Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Does anyone have any colour pics of the pickle barrel I'm building?
Safest place to be. (Sorry, Bill) RIPMake sure it's not 30,000 ft below a bomber with a Norden bombsight!
No fair! Gaming the spec! Oversize target!
That's because you misunderstood their contents. We're not talking fermented cucumbers here; those barrels are full of pickleswitches, without which the aircraft produced in the factory cannot release their ordnance. One little missing part can clog the production line for a month!I never grasped the strategic significance of pickle barrels
We had those at school, no one knew what they were for.Then there is Pickleball. A racquet sport that combines elements of badminton, tennis, and table tennis. Two, three, or four players use solid paddles made of wood or composite materials to hit a perforated polymer ball, similar to a wiffle ball, over a net. The sport shares features of other racquet sports, the dimensions and layout of a badminton court, and a net and rules similar to tennis, with a few modifications. Pickleball was invented in the mid 1960s as a children's backyard pastime but has become popular among adults as well.
Please tell me this wasn't invented by Field Marshal Dill...
Cheers,
Dana
Damn that autocorrect, anyway!typical supply chain snafu they asked for a sight to hit picklehaubses but got sights to hit pickle barrels
A late neighbor of mine was a B-24 pilot (Ploesti 2x), and he used to chuckle over that myth. He said that saying implied you could one-hand a Liberator in a tight box formation, which as far as he was concerned was a joke. He said especially if you were tail end Charlie, it was a two handed affair and you left the throttle jockeying to your copilot and flight engineer at your command. He said that (and plenty of "stick time") sharpened copilots up pretty quickly and improved them to the point they could become replacement aircraft commanders. Not the way it was taught in training command, where the skipper drove the bird and the copilot operated the gear and flaps, sat on his hands, and stood by for emergencies.B-24 pilots have massive left arms