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About onetrack
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Perth, W.A.
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Country
Australia
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onetrack's Achievements

Well-known member (3/3)
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The propellant in rocket chutes should contain Guanidinium nitrate, which is the same propellant as used in airbags in cars. I've never seen a recommendation to change out airbags in cars, they're supposed to still work after 30 years or more. There are still many questions around old airbags in use, because older airbags used sodium azide, which is as toxic as cyanide. Takata stopped using sodium azide in airbags due to toxicity concerns, and started using ammonium nitrate, which was deemed safer. But the problem that occurred with the ammonium nitrate in the defective Takata airbags, was that if it got wet (and it was supposed to be sealed, but sometimes the sealing failed), then the AN developed little tunnels through it, known as "Ostwald ripening". High temperatures made the problem worse, and effectively caused the AN to detonate when initiated, rather than burn (there's a fine line between the two, as you all know with fuel detonation). As a result, all airbag and ballistic chute manufacturers now use Guanidinium nitrate, which is a long-standing and safer propellant. This doesn't mean this product can be mishandled, it is still a toxic compound and needs to be handled accordingly, especially when disposing of product which has reached the end of its lifespan. All propellant in airbags and ballistic chutes should be detonated on disposal, to change the chemicals into less harmful compounds.
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"Hey Jethro, I jest shotgunned outta the sky, the biggest darn skeeter ah ever did see!!! .... and the noise of its buzzin', you could hear a-coming for miles!!! ...."
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.........Asian food delights from the Lucky Cat restaurant. Now, not many people know that Turbo started a fine Asian restaurant, as a sideline to the Turbine Cat Farming operation. This restaurant conveniently utilised cats from the Cat Farm that didn't make the grade for pelts - thus showing that Turbo's business skills at waste minimisation and maximising ROI, were right up there with the countrys biggest and best CEO's. The restaurant name was a clever joke that no-one ever twigged to, of course, and even fewer knew the source of the meat in the Kway Teow and the Sweet and Sour Pork, but regardless......... (and here, dear NES readers, is OT's photo of Turbo's prominent restaurant advertising - however, he did give the place a miss, knowing it was owned by Turbo, so he can't report on these particular food delights, as regards taste......)
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onetrack started following Lasco Lascondor
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It's a shame the Larkin Aircraft Co. folded because of the Great Depression. I have an early 1930's copy of the Australian Wings aviation magazine, and it features a lot of information about the Lascondor and the Larkin Aircraft Co. Aviation was going great guns here in Australia in the late 1920's, but the Great Depression wiped out a lot of aviation efforts.
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.......Santoku knife sets, which need to be treated with more care than a live Taipan, the Kimono with obi (which must be tied using the tateya musubi knot), and of course, Zori, otherwise known as Japanese work boots. Zori can be worn anytime and anywhere, of course, and if anyone complains that open-toed footwear must not be worn on the premises, one can always tell them where to shove their........... (Dear NES Readers, Cappy has brought a reminiscent tear to OT's eyes, as he did once own 3 of the D-375 dozers, plus a large fleet of other Komatsu machines, with the Cats making up a tiny minority of the 55-strong fleet. But those days are long gone, and today, all OT has left is a photo album, and little else. As the old saying goes, "I started with nothing, and I still have it all".)
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Trip Advisor users seem to provide the only feedback, and it's not promising. Read the reviews. https://www.tripadvisor.com.au/Hotel_Review-g24055445-d1458218-Reviews-Adels_Grove-Lawn_Hill_Queensland.html
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Well, that thing sure got whacked with the ugly stick, didn't it!
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......sold many Landcruisers to weekend walliors who wanted to tear up their local sand dunes! So the Landcruiser became the oliginal unbreakable Toyota, and now, having given up our original militaly conquest, when it failed to ploceed, we succeed with economic conquest!! Turbo looked a bit thoughtful when the Japanese bloke expanded on the eventual Japanese conquest of Australia. Then he thought back to when all the Japanese invested in Gold Coast property and the signs started appearing around the GC, reading "オーストラリア人よ、ファック", which led to local outrage, even if..............
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The GEnX engines in the Boeing 787 Dreamliner have increased thrust over previous models such as the CF6. The GEnX can generate up to 78,000 lbs of thrust at sea level, thus enabling the Dreamliner to take off with adequate power to spare, even at MTOW in high temperatures and high elevations.
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I can remember building a beautiful Kittyhawk about 65 years ago! It never flew! 😞 I could never get the engine to run! I never had any assistance in those days, living in a semi-rural area, so the Kittyhawk ended up collecting dust for decades! I can't even remember what happened to it. It probably got sold at a garage sale for a couple of dollars. That put to bed for good, all my dreams of flying aircraft!
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onetrack started following China's first mass-produced flying car and Brisbane control line club
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An AF-2S Grumman Guardian? Woo-Hoo! - now you just need the Carrier, to go with it! 😄
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China's first mass-produced flying car
onetrack replied to red750's topic in Other Countries Discussion
QUOTE: "It's really a flying car!" No, it's not - that's just pure BS on a par with Trump BS and lies. It's a big passenger carrying drone, that's all. Plenty of companies worldwide, planning, designing and building them - none of them a "commercially success" yet. -
The trash media are using the altitude loss event of an Air India B777 to continue to smear Air India, and make it look like every AI aircraft is a crash waiting to happen. Re Red750's report - The AI B777, Flight AI-187, took off from Delhi during a violent thunderstorm. On climbout, the aircraft obviously flew into a severe bout of turbulence and a heavy downdraught. From official sources - “The (B777) aircraft was involved in an inflight occurrence of stick shaker and GPWS caution. Soon after takeoff, stick shaker warning and GPWS 'don’t sink' caution appeared. Stall warning occurred once, and GPWS caution occurred twice. There was an altitude loss of around 900 feet during climb. Subsequently, the crew recovered the aircraft, and continued the flight to Vienna." However, officials pointed out that the post-flight report for the Delhi-Vienna leg only cited, “stick shaker due to turbulence after takeoff,” without detailing other significant alerts. A deeper review of the flight data recorder (DFDR) - most likely as part of increased surveillance after the AI 171 crash - had revealed additional warnings, including a “don’t sink” GPWS alert and a stall warning, that had not been documented earlier. As a result, the flight crew have been temporarily suspended from further duties until the B777 altitude loss investigation is complete. Possibly the major concern around this incident is the GPWS warning sounding, which indicates terrain was far too close to the flight path.
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.......the same design features as the Japanese carriers - narrow gangways and low bulkheads to match the small stature of the Japanese, small hammocks for sleeping areas, food storage areas in the galley that are designed to hold bulk rice, and nothing else, and a tiny galley centred around the production of sushi and sashimi, and rice and ramen dishes only. The Australian navy officials inspecting the new ships were outraged that the personnel spaces were so small, they kept banging their heads and elbows and knees - and it was found most Navy personnel hated the smell of cooking rice, let alone the taste of it. This came back to the experiences of their WW2 POW fathers, which were passed onto their sons. What was worse, it was found the carrier decks were designed to the dimensions that precisely matched Aichi D3A's and Nakajima B5N's, and no current Australian aircraft could land on them. When official complaints were lodged with the Japanese, the Japanese responded with, "Ahh, so ... Ostralia contract did not stipulate..............