View allAll Photos Tagged ARM
I decided I'd embark on a set of photos showing off my scars but, looking at what was once the most noticeable one now, I realize that time really has erased them.
This one, for instance, is on my inner left arm, just above the elbow. I got it in 1991, when I was going through an incredibly tough time financially, and literally the only food I had in the house was a cheese and meats gift basket my landlady gave me for Xmas. I was having trouble opening the last of the cheese, and at this point I was starving, so I used a butter knife to try to cut it open. Big mistake - the knife slid off the cheese and cut into my arm. The wound was bad enough that it bled freely for an hour, and at one point I half-considered going to the ER to have it stitched up (I'd done that with another cut not long before - that one's coming up next), but I didn't.
As a result, there was for the longest time a livid scar on my arm - but now, as you can see, it can barely be seen, and by the time I'm dead, it'll most likely not even be an identifying mark on my corpse.
Damn, that was a cheery thought...
First of all, huge credit to StrIntFire for the blade.
You can work out how it works and all the background details if you want, I don't have time right now.
The top one is a brace mounted saber used similarly to an upside down Guard Shoto and a brace made out of Mandalorean Iron, which means it's resistance to lightsabers.
With a few minor conversions you can change this arm mounted blade into a handheld one, where you can activate the precision cutter on the opposite end.
this was done during a 30 minute supposed reading time in my english class, i liked the way this one faded, this isnt a great picture, btu i still liked the design. I've done many designs on my arm using sharpies
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. -- When engineers from the U.S. Army Research Laboratory brainstormed on how to improve Soldier lethality, the idea of a third arm seemed like something that might help.
Mechanical engineer Dan Baechle carefully planned out a device that doesn't need batteries, is lightweight and can evenly distribute the load of a heavy weapon.
"It can help stabilize the weapon and take the load off of their arms," he said. "It's made from composite materials to make it as light as possible, but also to ensure the range of motion that Soldiers need."
Read more... www.army.mil/article/206011
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The U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Command Sgt. Maj. Richard Jessup and 21st TSC Special Troop Battalion Command Sgt. Maj. Clifton Lewis at the U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern's Right Arm Night held Feb. 27 at the Irish Pub on Vogelweh Housing. Photo by Christine June, USAG Kaiserslatuern.
We were meant to be sailing up Tracy Arm fjord, but the previous day there had been a major ice calving at the Sawyer Glacier, at the end of the fjord, and this had resulted in significant amounts of ice, virtually blocking safe passage. So, instead, the Disney Wonder received permission (rarely granted for very large ships) to sail up Endicott Arm where would see the equally spectacular Dawes Glacier. As we had previously visited Tracy Arm, being able to see something new (and a rare opportunity at that) was pretty cool :-)
Arm droop is a common ailment in countries with hot climates.
One of the solutions to this terrible affliction is to buy a car with Air Conditioning.