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#12 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
25B716 Posts |
[offtopic]
This reminds me of 'eighties, (1983) when few east-European countries put together a small "demo" military application, somewhere in the northern Turkey, about 60% (no joke) of the "front line" was reserved for the Russians, and the rest was taken by different other countries, including Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Turkey, etc., some of these guys came with their battalions a week before (we included) to "have time to install the front line". Just few hours before the exercise start, everybody was there, prepared, except the Russians, who didn't seem to care a dime. Everybody got impatient and they called the red lines, "yeah, yeah, harasho! we are coming, we are coming, the boys are coming..." - there were few thousand kilometers, and a mountain to cross, and we all made fun of the Russian troops marching through the forest 500km away with just two hours before the exercise was scheduled to start, but in reality everybody was a bit scared if they should start preparing their rocket launchers and start without the Russians (which would have been a political mistake), or wait, which would been a fail from the military point of view... Then just one hour before the start, with everybody sweating (and not only because of the heat of the desert!) the sky was dark and a Niagara noise filled the air... It was the first time in my life when I saw (without having any idea before that such thing is even possible! And we were "air landing" troops ([para]"chutes"), "elite troops", staying aside, with guarding mission, we were not part of the "parade"), so, first time in my life when I saw T10M (HEAVY tanks!) parachuted from the air planes! Hundreds of them! They felt like a stone for a while, then opened 4 parachutes at the corners, how the hack they could control it and avoid the tank to roll upside down in the air was a mystery for me, and just before touching the ground, they released the parachutes (avoid getting entangled?) and small explosions were detonated under the tank (to slow the falling). It literally "rained" with tanks. They bumped few times when touched ground, then started running (what the hack!?!? the tank operators were inside! ) to take their place on the front line. All the circus took about 30-40 minutes till all the front line was installed, and we were all watching jaw dropped, like idiots... [/offtopic] So, re: original thread title:don't get impatient... we are coming... we are coming... harasho...
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2013-11-30 at 05:03 |
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#13 |
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"Mr. Meeseeks"
Jan 2012
California, USA
1000011110002 Posts |
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#14 |
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"GIMFS"
Sep 2002
Oeiras, Portugal
3×491 Posts |
where have all the DC'ers gone?
It´s obvious, everybody knows: "Young girls have picked them everyone..." For me it´s the most obvious, and pleasant, explanation. I don´t intend to return any time soon. |
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#15 |
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"Mike"
Aug 2002
823410 Posts |
Short story:
One time (1994 maybe?) we got short notice to attend the Army's loadmaster course. It was a two week program about how to plan, rig and load just about anything onto C-130, C-141 and C5A airplanes. Basically it was a lot of repetitive simple math to calculate the overall center of gravity and a lot of hazardous material rules and stuff. Each calculation was done by hand. Even to move a helicopter one foot to the left, you had to calculate the whole load again. It took about an hour to do all of the math assuming no mistakes were made. So, I took my pocket HP100LX with Lotus 1-2-3 and programmed it to calculate everything and give a go/no-go answer within 20 seconds, but they wouldn't let me use it. FWIW, when we dropped tanks, we flew low and used a drogue parachute to pull them out of the airplane (Without people inside them!) on large pallets. Note: It is amazing how much stuff you can fit into a C5A! |
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#16 |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
100110010110102 Posts |
Have you seen how great the inside of the C-17 is? The outfitting inside has benefited from all of the lessons learned on the other planes. Fast loading, fast change over, etc.
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#17 |
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"Mike"
Aug 2002
823410 Posts |
The C-17 came online just before we ended our military service. The unit we were assigned to (1/504PIR) was (IIRC) the "test" unit for personnel drops.
Guess who the regimental commander was? |
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#18 |
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Bemusing Prompter
"Danny"
Dec 2002
California
1001010110112 Posts |
Yeah, I've noticed that I haven't gotten any DC assignments in a long time.
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#19 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
965510 Posts |
Why are you so self-confident? PrimeNet's Lifetime report says I will overtake you in ... 315 days
![]() It sound like tomorrow... Piece of cake!
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2013-12-02 at 06:00 |
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#20 |
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Dec 2002
32F16 Posts |
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#21 | |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
5·1,931 Posts |
Quote:
Now joking apart, I think this "competition" atmosphere is good for the project, as long as everybody understand the humor and take it without feeling offended. And to reply (partially) to your question, I don't take all my assignments through GPU72, that is why I talk more about "PrimeNet Lifetime Stats" (having the advantage of the "lifetime" particle too, being a long time contributor, but a "moody" one, I mean "not constant") and less about other "tops" like "gpu72" or primenet's "last year", etc. Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2013-12-03 at 03:11 |
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#22 | ||
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
11001010010102 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
I seem to remember a good-humoured and scrupulously fair debate about this somewhere. I thought Chris came to the unanimous conclusion that he was TFing everything to 74 with consummate ease. Did he succeed in reducing the demand for new LL assignments? |
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