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Posts Tagged American

U.S. drone captured in Iran

The USAF RQ-170 Sentinel – ISR (Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance) + Ground-attack stealth drone – recently captured in Iran should remain indefinitely according to the latest news:

“No one returns the symbol of aggression to the party that sought secret and vital intelligence related to the national security of a country,” Iranian General Hossein Salami said.

Nothing more was revealed but the U.S. Air Force admitted that the UAV would have had a malfunction on its course to Iran after leaving Afghanistan. The pictures of the fuselage cannot show evidence of shooting down, and nothing proves what the Iranian officials suggested about EW (Electronic Warfare) means which might have brought down the drone to the ground perhaps by jamming.

To be continued…

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PEARL HARBOR ATTACK & WWII

The Pearl Harbor Attack(called Hawaii Operation or Operation AI by the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters – Operation Z in planning – and the Battle of Pearl Harbor) happened on Sunday December 7, 1941 ie 70 years ago. Here is a video of remembrance of the infamous day which dragged the United States of America into World War II:

 

Pearl Harbor: A Landmark in History, part 5 from Pacific Historic Parks on Vimeo.

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SAAB’s RAPID 3D MAPPING for Military Aircraft

RAPID 3D MAPPING is a superior awareness system able to generate three dimensional maps. It processes pictures shot by digital and thermal sensors added to live georeferenced data onboard aircraft; drones; and helicopters.

It was chosen by the SDMA – Swedish Defence Materiel Administration – in order to provide 3D imagery to Gripen simulators last year.

The images can be compared several hours apart to establish whether threats can be considered in the latest analysis. As you can see in this video, the result looks quite accurate and useful for network centric warfare (NCW) purposes:

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US military aircraft supposedly made up of Chinese knockoff!

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BOEING 767 BELLY-LANDING in Warsaw

November 1, 2011 – A commercial aircraft performed an emergency landing onto Frederic Chopin International Airport two hours ago. The LOT Polish Airlines B-767 that had taken off from Newark had then been circling over Poland’s capital for an hour as a landing gear failure had been reported. The belly-landing unfolded perfectly, and the firefighters responded immediately. No casualties have been reported among the crew members and the 230 passengers.

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Machine Guns – How they work

 

 

TRANSCRIPT of this video from 00′:28″ – hereafter:

 

At its core, a machine gun is a gun. Its job is to shoot a bullet.

A bullet is a slug of metal – usually either steel or lead. The bullet is packaged in a metal casing, and the casing is filled with gunpowder that is going to explode and fire the bullet out of the gun. The bullet casing also contains a primer – a small charge that explodes when you hit it. When this small charge explodes, it lights the main charge of gunpowder.

Most machine guns are rifles with long-grooved barrels. The barrel gets the bullet heading in the right direction, and the grooves spin the bullet so that it flies straight. At one end into the barrel is a mechanism called the firing pin. When you pull the trigger, the firing pin hits the primer, and makes the bullet fire. The bullet comes screaming out of the barrel at roughly the speed of sound.

The machine-part of the machine gun is the bullet-powered engine. When the shell fires, the bullet goes one way, and the shell casing goes the other. It is a perfect example of equal and opposite reaction. The energy of that shell casing can be harnessed to drive a spring-operated bolt.

The bolt does three things. As the bullet fires and starts driving the bolt back, the bolt can extract the casing and eject it from the gun. Then, as the bolt starts moving forward again, it can ram a bullet into the barrel, and then hit the bullet with the firing pin. The newly exploding bullet starts a cycle all over again.

A typical machine gun can shoot anywhere from one hundred to six hundred rounds per minute depending on the size of the gun and the size of the bullet.

So, that’s how machine guns work.

 

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