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You been going to those bad websites again Tony? :D what happened to god given talent!
 
Actually for a while yesterday I was also being redirected, but later in the evening it was working fine.
 
So is everyone going there to see if the Stratologger CF is back in stock? What is going on with the no availability anyway?!
 
You been going to those bad websites again Tony? :D what happened to god given talent!

It started working for me late last night..Thanks for most of the replies!

Ethan, I just deleted a smart arse reply to you..about tip to tip and fins.
Nice nose cone mold, rocket and motor!

Tony
 
It started working for me late last night..Thanks for most of the replies!

Ethan, I just deleted a smart arse reply to you..about tip to tip and fins.
Nice nose cone mold, rocket and motor!

Tony
Haha fair play Tony, we'll call this one a draw!
Cheers, learned from the best:cool:
 
Make sure you are going to the correct URL:

https://www.perfectflitedirect.com/

They have had stock issues for over a year. I wasn't able to get a CF in time for LDRS 38. Ordered in May of 2019. I think Apogee had to drop them due to delivery issues.

Too bad. Great devices and good customer service when they respond.
 
Anybody locate these mysterious items lately? I missed the March 20th stock and all vendors online I research have bare cupboards as well...
It is a genius marketing ploy. Scarcity by design. Random limited availability and a cult following.
 
Each time I have tried to go to a location and it got re-routed surreptitiously, it was because I picked up a rootkit.

It may not hurt to run a virus scan/Malwarebytes/etc., to be sure nothing bad got on your computer.
 
It's probably not a factor in this particular case, but in case of unexpected redirects, you should also check your router since it usually hands out DNS server addresses as part of the DHCP process. DNS hijacking attacks are possible by compromising the router and causing it to hand out a bogus DNS server, allowing the attacker to redirect you at will. Many older routers can easily be rooted if remote management is enabled. Have a look at the DNS server addresses on your computer. You can also try setting your DNS server on the computer to 8.8.8.8 (google) and ignore the DHCP setting, though depending on the thoroughness of the router hack it might not be effective. A lot of times the google DNS will also provide better performance than your ISP's DNS.

Some information on a current attack along these lines is here: https://arstechnica.com/information...nds-users-to-spoofed-sites-that-push-malware/
 
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