Made a nice Chicken Korma while watching 'Man in Space' (1955) on Disney. Lots of cool stuff and Willy Ley, which is always good.
I was gonna say "try BulkAmmo dot com" but it looks like they don't have much of the bulk stuff. Glad I bought bulk 9mm when it was almost as cheap as 22.Buying ammo is the more impressive of those two. Kinda hard to come by at the moment.
Try Gunbroker. If your patient you can still get a fair price. Just watch out for a high shipping price. Good Luck.Buying ammo is the more impressive of those two. Kinda hard to come by at the moment.
I try to support my local stores and ranges as much as I can. I'm ok for the next several months but if this shortage continues past spring I'll have to be selective in what I take to the range. 9mm and .40 stocks are running low but still have lots of .17HMR, .22LR, .380, .45, .223, .308, 7.62x54R, 20Ga and 12GaTry Gunbroker. If your patient you can still get a fair price. Just watch out for a high shipping price. Good Luck.
Well, let's see. 29 to 75 mm rings mumble mumble; 6 to 16 in² fins mumble; bulkheads pencil scratch; carry the three scratch scratch; divide by the square root of tree;[T]hey have 1/4" baltic birch in 4x8 sheets. Do you know just how many rocket fins and centering rings I can make from a single sheet?!?!?!?!?
Not to me.When it's done, it will take containerized cargo from Honolulu to the outlying Hawaiian islands. No pictures, but they'd be boring anyway.
So, given the intersection of marine and HPR requirements, how big a barge do I need to launch everything up to K/L? :-DIssued about 90 sheets of structural drawings for a deck cargo barge roughly the size of a football field. When it's done, it will take containerized cargo from Honolulu to the outlying Hawaiian islands. No pictures, but they'd be boring anyway.
So, given the intersection of marine and HPR requirements, how big a barge do I need to launch everything up to K/L? :-D
Not to me.
Launching is easy.You could do that on this barge no problem.
That’s what the skiff on the tug is for...Launching is easy.
But the recovery.................
Oh wait, maybe you have a Falcon 9?That’s what the skiff on the tug is for...
Issued about 90 sheets of structural drawings for a deck cargo barge roughly the size of a football field. When it's done, it will take containerized cargo from Honolulu to the outlying Hawaiian islands. No pictures, but they'd be boring anyway.
That’s pretty much it, though it does have a megawatt of generating capacity on board to run refrigerated containers, though only about 400 kW will be used at a time. I don’t think we have any 1/4” structural steel on this one—too thin! The main deck is all 31/32” steel (not 1” for regulatory reasons), and the padeyes for the towing shackles are made from 3” plate.So, a really big fancy box..
Love 'big steel'.. and I think 1/4" plate is big!
I harvested my Ghost Pepper, yes just the one. I started it from seed this Spring and had plenty of buds. The one plant only grew 2 fruit to maturity and one was moldy when I cut it open. I ended up saving the seeds for next year and freezing the pepper that was good while I think how to cook it. I planned on smoking the peppers dry and grinding it into powder for a smokey Nashville Hot Chicken, but didn't get enough to make it worth the effort. I did try a sliced ring, after all, I don't think I should grow something without eating it. It made me cough and made my eyes water immediately. It took a good half-hour for the burn to dissipate.
I also pruned the plant down to try and keep it alive and dormant over the Winter. Hopefully it survived and I can compare it to the 2nd generation plants next Summer.
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We have defeated our second wave and have had about a 100 day lockdown eased earlier in the week. Went to our local Indian restaurant for the first time in nearly four months.
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