DDE Posted August 21, 2022 Share Posted August 21, 2022 "You thought it was someone else, but it was me, Firefly!" Wasn't really used, according to Shushpanzer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StrandedonEarth Posted August 21, 2022 Share Posted August 21, 2022 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lisias Posted August 22, 2022 Author Share Posted August 22, 2022 Locking up the joint to prevent a jacknife effect is something very kerbal, indeed! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lisias Posted August 23, 2022 Author Share Posted August 23, 2022 (edited) Using kitchen salt and candies as rocket fuel! _ "Dr Khermann, we run out of LFO!!!" _ "Keine Probleme bekannt, call the Chief in the kitchen..." In the background, Jeb yells "Get your greasy hands out of my snacks!!!!" Edited August 23, 2022 by Lisias I forgot the "bekannt" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted August 23, 2022 Share Posted August 23, 2022 Just a milk jug, don't look for similarities. Spoiler Just a glass bottle. Spoiler Well, I got tired finding such bottle, but it just asks to exist. Spoiler Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted August 24, 2022 Share Posted August 24, 2022 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockspeiser_LDA-01 Assembling the wing and canards out of the same board segments, with one actually carried internally as a spare. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted August 24, 2022 Share Posted August 24, 2022 The armadillo is embarrassed by you taking samples at the KSC. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted August 24, 2022 Share Posted August 24, 2022 On 8/21/2022 at 5:25 PM, DDE said: "You thought it was someone else, but it was me, Firefly!" Wasn't really used, according to Shushpanzer. So this was to add an fake barrel assembly on the rear of an turret to confuse the enemy or at least give people something to laugh at. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 2, 2022 Share Posted September 2, 2022 When you have KIS + IR + KF https://cs14.pikabu.ru/video/2022/09/02/166208656123395474_544x960.webm @Ben J. Kerman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 3, 2022 Share Posted September 3, 2022 (edited) Spoiler Edited September 3, 2022 by kerbiloid Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lisias Posted September 7, 2022 Author Share Posted September 7, 2022 Going Full Kerbal on RealLife(tm): take out a v12 from a Lamborghini and build a motorcycle around it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 8, 2022 Share Posted September 8, 2022 And now ride veeery slowly, because the bike costs like a half of Lamborgini. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SunlitZelkova Posted September 8, 2022 Share Posted September 8, 2022 The SeaLand SL-7 is the world’s fastest cargo ship. They were high maintenance though, and thus unprofitable, so the US Navy bought them and they became the Algol class vehicle cargo ships. They’re still in a 96 hour notice reserve status today. But long before that in the early days of the SL-7’s development, a problem emerged. The cavitation was so bad it would create massive holes near the propeller blades. Land engineers were unable to solve the problem. The SeaLand naval architecture team was then approached by a group claiming to be commercial divers, who offered to free dive to the side and underneath an SL-7 as it went by at full speed and film the cavitation. They showed off a film of another ship taken underwater as evidence they could do it, so the SeaLand team accepted. They went out into a part of the Caribbean and well… I think my retelling would not do it justice. Here is the blurb from the description of the video- “S/L TRADE was routed to an area called ‘Brown’s Deep' in the Caribbean where they could get decent underwater visibility. Three divers went in the water with hand-held 16 mm cameras. The idea was to get one camera on each propeller from the side and one camera looking up at both propellers from underneath. S/L TRADE came roaring over the horizon at 33 knots and the divers submerged, taking up their positions and waiting until it was close enough to fire up the cameras. After the ship went roaring past the two ‘side’ divers surfaced but the ‘centerline’ diver was nowhere to be seen. After a couple panicked minutes they saw him surface waaaaay astern still being churned about in the wake. His dive mask was gone and the only thing left of his camera were the two handles from the waterproof housing. The guy, after submerging, had misjudged how much time he had to prepare and had narrowly missed being struck by the bulbous bow. He got rolled end over end grazing the keel for the entire ship length, narrowly missed being sucked into the two condenser sea scoops, and somehow managed to escape the propellers. [Emphasis added] After letting this poor guy catch his breath and take stock of what happened John starting asking him some very pointed questions about the wisdom of this procedure. It was at this point he gave up the fact that they were all amateur divers. None of them had ever done this sort of thing before. [Emphasis added] The test footage they had showed them was ‘borrowed’ from who knows where and they had basically conned SeaLand into giving them their first paying gig.“ @JoeSchmuckatelli @Gargamel Any divers care to comment? Here is the full description from the video, it’s a nice read. Spoiler This story comes courtesy of John Boyleston (KP ’61), the only deckie-turned-naval architect I’ve ever met. At age 26 he became the chief naval architect with SeaLand. His two supervisors, in the midst of a heated argument, up and quit, leaving him as the only engineer on staff. Within a year he was managing the SL-7 project. When the SL-7s entered service they suffered from severe cavitation. In a single round trip the cavitation would eat away at the propeller blade roots, gouging out enough metal for a diver to fit his arm in the crater. The temporary fix was to have the divers fill the craters with a two-part epoxy that could cure underwater, giving the cavitation some sacrificial material to eat away at. This went on for some time while the engineers on land tried to diagnose the problem. The model basin tried but failed to recreate the cavitation in their vacuum cavitation chamber. No one really knew what to do. It was about then that John and his boss, the late Warren Leback (’44), were approached by a team of commercial divers who said they could film full-scale propeller cavitation with high speed underwater cameras. “Full-scale’ as in… drive the ship at speed over the team as they free-dove underneath. Apparently, they had done this before because they gave John and Warren a reel of test footage demonstrating their capabilities. With no other alternatives John and Warren figured they had nothing to lose. S/L TRADE was routed to an area called ‘Brown’s Deep' in the Caribbean where they could get decent underwater visibility. Three divers went in the water with hand-held 16 mm cameras. The idea was to get one camera on each propeller from the side and one camera looking up at both propellers from underneath. S/L TRADE came roaring over the horizon at 33 knots and the divers submerged, taking up their positions and waiting until it was close enough to fire up the cameras. After the ship went roaring past the two ‘side’ divers surfaced but the ‘centerline’ diver was nowhere to be seen. After a couple panicked minutes they saw him surface waaaaay astern still being churned about in the wake. His dive mask was gone and the only thing left of his camera were the two handles from the waterproof housing. The guy, after submerging, had misjudged how much time he had to prepare and had narrowly missed being struck by the bulbous bow. He got rolled end over end grazing the keel for the entire ship length, narrowly missed being sucked into the two condenser sea scoops, and somehow managed to escape the propellers. After letting this poor guy catch his breath and take stock of what happened John starting asking him some very pointed questions about the wisdom of this procedure. It was at this point he gave up the fact that they were all amateur divers. None of them had ever done this sort of thing before. The test footage they had showed them was ‘borrowed’ from who knows where and they had basically conned SeaLand into giving them their first paying gig. This video was unearthed from John’s attic in 2010. We had it converted from 16 mm to digital format. It’s the only surviving relic of this saga. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoeSchmuckatelli Posted September 8, 2022 Share Posted September 8, 2022 @SunlitZelkova - that's Bonkers! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gargamel Posted September 8, 2022 Share Posted September 8, 2022 (edited) 4 hours ago, SunlitZelkova said: Any divers care to comment? The Diver in me has no comment. The paramedic in me says "Ohhh! Job Security!" They apparently got the footage though! Edited September 8, 2022 by Gargamel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted September 11, 2022 Share Posted September 11, 2022 OTD in 1996, the Bird of Prey made its first flight. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted September 13, 2022 Share Posted September 13, 2022 "We need to build a statue of a notable goalkeeper" * a few months later * Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted September 14, 2022 Share Posted September 14, 2022 (edited) A Kiev electric vehicle plant KTZ-1 trolleytruck that needed its crew capacity expanded by 1. Edited September 14, 2022 by DDE Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted September 14, 2022 Share Posted September 14, 2022 Back from before 1.0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Flatbed Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted September 15, 2022 Share Posted September 15, 2022 19 hours ago, DDE said: Back from before 1.0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Flatbed LOL, the weird thing about this is that tanks are not that large, yes they tend to be 3.5 meter wide who is the widest you can transport on railways. They are however heavy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 16, 2022 Share Posted September 16, 2022 Kickstarting autogyro Spoiler Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 16, 2022 Share Posted September 16, 2022 Flying tankette / attacker LT aka SAM-23 (the first of its name). Designed by the constructor of landing gliders A.S. Moskalyov in 1942. Spoiler The pilot is protected by 3 mm thick armor (4..5 mm at front). 2 x 20 mm (200..500 rounds each) + 2 x 7.62 (1 500 rnd each) + 4..6 RS-82 rocket (82 mm) or 400 kg of bombs. Main combat mode: run-flight at 4..5 m attitude at 150..180 km/h. The special foldable truss follows the ground landscape allowing the pilot to precisely keep the altitude. In same manner can covertly follow the roadways for sudden strikes. The truss can also destroy lightweight fortifications and wire fences. Mass empty/full = 534/1128 kg Span/length/height = 5.57 / 7.20 / 2.0 m Wing area = 7.75 m2. Engine = 1 x 100 hp (73.6 kW) Max speed 188 km/h Ceiling 1 200 m. Real flights are unknown, but was tested on ground. P.S. UC now, where did the Star Wars get those ground fliers from. Spoiler Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lisias Posted September 18, 2022 Author Share Posted September 18, 2022 The Zeppelin could be boarded by passengers by the Mooring Mast. I was not commonly used, tough. Can't imagine why! Of course, this didn't prevented Americans to try it that way! (in the end, the high winds prevented boarding the vessel on the Empire States) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lisias Posted September 20, 2022 Author Share Posted September 20, 2022 The Burning Man 2022. (we need a Burning Kerbal Festival around here!!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted September 20, 2022 Share Posted September 20, 2022 "Bugs, Mr Rico! Zillions of them!" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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