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On saturday 24th june we woke up, had breakfast and got ourselves ready. Then we marched to our target of the day: the OBA coal terminal of the Amsterdam harbour.
Code in monolaccato lucido bianco artico, elementi a giorno laccato opaco blu prugna.
CODE in gloss arctic white monolacquer with open elements in plum blue matt lacquer
Started making a programmable timer a few weeks back. The Arduino code at the moment is stupendously long and untidy.
The kit and its assembly:
This whif was a bit of a spontaneous use of a Hobby Boss La-7 kit, part of a kit lot, for which I lacked any good idea. Anyway, I always had an eye on kits for the more streamlined La-9/11s – and then the idea was born to convert the leftover La-7 into something that would come close to the later types.
Biggest surgery concerned the aerodynamic surface; everything was modified:
• Outer wings from a Matchbox P-51D
• Stabilizers from a Heller P-51D
• Fin tip from an Academy Fw 190A
Wings were cut just outboard of the landing gear wells, while the Mustang wings were cut at the 2nd machine gun. Depth fits surprisingly well, only the La-7’s trailing edge had to be adapted, but that only a small effort.
Another mod is the new, for-bladed propeller, scratched from the spares box, and I added some cockpit details and a pilot torso (the canopy was to remain closed). I also removed the original tunnel oil cooler and moved this device into the wings’ leading edges, for a cleaner fuselage.
For the same clean look I left away any ordnance. Actually, when all major parts were in place, I even considered to make a race aircraft (Reno Unlimited?) from the kit, since the Lavochkin looks really fast, but then I reverted to the military use option. A North Korean whif was still missing!
PAA-S WBB 30030 (PA016A, ex- BIS 7959 PA012A)
WBB Minerals 2-Axle Covered Sand Hopper
Blt. WH Davis, Langwith Junction, 1981-82 (BIS 7950-7970)
Peterborough West Yard, Cambridgeshire
April 24th, 2007
Notes: Originally TOPS coded PGA (PG018A)
On saturday 24th june we woke up, had breakfast and got ourselves ready. Then we marched to our target of the day: the OBA coal terminal of the Amsterdam harbour.
On saturday 24th june we woke up, had breakfast and got ourselves ready. Then we marched to our target of the day: the OBA coal terminal of the Amsterdam harbour.
"Codes & Clowns" was an exhibtion devoted to Claude Elwood Shannon (April 30, 1916 – February 24, 2001) who was an American mathematician and electronic engineer known as "the father of information theory" and cryptography.
credit: Otto Saxinger
On saturday 24th june we woke up, had breakfast and got ourselves ready. Then we marched to our target of the day: the OBA coal terminal of the Amsterdam harbour.
The United States dollar (sign: $; code: USD) is the unit of currency of the United States. The U.S. dollar is normally abbreviated as the dollar sign, $, or as USD or US$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies and from others that use the $ symbol. It is divided into 100 cents (200 half-cents prior to 1857).
The U.S. dollar is the currency most used in international transactions. Several countries use it as their official currency, and in many others it is the de facto currency.
With opening doors and windows that rolls up and down, complete with a very very detailed interior, this model is the best fire truck model I've ever seen. Code 3 at its finest.. The compartments can open too!!!! And the hoses feel like real hoses, all textured!!! Only thing missing are the light up LED's... But with all the features this model already has, it doesn't matter to me if there's no light up LED's..
Find out more @ www.code3.net/product/detail.asp?item=12988
Quote from Code 3 website on the 1/32 FDNY Squad 61
"A Tribute To American Firefighters
A True Labor of Love
It was tough to tell who was more proud - the Fire Department of New York (FDNY) or Seagrave - when a special new fire truck with the latest technology was dedicated and put into service by the FDNY last October 24, 2003 during a ceremony at the FDNY Training Academy on Randall's Island in the Bronx.
Following months of fund-raising efforts, Seagrave Fire Apparatus handed over the keys of an all-new Commander II rescue pumper that it and its employees both built and paid for, to firefighters of FDNY Squad 61.
Seagrave and its employees raised the money to build the pumper from numerous fund-raising events, bake sales, potluck dinners and supplier donations.
Together with the FDNY, Seagrave designed a new truck, adopting the latest technology in fire apparatus construction to put together the new standard in 'big city' fire apparatus.
More Detail Than Ever Before
We've replicated this labor of love in 1/32 scale with our latest addition to the Diamond Plate Series. As you can see from the photos, we've put our heart and soul into this fine piece as well.
Just like the actual apparatus, this replica pays tribute to the heroism of American firefighters. The beautifully recreated mural on the side of the truck, with the words "Never Forget" inscribed on it, speaks of our deep respect to all fallen firefighters.
Four opening cab doors reveal a highly detailed interior. Inside each of the opening compartments are the actual tools and equipment meticulously replicated. Squad 61 features realistic LED lights, real lenses, windows that roll up and down, a detailed bumper, and hoses that feel just like the real thing.
With over 520 individual parts (the most we have ever used in any model to-date) for incredible detail, we hope to have captured the spirit of the actual apparatus."
QR codes are a great way to put information right into the hands of the consumer. There are many great uses for QR codes. Ask a C2 rep how to integrate them into your campaign.
The track and music video were released on August 7, introducing Ladies Code fans to an upbeat and funky song with comical choreography. The five ladies code members each tried to steal a kiss of a gentleman in deep slumber, only to fail each time, despite being prepared for it by gargling and...
360kpop.info/videos-kpop-korean/ladies-code-members-fight...
A scan from my old Boy Scout Handbook from 1985. That I still have this page saved since then speaks to the depth of my interest in knighthood I suppose.
There are probably countless versions of the knighting ceremony, the simplest being a hard slap on the shoulder with the command "Be a knight".
John Boorman's "Excalibur" may have been fantastic and outlandish in many respects, but it's knighting ceremony was pretty standard: "In the name of God, Saint Michael, and Saint George, I make you a knight. Rise Sir ___"
The film "Dragonheart" touted a somewhat stodgy, idealized version called the Old Code: "A knight is sworn to valor, his heart knows only virtue, his blade defends the helpless, his might upholds the weak, his word speaks only truth, his wrath undoes the wicked."
Most recently Ridley Scott's "Kingdom of Heaven" delivers a well written version of the ceremony: "Be without fear in the face of your enemies. Be brave and upright, that God may love thee. Speak the truth always, even if it leads to your death. Safeguard the helpless and do no wrong; that is your oath. [Slap!] And that is so you remember it. Rise a knight."
Such virtues are mostly cast aside in popular culture nowadays. Most people view this stuff with doubt, dislike, and oddly enough, suspicion. Anyone who tries to behave this way clearly must have some ulterior motive, right?
I think Jeremy Irons sums up a realistic interpretation of an oath to be a good knight when he meets Orlando Bloom: "I pray God and Jerusalem that you can accomodate such a rarity as a perfect knight."