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Posted on 08/07/2007 7:52:15 AM PDT by HairOfTheDog
He urged his friends to get North before the War, but the only one who really listened to him was six years old.
But she did listen ...
Oh well, I suppose this'll work...
No! Ticks me off, too!
Did you read the article at www.pendemonium.com? Have you tried the new turquoise?
You can run, but you can't hide ...!
1. You're invited to go hunt red deer on a British estate. What's your rifle of choice?
2. You're purchasing firepower for Islamo-fascist revolutionaries and have an unlimited credit line on some Saudi cash. Given some MOUT operations (against civil authorities), some rural patrols ("peacekeeping"), and field expedient ground systems in-country (SUVs).... what do you buy?
I wrote out one for one of my minor characters. His father gave him a knife to take with him to WWII, but his Lt was an unreasonable chap and decided to make an issue about the non-standard equipment. So they butted heads about it, but ultimately minor character used the knife to save his Lt's life in a little encounter with the Germans. Minor character gives the knife to a MC who in turn uses it in a tense-moment-to-be-outlined-later and adds another chapter to the story of the knife.
Good Morning Rose: The Railroad pen is a double ruling pen. The ruling pen had a hollow handle to allow the pen to swivel freely, it was used to drawing curvilinear lines, like contours on a map. The railroad pen would draw parallel lines of equal and or unequal width. It was trial and error, set the points, drop in some ink, draw a line, let it dry and then compare the width of the line to line guide to see if it was the correct width. You turned a little adjusting wheel to make it wider or narrower. The railroad pen had to ruling pens in a single handle, each one independently adjusted and only rarely were the same width the first time you tried. Practice made perfect or at least the ability to produce reasonably accurate maps or drawings in my case. Drafting and cartography were interesting and I did enjoy them up to a certain point. :-)
Morning Winmag, great gun ‘pron’ for this Saturday night. While the instructions seem clear enough, it isn’t till the close-ups you see the inherent ‘opportunities’ for mangled digits.
The tool you show would seem to be a need waiting to be full-filled by some enterprising machinist-gunsmith. I know I’d want one if I had that model of HK.
Needless to say, that’s a great looking rifle.
Thanks fer the thorough research and graphics bro... a challenging issue, tuh say the least...
love your stock...
Well, as long as we’re doing Nanowrimo research, here’s muh question:
I need a ~legitimate~ reason that someone with a high draft number would have been turned away in 1970. Don’t want it to be too debilitating, but something that would keep him out even though he wanted to go.
Morning LF: well, if you want something somewhat off the beaten path, you could go with something like 6.5 Mannlicher-Schoenauer (introduced around 1900); the .275 Rimless (Rigby) or .280 Flanged Nitro Express (Landcaster); The .275 would be for bolt action rifles and .280 would be for single and double rifles. These two latter were developed around 1907 and 1910.
Ooooh very good! I’ll put those in the estate collection. They’ll be perfect for the estate owner - he’s a “collector” of items with “stories.” My Nano is set in the near-future so I’m interested in rifles of more recent vintage for his sons to use.
Morning Corin - how about flat feet or being deaf in one ear?
I haven’t tried the new turquoise. And it’s always hard to tell how an ink really looks from an on-screen picture! I may pick up a bottle at some point, though.
For turquoisey colors, my current favorite is Waterman’s South Seas blue. There’s a lot of shading to it, and it flows nicely. It’s lovely!
Plantar wart or pilonidal cyst - painful but not too dibilitating. Embarassing for the character which is good for development.
asthma could do it, too.
Red deer shooting (if it's still legal in near-future England) is as much an upper-crust activity as fox hunting or polo (both extinct, or nearly so). If you're interested in good manners, you'll equip yourself like an English gentleman should, with classy hundred-year-old weapons like Osagebowman mentioned.
If you want to make obvious that you're a brash American, you'll bring along your own high-tech stainless steel Remington 700 in some high-tech caliber, with a high-tech Leupold scope on it. And wear some digital camouflage outfit, rather than traditional hunting kit.
The "brash American" firearm would be appropriate for the chracter I have in mind, even though he's not an American.
That's true, but the precious greenies, here and in England, would prefer that somebody teach the deer about using contraceptives, rather than killing them as vermin.
Even with unlimited money, I'd go with off-the-shelf soviet bloc stuff. First, they don't have the brains for anything more. Second, the world is awash with it, and it doesn't raise any red lights like finding western high-tech gear would.
As for vehicles, the white Toyota pickup truck is the world standard for terrorist mobility. You can also carry a mortar and crew in the back for dismounted use. Take off the bed, and mount a Russian quad 12.7mm antiaircraft gun on it.
And RPGs for everybody, even if they can't hit anything with them. Throw in a few Dragunov SVDs for those troops that can actually figure out how to use the sights on a weapon.
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