be of similar quality to the ones conventionally manufactured. And for the most part, they aren't. Local motors car is a great deal closer to a dried mashed potato sculpture than it is to a modern product. Printing allows for exotic geometries, and

Now lets see some laps. I'd like to know

Am I the only one that laughed at the announcer stating that underneath, its all 90's technology?

We grew tired of the retro 60's, bring on the retro 20's!

I wonder what caused their population to spike in the 90's.

I was at IMTS where local motors were printing their "car", which has a great deal more in common with a mashed potatoes sculpture than any automobile. The body is made from this thickly extruded gunk which is miles behind the earliest automobiles in term of fit an finish (and probably safety as well). The only

The original ZaZ. 17.5hp needs an engine overhaul every 20k miles

My BMW started making terrifying knocking sounds, followed by a loud squeal and loss of power steering as the belt went. Or rather the belt looked just fine, but one of the pulleys did not. When I finally managed to get to it, I found pieces of squirrel everywhere. That was one expensive rodent.

Then someone will figure out that the rats are some unique breed that only lives in south georgia, and everyone is going to feel real smart...

I'm a little surprised that the technology is being adopted from consumer vehicles, instead of the other way around. After all, the early systems must have been expensive. Its easier to absorb that cost in a very expensive piece of equipment.

Well, yes. Although I should point out that it's ussually the higher order systems that have bugs. Microprocessor code is relatively simple, so it tends to either work, or not. You need a certain level of complexity before you reach that state of "it works fine most of the time, but acts really weird under some

Well, microprocessors are really handy, cheap, and effective, so every manufacturer uses tons of them. Technically, each as a computer, in a rather 80's sense of the word. Fantastic for doing the same simple jobs over and over again. Very reliable. Wait wha?

The angle of the windshield does make it much harder for the horizontally flying rounds to penetrate, but I don't think that's enough to justify this crazy contraption

" In other words, the U-2's analogue 'pulley and push-rod' flight control system would remain intact even for unmanned flight, with commands being processed through a digital autopilot, which are then physically implemented via the mechanical actuators."