Posted on 11/29/2007 8:46:29 AM PST by charles m
Maybe you already have. See my post #40 above.
That’s scary.
I still want the flying car I was promised as a kid.
Oh, and I want it made in America by a US company.
Michael Frazier
While I agree with you - my friend says that the Chinese have been doing excellent work. Some of the parts they turn out are more accurate than the tolerances of Boeing parts made here.
His speciality is Quality Control....Boeing rides herd very closely on its suppliers to meet QC specs.
The "new world" is here....and I'm not sure I like it either!
At some point, there would be nothing left to sell. What then? If and when all our manufacturing AND R&D facilities go to China, what will we have left besides Wall Street paper pushers and lawyers? We’re currently floating on a certain sense of economic, cultural and perhaps even racial superiority with the belief that the Chinese will never catch up to us. What happens when they start innovating on our designs? What happens when their quality reaches to our level? Are we gambling everything on the hope that the Chinese can’t do it?
Fifteen years ago, the Chinese didn’t make cars, they made bicycles and auto rickshaws. Now they’re making full-size sedans. While their quality still pales compared to American and Japanese cars, I don’t think it will take long to reach our level. The technological jump from a bicycle to a car is far larger than the jump from a 1-star crash rating to 4-star crash rating. I bet in five to ten years, you’ll see Chinese cars that easily pass our crash tests. What then?
I know some of you will tell me to look at Japan and how they haven’t surpassed the US still. But Japan has a third of the population and a tenth of the landmass as the US. I say, the Japanese are doing pretty damn well given their conditions and where they were fifty years ago.
Iraqi Air Force Sensor Operators Keep Watch Over Iraq
Friday, 08 February 2008
Multi-National Security Transition Command Iraq
KIRKUK Iraqi Muslims making their annual pilgrimage to Mecca in December were being watched. Their every movement was being carefully scrutinized and recorded by unseen men. The watchers plotted prime ambush points that would be the most dangerous to the pilgrims and made sure to note and analyze them.
The watchers were Iraqs own Air Force keeping a vigilant watch over their fellow countrymen. Flying over a mile above their heads, the crowd probably didnt even notice the Cessna Caravan circling or the impact it had on their pilgrimage. Onboard the aircraft was an aircrew made up of pilots and most importantly, mission sensor operators.
Iraqi mission sensor operators are Iraqi Air Force officers who operate television and infrared cameras on the Cessna Caravan, an intelligence gathering aircraft used by the Iraqi Air Force.
I photograph the people, said Iraqi Air Force Capt. Ali, a mission sensor operator with the Iraqi Air Forces 3rd Squadron. We photograph them to protect them from missiles and other harm.
The sensor operators did well in protecting the pilgrims, as none of those participating in the Hajj this year were attacked.
Before, they had attacks, and some people were kidnapped and killed (during the Hajj), said Ali. This year we did our job well, and they were very safe. They werent hurt.
The video taken by the camera mounted below the aircraft known as the ball feeds the images directly to the sensor operators console aboard the Caravan. The operator then has the capability to zoom in for a closer look, record the material and give the intelligence gathered to higher headquarters, or even link with an Iraqi Army unit below them to give them a birds eye view of the area theyre operating in.
The Iraqi sensor operators have a keen eye for detail in their country, said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Justin Rice, an advisor with the 870th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron, which is attached to the Coalition Air Force Transition Team.
The Iraqi sensor operators experience from being in their home country allows them to quickly discard common gatherings and focus on more important areas, said Rice.
In order to put their experience to work, the sensor operators must first go through an extensive training program.
Before an Iraqi can even begin the training, he must have a college degree. The future operator is then sent to learn English, the official language of aviation, and a basic military course where they earn their commission.
After earning his commission, the officer heads to Kirkuk to begin ground school. In ground school, the students are taught subjects that include basic airmanship, how to read charts and how to work the equipment aboard the Caravan.
The ground school is taught by two Iraqi Air Force officers who are also trained sensor operators on the Caravan.
After completing approximately two weeks of ground school, the students move on to apply what theyve learned in the air.
A mix of Iraqi instructors and U.S. Airmen fly with the students to monitor their performance. After eight sorties, the Iraqi sensor operator is given a check-ride, which qualifies him as a mission sensor operator.
Im very happy to take the information they teach me to protect my country and protect the
people in my country, said Ali, a former MiG-21 pilot.Once their training is complete, the sensor operators begin flying sorties without an instructor supervising them.
Besides special missions such as monitoring the Hajj, the sensor operators regularly watch Iraqs oil pipeline, power lines and perform surveillance missions for the Iraqi Army.
The Iraqi sensor operators fill a gap that the Iraqi military has never before seen. They give the ability to gather intelligence and watch a target using real time video. The operators are well aware of this when they discuss the pride they have in their duties.
I like my job when I do it perfectly, said Ali. When asked if he does perform his job perfectly, he replied just one word.
Yes.
http://www.mnf-iraq.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=16904&Itemid=110
I think I’ll pass.
aircrafts are already painted with lead!!
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