New Russki Helo
Moderators: Guru's, The Ministry
- Trev Clark
- The Ministry
- Posts: 2822
- Joined: 26 Jun 2004, 08:54
- Location: Runway 26 at RAF Tangmere....most Mondays!
New Russki Helo
http://secure.simmarket.com/product_inf ... ts_id=1910
This guys models are superb, but you normally have to click on 50 odd CBs before you can even get battery power! If they had an automated start (the co-pilot), I would be tempted, do not even think of using Ctl+E :huf:
This guys models are superb, but you normally have to click on 50 odd CBs before you can even get battery power! If they had an automated start (the co-pilot), I would be tempted, do not even think of using Ctl+E :huf:
ATB Trev
Even before I clicked, I rather guessed or hoped it would be that one.... detail is superb... interior is very interesting... mainly because its so spartan :shock: ! Do I take it from those screenshots than in Russian Helis the pilot sits on the left, same as a fixed wing aircraft but the opposite to western helis?
There's a Hoodlum at the Helicopter museum at Weston-super-Mare:
..and that's my Sam, looking for bits to nick...
As well as a Hind D there's a Queens flight Wessex as well...I'll sell the pics for a quid....
Derek
..and that's my Sam, looking for bits to nick...
As well as a Hind D there's a Queens flight Wessex as well...I'll sell the pics for a quid....
Derek
'My Auntie Mabel told me I'd make a great soldier, though I don't know how 30 years working in a biscuit factory had qualified her to make that judgement.....' Eddie Nugent
Airborne Signals
Airborne Signals
Glow in the dark cockpit instruments, probably painted with something nasty extracted from pitchblende!
Edit - and not just on Ruskies, also on Spits and plenty of old British and probably American types too. Still, we've done worse since, with d/u counterbalance weights on 747 classic and Tristar control surfaces!
Edit - and not just on Ruskies, also on Spits and plenty of old British and probably American types too. Still, we've done worse since, with d/u counterbalance weights on 747 classic and Tristar control surfaces!
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- Vulcan
- Posts: 422
- Joined: 15 Mar 2006, 10:54
- Location: EGPJ
Depleted uranium. Basically used because its even denser than lead (i.e. a small component will hass a very large mass). Although the fact that it is "depleted" means in theory it cant be used energy-providing purposes and (presumably) its already done a fair amount of decaying, its still not desparately safe and its probably on a par with Asbestos in terms of a material thats best left in the ground where it came from!
I guess the only thing that is denser is the guy who authorised using it in the first place?TobyVickers wrote:Depleted uranium. Basically used because its even denser than lead (i.e. a small component will hass a very large mass). Although the fact that it is "depleted" means in theory it cant be used energy-providing purposes and (presumably) its already done a fair amount of decaying, its still not desparately safe and its probably on a par with Asbestos in terms of a material thats best left in the ground where it came from!
AndyG
The risk from depleted uranium results from it getting into the body where it is toxic.
It is not the radioactivity since that has been partially extracted for use eleswhere and hence the levels have been reduced compared to the original material.
So where depleted uranium is used in ordnance, it is the release of dust that poses the risk. Equally a crash of a plane using depleted uranium could release particles - the chemical toxicity on the kidneys is going to kill you before the radioactivity.
It is not the radioactivity since that has been partially extracted for use eleswhere and hence the levels have been reduced compared to the original material.
So where depleted uranium is used in ordnance, it is the release of dust that poses the risk. Equally a crash of a plane using depleted uranium could release particles - the chemical toxicity on the kidneys is going to kill you before the radioactivity.