riggerrob

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Posts posted by riggerrob


  1. 5 minutes ago, riggerrob said:

    Alcoholism has significantly reduced the life-expectancy of Russian men.

    Ever since 1920, Russia/USSR has suffered a series of waves of low birthrates. A Russian boy born in 1920 USSR only a 20 percent chance of surviving World War 2/Great Patriotic War. He would need to survive a series of deadly waves of extermination during the Russian Revolution, various civil wars, WW2, etc.

    One of the reasons that Mr. Poutine launched the current invasion of Ukraine is that he feared if he waited a few more years, he would not have enough cannon-fodder .... er military age men ... to complete the invasion.

    How well is that working out?

    Alcoholism has significantly reduced the life-expectancy of Russian men. We wonder how much "brewers' droop" has dragged down Russian birth rates??????????

     


  2. On 4/20/2023 at 11:52 AM, gowlerk said:

    But....not only are they cowards they are also unmotivated lazy drunkards as well. When they do manage to run over an undefended town they immediately go to the local hospital and murder babies. Just like the Iraqis did in Kuwait. 

    Alcoholism has significantly reduced the life-expectancy of Russian men.


  3. On 4/18/2023 at 5:43 PM, Slim King said:

    Russia invaded, decided what they wanted to defend, and moved to those areas.  Do you honestly think Ukraine is winning in Bakhmut? You'd have to be brainwashed to believe that. They lost Mariupol and now Bakhmut ... They are losing.  Around 7 Ukrainians die for every Wagner professional killer. Both sides say the same thing but L@@K at the map. Ukraine is losing ground and soldiers every day. Ukrainian kids die every night as the Russian Air Force bombs them. There are no losses from this amongst the Russians. It's totally one sided and that's why they are losing. I feel so bad for these innocent boys .. Reminds me of Viet Nam and how they lied to us then.....

     

    That Leopard 2 was wrecked during a driving accident on a range well west of the fighting front.


  4. 17 hours ago, gowlerk said:

    Russia is having it's butt kicked again because it is a POS country that doesn't even deserve to exist as a federation outside of the Moscow area. It is populated by corrupt elites and drunken peasants. Hitler would have controlled it if it wasn't for the west bailing Stalin out because we wanted a third front. ... 

    Back during World War 2, WALLIED leaders like Churchill and Roosevelt (sp?) decided that it was less expensive to supply weapons to the USSR - and have millions of Soviet soldiers die on the Eastern Front - than to have American and British Commonwealth soldiers die on the Western Front. Germany had about 200 divisions on their Eastern Front, but only 26 divisions on their Western (French Front.

    During onen mid-war conference, Churchill commented to Stalin about the high casualties among Russian soldiers and Stalin poo-pooed his comment with "It was much worse during the 1930s purges."

    Bottom line, Russia has always been willing to sacrifice hundreds of thousands of soldiers to achieve political objectives.

    Sad.

    • Like 1

  5. 17 hours ago, gowlerk said:

    Russia is having it's butt kicked again because it is a POS country that doesn't even deserve to exist as a federation outside of the Moscow area. It is populated by corrupt elites and drunken peasants. Hitler would have controlled it if it wasn't for the west bailing Stalin out because we wanted a third front. Russia is a joke of history and will shortly be flushed away and divided up between China and the west. 

    Dear Gowlerk,

    Why do you hate China so much ... to inflict a part of Russia on her?

    Hah!

    Hah!

    • Like 1

  6. This morning's CBC news radio said that about 200,000 Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine over the last 14 months. Meanwhile about half as many Ukrainians have died.

    Why?

    What is this war accomplishing????????????

    The Russians completed de-nazification when they bombed the Azov Battalion flat during the siege of Mariopul.


  7. 9 hours ago, Slim King said:

    Ukrainian NAZI's killed 14,000 Russian Speaking Ukrainians. since 2014... How do you not know this? 

     

    A tiny number compared with the total number of Ukrainian citizens killed by Russia during the same time period.


  8. On 4/15/2023 at 10:04 PM, Slim King said:

     .... Putin is making money selling diesel to third party vendors who sell to Ukraine.... 

     

    That is because Russia is forced to sell oil at deep discounts after NATO, European Economic Community, etc. refused to buy Russian oil.

    India and China may still be buying oil from Russia, but they can demand deep discounts on otherwise un-sellable oil. Neither China nor India are honestly reporting the prices they are paying for Russian oil.


  9. 16 hours ago, gowlerk said:

    Here's a sign of the times. Under Kentucky law the weapon used in this weeks mass murder must be turned over to the state which is obligated to sell it so that it goes back into circulation. I shit you not, someone will own this as a souvenir because, well you tell me why.......  

    https://www.npr.org/2023/04/12/1169557476/louisville-shooting-greenberg-rifle-auction-kentucky-law-gun-violence-us

    If I were the sheriff or chief of police in that district, I would lay a beating on the murder weapon - with a large and heavy hammer - before handing it to the auctioneer.

    IOW destroy the gun or render it inoperative before handing it to the auctioneer.

    • Like 1

  10. Stock Cessna seat-belts can do a reasonable job of restraining skydivers, provided that you route seat-belts between harnesses and bellys.

    The best restraining method invovles wrapping special, skydiver-specific seat-belts around the hip joints of their harnesses. American operators of jump-planes changed their attitudes towards seat-belts after a couple of fatal crashes in 1992. Most now have "Hooker" belts installed (aka. the "tag-line" belts that are standard on PAC 750XL and Quest Kodiak). Jack Hooker (Hooker Harnesses of Illinois) invented the single-point restraints now used in most North American jump-planes.

    Pssst! I have also invented a couple of other methods of restraining tandem students ... but please don't tell Transport Canada.

    • Like 1

  11. When you think back to the year that I was born, the Catholic Church still provided the bulk of the social services in Quebec: elementary schools, high schools, universities, hospitals, orphanages, soup kitchens, etc. Ergo the Catholic Church had plenty of political and economic power. Just like "you cannot sue city hall" it was almost impossible to sue the Catholic Church in Quebec.

    Granted, the Jews had their own hospital in Montreal and Protestants also had their own separate school boards.

    As tax revenues increased, the Quebec Provincial Gov't eventually took over most of those social services from the churches.


  12. MIL SPEC 2 shot Capewells were invented during the 1950s to allow pilots to release their parachute canopies after landing ... to prevent being dragged to their deaths.

    The Military Specification Capewell 2-shots on my student gear were almost rusted solid. Totally useless when you wanted to get rid of a miss-behaving main.

    MIL SPEC 1 1/2 shots were an improvement.

    My impression was that Security tried to improve on the 1 1/2 shot Capewells by making them 1 shot. ... by attaching the cable to the sheet metal cover.

    How close is my guess to reality??????????????


  13. On 3/30/2023 at 3:52 PM, wolfriverjoe said:

     ... full registration of every gun. I think that would be less likely to happen than a ban/confiscation of military style rifles. ...

    Italy did that many years ago when they banned civilians from owning military caliber guns. Basically if a particular caliber had been used by the Italian Army, civilians were forbidden to own that caliber of ammunition or any gun capable fo firing it. ... because the Italian police and army did not want to be out-gunned when facing criminals.

    The exact opposite happened in North America after the Boer War (ended circa 1900) when the professional British Army got their @$$e$ shot off by Boer farmers firing the latest in Mauser military rifles. Many Boers bought these rifles simply to chase hyenas, etc. away from their cattle.

    During the 20th century, the Canadian and American Armies assisted civilians in getting their hands on full-bore military rifles. The North American objective was to train large numbers of civilians in the basics of rifle shooting in preparation for the next war.


  14. On 4/4/2023 at 1:07 PM, JerryBaumchen said:

    Hi Rob,

    I know almost nothing about Canadian law; but, in this country one is innocent until proven 'guilty.'

    I would suggest a better choice of words.

    Jerry Baumchen

    PS)  Re:  The awkward point about not marking the non-airworthy component

    If you were presented with a certificated component that you felt was not airworthy, would you mark it in any manner?

    How about tying a "not airworthy" small paper tag to something like a D line attachment tape?

    That tag would be found during any normal inspection. if the next rigger missed the tag, then he/she did an incomplete inspection.


  15. Try to find a UAE medical doctor who is certified to do aircrew medicals. If you are in the USA, that should be an aviation medical examiner certified by the US Federal Aviation Administration. In Canada, an aviation medical specialist certified by Transport Canada, etc.

    Start by asking local pilots where they get their medicals updated. You need at least an FAA Class 3 medical, the same as an American private pilot.

    • Like 1

  16. On 4/1/2023 at 5:55 PM, mark said:

    A simple collision is unlikely to extract the trigger.  Think of how difficult it would be to extract a Cypres control head from its pocket in similar circumstances.

    You might be able to extract the trigger if the collision involved snagging the RSL.  I can't recall any incidents involving snagged RSLs on any system, so we should consider the probability of this happening to be quite low.

    I can think of two accidental deployments involving snagging an RSL.

    The first was a static-line student who was not mentally capable of handling the stress of a solo jump. The chief instructor put him out on a static-line jump anyways. After his main opened properly, he searched for the red steering toggles. Every other student grabbed the red steering toggles hanging near their ears. Instead, he fumbled around and pulled red RSL that was velcroed to the yoke behind his neck. He landed his round reserve in the trees beside the bowl. GRRRRRR!

    The second accidental deployment occured with an early production Telesis 2 student rig. During an unstable main deployment, the student snagged the RSL and pulled it. Rigging Innovations promptly changed the RSL coverage on the Telesis 2. I doubt if any Telesis 2 are still in service as it was soon replaced in production by the Telesis 3.


  17. The awkward point about not marking the non-airworthy component is that some cheap-skate skydivers will ask two or three riggers before they find one who will pack it. Chances are, the "guilty" rigger is junior and never heard the full story.

    Then the "guilty: rigger is left trying to explain why he packed something after two or three more senior/experienced riggers refused.


  18. 20 hours ago, kleggo said:

    I'll bet that you've never been in terminal freefall below 1500 feet.

    Trust me, there are visual differences.

    Magical? That's up to the observer.

     

    I have been at terminal velocity at 1500 feet.

    It scared me when I  lost sight of the horizon in my peripheral vision.

    It scared me before I did the math. After doing the math, I realized that I was dangerously close to impact. Much closer than if I had done a hop-and-pop or BASE jump from 1500 feet.


  19. Modern RSLs and MARDs are ALMOST idiot-proof. You are more likely to dis-lodge the RSL/MARD by slamming your rig around on the ground or slamming a door frame on exit. If you are habitually that rough on your gear, it will not last very long.

    For illustration: both Cypres and BOC became fashionable introduced about the same time during the early 1990s. It was briefly fashionable to stand a rig on its yoke to stuff the pilot-chute into the BOC. After a few broken Cypres cables, that packing method fad soon faded.

    Container manufacturers responded by shifting Cypres control heads from the right mud-flap to deeper in the reserve container where they were better protected. Other manufacturers of electronic AADs learned from Cypres' problems and installed thicker, more durable cables.


  20. 18 hours ago, jimjumper said:

    You didn't mention time limits on that work flow. Most of the turbine places work at 40-50 minute turns. That included everything you noted in the workflow plus downloading video, presenting certificates, and stowing brakes and stretching the canopy for packing. Sometimes it isn't the work, it's the pace. I know a lot of very experienced TI's that quit when the pace became unsustainable.

    Sometimes manifest pushes TIs too fast.

    If pushed too fast, TIs start skipping steps and making mistakes.

    I draw the line at running to meet the plane.

    My fastest walking pace is about the same as most people's slow-jog, and I can keep up that pace all day long. If I have to run to meet a plane, that means that manifest did not think far enough ahead.