Bullethead
JAGDSTAFFEL 11- 
                
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Everything posted by Bullethead
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				What are these hanging from pontoons?
Bullethead replied to Hauksbee's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Maybe my experience with seaplanes in Lousy Anna has biased my opinion, but the waters hereabouts are always full of floating driftwood, basking alligators, floats for trot lines and crayfish traps, Cajuns passed out drunk in pirogues, etc., plus there are always tree stumps just below the surface. These things are very hard on pontoons (to the point that seaplanes never stop on the water because they're leaking so badly), so I'd imagine they'd just tear hydrofoils right off. Plus, of course, once in the air, the hydrofoils add a lot of drag compared to a stepped pontoon. Of course it's fair. If there weren't engineering failures and disasters, we'd never learn what works and what doesn't :). - 
	
	
				What are these hanging from pontoons?
Bullethead replied to Hauksbee's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
The minesweeping thing Olham mentioned is usually called (at least in English-language publications) a "paravane", not a "hydrovane". In fact, I've never heard them called "hydrovanes" until this thread. Paravanes were (and still are) widely used in all navies on many types of ships, not just dedicated minesweepers. But anyway, now that I've looked at more info on this plane, I have to agree with Lou that those things on the floats are hydrofoil surfaces. Given that the pontoons don't have steps on their bottoms to break the suction, they must have needed the hydrofoils just to get the thing off the water. But given the complexity and apparent fragility of these particular hyrdofoils, I'm thinking they'd have done better to use steps. - 
	Sounds like a lot of fun. I hope you have a good and safe trip. Maybe you can meet up with some of our German members along the way?
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				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
HD is quite correct. One of my major interests is American prehistory; I learn all I can about how the Indians lived (which changed a lot over time) and I practice a lot of their technologies myself. From what I've learned so far, it appears that my bailiwick has almost always been a poverty-stricken, lightly populated backwater between more prosperous areas, even in Indian times. But that's another story. To return to Isaac, I spent most of yesterday driving all over the parish. I visited all our fire stations to assess their damage, inventory their remaining supplies, and collect the accumulated garbage. In the process, I also assessed damage to houses, businesses, and infrastructure. The general impression gained was the same as previously reported: everybody inconvenienced and a very few folks screwed over. The main problem here now is that the whole supply chain feeding this area got disrupted so there are some temporary shortages of things like milk, bread, and gasoline, but those aren't expected to last very long. Later in the day, however, I performed what I consider my most useful service ever as a fireman. We have a nuclear power plant here. It survived the storm perfectly intact and there are absolutely no fears for it or of any radiological issue. However, it somehow lost prime to its big pumps that suck cooling water out of the Mississippi River. I don't know if this was due to the storm or just bad luck, but without those pumps running they'd have had to shut the plant down for a while. The plant would have been OK but thousands of homes and businesses would have lost electricity, which is the last thing we need around here with so many power lines already down from the storm. So I took a firetruck down there and primed the pumps with the water it carried. It was a simple job easily accomplished at no risk to myself (the hardest part was washing the truck after the 6-mile round trip on a very muddy road) but it did a lot of good. And that made me feel a lot better about doing little more than lie in a hammock for most of the storm :). I suppose this was kharma. Earlier in the day, I'd gone to one of our stations that still didn't have shore power but its generator wasn't running. Nobody was still living at the station but the station always needs power to keep various batteries charged and the air brakes of the trucks topped up. So I called the guy in charge of the generators and learned that he'd shut it down because it was low on fuel. When I told him it had been refueled, he told me to start it up. And the generator ran for a couple of minutes and blew its engine.... - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Where I live, the following pieces of gear are required for daily survival: a minimum of an 18" chainsaw, a generator, a 4WD pickup with a winch, a tractor (with a minimum of bush hog and box scraper attachments), a 16' flatbed trailer, 20' of log chain with a come-along, several tow straps, and a shotgun. It's nice to have a blue wrench, a welding machine, a chain fall or overhead crane, a backhoe/frontend loader tractor, a bulldozer, and a side-by-side ATV (with a winch), although you can get by with renting these things from your friends and neighbors for a few beers. - 
	
	
				What are these hanging from pontoons?
Bullethead replied to Hauksbee's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Definitely another candidate for the Museum of Diseased Imaginings......... - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
The cat is a he, named Hurricane Gustav or "Gus" for short, because he was blown into my yard as a starving little kitten by that storm 4 years ago this coming Saturday. He has his own door so can go in and out at will and often brings his prey inside. But he's very considerate and conscientious about it. If he's hungry, naturally he wants to eat inside where it's cool, especially because he's gotten all hot and sweaty catching the thing. He brings his meals in dead and eats them in my shower so I can just hose the blood down the drain. But he also sometimes feels sorry for the dog. The dog is a poor but enthusiastic hunter, knowing nothing of stealth but always charging in full speed. Very occasinally she catches something but usually ends up barking up a tree while the squirrel laughs at her from above and showers her with bark chips and excrement. So the cat will bring in live squirrels and drop them inside for the dog to chase around. With no trees to climb, the dog usually succeeds in catching the squirrel eventually, although often my house gets trashed in the process - 
	Damn, that bottle was launched just before the WW1 dominos started falling. Reminds of somewhat of Shackleton, who was shocked to learn that WW1 was still going on when he finally got back to civilization. And there's still about 1400 of them out there, so there's a good chance of breaking this record again :). I wonder how much 6d from 1914 is worth today?
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				What are these hanging from pontoons?
Bullethead replied to Hauksbee's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Well, my guess is that those things are a VERY BAD IDEA. They look like they're attached on top of the floats and free to swing along their sides, so I'd expect them to bash into the floats and poke holes in them. I note that such attachments did not become standard on other, later seaplanes so I figure Darwinism did for them ;). As to what their purpose is, I suspect they're bumpers or fenders, intended to hang down between the floats and the dock or a boat tied along side, to keep the floats from scraping on these objects. You know, the same job that tugboats often use old tires for today. And it could be that they were supposed to have been removed before flight, but that this picture is so old that preflight checks and red streamers saying "REMOVE BEFORE FLIGHT" hadn't been invented yet. Perhaps this picture shows one of the reasons such things were invented later :). What I'm curious about, however, is what is powering this plane. It appears to be a pusher but the tail booms seem too close together for a prop to be between them, and I don't see any engines out on the wings, nor under or above the fuselage. So what's moving the plane? Could it be that this is a faked photo? I mean, "photoshopping" was invented in the 1800s, only slightly after photography itself. - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
That collie's a she, same dog I've posted pics of before. She was looking at the fallen limbs to see if any were suitable for building sheep pens ;). But you didn't notice my cat. Look about 1 dog's length behind the dog and up to the brick walkway. Now you see why so many cats are black with white feet. The line between black and white on his legs lines up well with the irregular line between dark bushes and lighter grass. That way he can ambush critters even out in the middle of the yard, as long as he has a bush behind him. - 
	
	
				Anemometers and Airspeed Indicators
Bullethead replied to Pips's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Yes, the Gypsey Moth's version was a simplified version of the Austrian Teddybär type ;) - 
	
	
				OT - Just checking in but not fit for duty.
Bullethead replied to tranquillo's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Welcome back! Drinks all around! :cheers: - 
	
	
				DFW KuK Hex Camo Finished
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
The appearance of the camo colors varies with in-game lighting. In the top view pic, I maneuvered the plane so that when banked, the upper surfaces were perpendicular to the sunlight angle so the colors look brighter than they do most times. Compare to the fuselage colors in the bottom view where the bottom of the wings are facing the sun and the fuselage sizes are nearly edge-on to it. There's also plenty of dirt on the plane. You can see the mud splashed on the lower sides of the wings, plus some grime on the lower wing surfaces. The top surfaces have the same grime but you can't see it so much when the light is hitting it squarely. The museum with the real Knoller is somewhere in the Czech Republic. Just Google up "Knoller C.II 119.15" and you'll find it. - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
The speakers of the 1MC (ship's PA system) crackle to life. Then a bosun's pipe tweets a a voice says "Now hear this, now hear this! Secure from general quarters, resume normal underway watches. And sweepers, time to man your brooms." Well, it's now 1530 my time on Thursday. I've been back home since 1200, I've been drinking since 1300, my lights here have been back on since 1400, and I've now done everything around the house that can't wait a few days. So I'm fresh out of the shower and have just now sat down for the 1st all day, in front of my desktop with a bottle of bourbon and in the sweet embrace of central air conditioning, for the express purpose of bringing you all up to date. NOTE: as part of resuming normal operations, I have to go back to work tomorrow :). Anyway, my last post was yesterday about 1230. The storm kept slowing down so the time for the bad stuff to hit my area got moved back to about midnight last night. But we scared it off. Just an RCH before it reached us from the SE, the storm took a very slight jog north before resuming its NW path. I guess Isaac realized how preparted we were here and didn't want to mess with us :). By that time, the storm had piddled around over land so long that its circle had been divided diagonally from NW to SE. The NE half was still all nasty but the SW half had disappeared from radar, so was only wind, and that rather slower than in the other half. If the storm had kept on its path, we'd have been just barely on the bad side of the divide and would have eaten the whole diameter of the storm and the worst it had to offer. But that last-second jog to the north put us on the clear side of the divide by about 5 miles, so all we got was sustained 20-30 knot winds with gusts of about 50 and hardly any rain. As a result, I wasn't called out all night and slept right through it. By the time I woke up at 0600 this morning, the wind had backed around from NE to SW and died way down and it was only drizzling. At dawn, we sent out recon groups along all the roads, noted the problems, divided up the work up amongst all the teams we had ready (all our fire stations, sheriff deputies and jail inmates, and the parish and state road crews), and off we went. Lots of chainsaw and bulldozer work. We got done with that by about 1030 (which shows how little there really was here), declared the war over, and then back to the fire station to sweep and mop out all the muddy boot prints. And so on home. All in all, we got off VERY much lighter than expected. 5" of rain at my house so far but it's still drizzling now and again and probably will for a few days. Looks like the lower half of Mississippi got the worst of it, and in fact is STILL getting it right now. Plus of course all the folks along the coast who got flooded out. The whole area is still at risk of tornados for the next few days so we're not quite out of the woods yet, but we're much better off than we had any right to be and my power is back on, so I'm counting my blessings and hoping the Dark Gods haven't noticed. I've attached a pic of what my yard looks like right now. Lots of rake work but that can wait until the weekend. AFAIK, we only had 2 trees fall on houses, all roads are open and most folks hereabouts now have electricity again. - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
1200 Wednesday my time. @ my station in hammock waiting for calls. Using smart phone. Storm hardly moving so time of bad stuff arriving keeps getting later and duratiolightn longer. Righandt now 25-30 knots gusts 45. Medium rain. Hell supposed to start1900 Not much business so far so catnapping. Thanks for good wishes - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
I'm now at the fire station doing my HQ job. I'm the Logistics Chief, which means I'm the head gofer. I get stuff we need and get it to where it's needed. As to the storm, they say it finally made it to hurricane force. The track is still right over my head or a few miles to either side, but really that won't matter enough to worry about. We're getting the center slice either way. However, the fun hasn't yet started here. The outer edges of the cloud bands went over about an hour ago so now we're overcast and we've got a nice, cool breeze that's a bit gusty at times, but not yet a drop of rain. It's great kite-flying weather right now. The storm's forward progress is slowing down so we don't expect things to get rough here until about supper time. Updates to follow as time permits ;) - 
	
	
				Austrian Semi-Random Hex Camo (Work in Progress)
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
The important question is, were the 2 fingers your dad used on 1 or 2 hands? :). I'm glad nobody got hurt. With 1 week to go, the issue wasn't in doubt so there was nothing worth dying for on either side. - 
	
	
				OT - Batten Hatches, Rig for Heavy Weather
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Thanks for the concern, everybody. And I'm willing to give away all but 1-2" of the 12-18" of rain we expect in my gridsquare. Tonight is my last that might be uninterrupted until the weekend. Isaac is predicted right now to go either directly overhead (bad), slightly to the west (worse), or slightly to the east (a bit better). And because the storm is so wide and so slow, we're expecting the main event to last about 36-48 hours in my gridsquare, where most storms blow over in 6-8. Thus, while the sustained winds will probably be "only" 40-60 knots with gust of about 80 knots, that will be happening all that time, along with all the rain, so trees will be falling by the hundred and quite a few will land on power lines. So all in all, I expect the bottom line to approach that of Hurricane Gustav, a much stronger storm but with much less duration. Anyway, I'll use my fire department internet when I have the chance but I don't expect to have any at home (or electricity) for a couple weeks. Here's to being proved wrong - 
	Just a head's up that I might be off the air for a week or 2 starting about Tuesday or Wednesday of this week. There's a chance what's now Tropical Storm Isaac will be Category 3 Hurricane Isaac by then and right on top of me. That's what Gustav did in '08 and I was without electricity for 2 weeks. But OTOH, Isaac could still miss or just sideswipe me, although the odds of a clean miss seem to have evaporated since yesterday. In any case, I figure I'll be quite busy this week with the fire department.
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				Question about von Richthofen's JG1
Bullethead replied to Olham's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
I thought the Germans actually built a direct copy of the Nieuport, called the Siemens-Schukert D.I. Because they didn't ask permission or pay licensing fees, these were "pirated" copies in today's parlance :). - 
	
	
				Screen Shots, Videos, Media, OFF Posters
Bullethead replied to MK2's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
And here I'd been thinking it was the logo of Johnny Walker :). - 
	
	
				Question about von Richthofen's JG1
Bullethead replied to Olham's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Yup, and the vast bulk of WW1 tanks used by the Germans were captured from the Brits. That's the main reason for the white-red-white identification stripes on Brit tanks later in the war. - 
	
	
				WOFF term "two weeks" at last understood!
Bullethead replied to RAF_Louvert's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Well, my internet connection is at best unreliable, so I figured it was a problem on my end. BTW, PLEASE have a DVD version of WOFF. Trying to download something that big is out of the question for me, both in the time it would require and because it would totally blow my download limit. - 
	
	
				DFW KuK Hex Camo Finished
Bullethead replied to Bullethead's topic in WOFF UE/PE - General Discussion
Thanks, folks. Lou, you're right about the mind-numbing part. It wasn't technically difficult, just copying and pasting hexes of the appropriate color. But there were so many of them, and each one had to be matched to its neighbors at specific pixels or there'd be bad joints between hexes and the error would propogate through the rest of the pattern. So I had to zoom in very close each time, then zoom out, copy the next hex, move it into rough position, and zoom in again. Over and over. I think I wore out the wheel of my mouse :). - 
	Fair winds and following seas
 
