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onetrack

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onetrack last won the day on January 28

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  1. The Ukrainians are using an Antonov AN-28 STOL twin turboprop, equipped with an M134 Minigun, and operated by civilians, to shoot down Russian drones. The M134 Minigun is a six-rotating-barrels machine gun that pumps out between 2000 to 6000 rounds a minute of standard NATO 7.62 x 51mm rounds. They effectively fill the air with lead, and when they hit a drone, they blast it to pieces. The AN-28 crew is claiming to have shot down nearly 150 Russian Shahed drones since starting operations. Now the Russians are equipping some of their drones with air-to-air missiles, to try and knock out Ukrainian air defence efforts. This is in addition to the drone already carrying a warhead that detonates on impact. https://www.twz.com/air/watch-ukraines-minigun-firing-drone-hunting-turboprop-in-action
  2. Many tannins are a good preservative. We've got thousands of Qld Box trees for street trees in Perth, there's one right outside my house. Anytime I park my Hilux traytop under it, the floor stains purple blue from the Box tree tannins - but it never rusts. Jacaranda tree tannins are quite corrosive, and the leaves built up everywhere.
  3. Apparently one major Chinese investor is dealing in huge amounts of gold futures, and has made a $3B fortune from doing so - that's enough to skew the market badly. Now he's shorting silver and planning on making another $3B. There's a real danger he'll do a Hunt Bros on the precious metals market. If you make $3B out of wheeling and dealing in precious metals futures, a lot of other people must have lost a lot of money? I'm reminded of the Metallgesellschaft oil futures fiasco in 1993. The company lost $1.3B on betting on oil futures - they should've kept their nose out of futures and stuck with the business they knew. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/china-trader-made-3-billion-054343617.html
  4. The big problem is, that Govt assets are nearly always sold at below market prices to "mates in the know", who promptly turn them over for a massive profit. And the Govt then takes the money they got from the assets and pisses it up against the wall on vastly overpriced, often under-utilised, and generally vastly problematic, Defence purchases. Just look at the exorbitant and ever-increasing pricing of the MD F-35 fighter as an example. I employed a young Scottish bloke many years ago, who had worked for Marconi in the U.K. He said the rip-off profits staggered him when he sighted the figures. Marconi were supplying radar and navigation aids to the IAF in the late '60's, and he said, typically, a small electrical component that cost Marconi something like £14, was billed out to the IAF at a figure around £1,000!
  5. Isn't the lane on the right, the pit lane? In F1 racing, where the speeds are terrific, they need to have a pit lane to allow separation of the cars entering and leaving the pits, due to the huge variation in the race car speeds, and the much lower speeds of the cars entering and leaving the pits. There have been many serious prangs in past decades due to collisions between cars racing past the pits at extreme speeds, and the cars entering or leaving the pits.
  6. The military buildings in question are all heritage listed, and hold enormous emotional attachment for many, due to their links to all major wars. Plus, their architecture and construction quality is excellent, as it is with all military buildings.
  7. onetrack

    Funny videos

    This is when you can't afford a real truck ....... (turn your sound up) https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1USLyWCMJ8/
  8. Are talking Victoria Barracks in Melbourne, or Victoria Barracks in Sydney? I was under the impression it was the Victoria Barracks in Sydney that is up for grabs.
  9. For the hotrodders, Ed Iskenderian, of the "Isky Racing Cams" fame, passed away yesterday at the tremendous old age of 104. He was a real character, like so many hot-rodders. https://carbuzz.com/remembering-edward-isky-iskenderian/
  10. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    Add "ST" after the second letter in each word and you get "JUSTICE", "PESTERING", and "JESTER".
  11. It was well known amongst "ordinary" Australian soldiers, that the SAS were called "super-grunts", and they considered all other ordinary soldiers, as far below them in skills. Just the psychological effects of SAS training were severe, and huge numbers of SAS applicants fell out of the SAS courses, because they failed to make the grade. Their training is brutal.
  12. Be assured, that helmet will protect you extensively on a rat bike - from spears and lances, of course. 😄
  13. He's going to wear his rat bike helmet - fitted with a German spike, of course.
  14. I could see this coming years ago, as Defence started on its major shopping list. I notice that the massive chunk of SAS land on the W.A. coast at Swanbourne (Campbell Barracks) isn't mentioned. There's 236Ha of pristine, mega-mega dollar, ocean-front land there, that at current values would bring in mega-billions if sold off. I see where our local nefarious resident land developer, and Politician suck-hole, is licking his lips over the sale of Campbell Barracks, saying it "could bring in $1.3B for the Govt" if sold. Pigs bum it's worth $1.3B, more like $13B - but I'll wager he'll exert pressure on the Govt to sell it to him for $1.3B. This is the value of that land in that region. A 1925 house on 1181 sq m of land in the area, sold last Oct for $12.8M. In the aerial view of the house and golf course, you can see the Campbell Barracks land in the distance. https://www.domain.com.au/property-profile/11-pearse-street-cottesloe-wa-6011
  15. You can tell the image isn't real, because the road warning sign doesn't show a kangaroo, emu or camel. In fact, it looks like a pterodactyl warning sign.
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