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-   -   2020 New Random Pics (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=1065287)

WPOZZZ 11-29-2021 09:48 PM

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/1b/21...2d657cb6fc.jpg

GH85Carrera 11-30-2021 05:58 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638284282.jpg

I remember those days! ^^^

stevej37 11-30-2021 06:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Por_sha911 (Post 11532616)


I really enjoyed this video....
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638285086.jpg

GH85Carrera 11-30-2021 06:24 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638285842.JPG

Jim Horton 11-30-2021 08:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WPOZZZ (Post 11532808)

Thanks for the heads up, Frank!

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638293074.jpg

bkreigsr 11-30-2021 08:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Geronimo '74 (Post 11532795)
Found it!
Looking right at me :)

you guys are driving me crazy....
where is it?????

stevej37 11-30-2021 08:48 AM

^^^
tilt your head to the right somewhat and look for it's head/face....just below the snow.
It's looking right at the camera.

mattdavis11 11-30-2021 08:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bkreigsr (Post 11533194)
you guys are driving me crazy....
where is it?????

It's where you centered your view the whole time.


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638294877.jpg

Find the kitty.

bkreigsr 11-30-2021 08:59 AM

YES, YES.
what's that crazy pom-pom doing between the ears ?

GH85Carrera 11-30-2021 11:53 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638305618.jpg

JackDidley 11-30-2021 02:46 PM

https://scontent.fyyc7-1.fna.fbcdn.n...13&oe=61AACCDD

masraum 11-30-2021 03:26 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638318109.jpg
Quote:

Robert McGee, one of the few people in American frontier history who got scalped and survived to tell the story (1864).

Photographer E.E. Henry took this rare photograph of Robert McGee displaying his scalping scars.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638318189.jpg
Potatoes


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638318230.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638318288.jpg

masraum 11-30-2021 04:19 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638321585.jpg
Captured Japanese mini-submarine in the Aleutian Islands, 1943 and 2021

Baz 11-30-2021 05:13 PM

Brooks Street, Laguna Beach, 1962

https://scontent.ftpa1-1.fna.fbcdn.n...a5&oe=61AC1E55

Baz 11-30-2021 05:17 PM

https://scontent.ftpa1-2.fna.fbcdn.n...fb&oe=61AC3CDF

asphaltgambler 12-01-2021 07:02 AM

What's the story here? why is the building and train tracks all fubared?


Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 11533726)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638321585.jpg
Captured Japanese mini-submarine in the Aleutian Islands, 1943 and 2021


masraum 12-01-2021 07:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asphaltgambler (Post 11534104)
What's the story here? why is the building and train tracks all fubared?

I didn't know anything other than what I posted. My dad was stationed on one of the Aleutian islands in the mid 70s.

I did a quick search and found the following which I find super interesting.

https://news.uaf.edu/japans-torpedo-like-submarine-rusts-alaska-island/

Quote:

On a damp island far out in the Aleutian chain, a secret weapon of Japan’s World War II Navy sinks into the sod. A Type-A midget submarine the shape of a killer whale was one of six the Japanese carried to Kiska Island in 1942.

Debra Corbett, an archaeologist who spent five weeks on Kiska last year, has imagined the plight of elite Japanese seamen assigned to operate the subs. Two men squeezed into the ship, which historians compared to torpedoes that could fire smaller torpedoes at ships from point-blank range.

“I don’t know if you’re claustrophobic, but I couldn’t imagine a worse job,” Corbett said.

Corbett and graduate student Richard Galloway have highlighted the Kiska midget sub on their blog for the Aleutian Island Research Group, a collection of scientists who share ideas about a unique place on Earth. Corbett, now operating a consulting business, retired in 2013 from her position as archaeologist with the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, the keepers of the Aleutians based in Homer.

While looking for prehistoric sites on Kiska, of which there are many, archaeologists bump into reminders of the Japanese presence on Kiska during World War II. The 78-foot submarine lies in the long grass off Kiska Harbor. It rests at the site of a base complete with rails to move the subs into and out of the ocean and a few sheds to shelter them.

The sub is like an unprotected museum piece into which infrequent visitors can wedge themselves amid the shards of rusted metal. They can imagine what it must have been like to be the pilot or navigator, only one of whom was able to stand in the sub at any moment.

“This was not the suicide sub, but it was not known for a high survivability for the occupants, either,” Galloway said. “The Japanese were more willing to give their life for the sake of the emperor than most U.S. troops were. This tiny sub is a good symbol of that.”

Kiska seems an odd place to deploy the subs, which ran on battery power. Their range was 90 miles at six knots, and the subs could dive to 100 feet. The crew could not recharge the batteries at sea and depended on being recovered by another ship. The Japanese used several of the midget subs during the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Japanese leaders wanted to deploy six of them at Midway Atoll, but after defeat there they diverted the subs to Kiska in July 1942.

Though the Japanese were only at Kiska 14 months before evacuating under cover of fog, the presence of the sub base, an underground hospital and big hillside guns show their long-term plans.

“Most people think Japanese occupation of the Aleutians was ephemeral,” Corbett said. “But their defenses on Kiska were pretty formidable. They had anti-aircraft guns up and down the valleys. They had six Shinto shrines and a floatplane base. They had pretty much dug in there for the long haul.”

The World War II Japanese attacks and occupations in Alaska involved three places. The Japanese bombed Dutch Harbor on June 4, 1942. They landed and set up bases on Attu and Kiska two days later. American troops recaptured Attu in a bloody battle in May 1943.

American and Canadian forces then landed on Kiska in August 1943. Expecting heavy resistance, they found the Japanese had escaped the island before the invasion. Before they left under cover of thick Aleutian weather, Japanese troops disabled the midget submarines with explosives.

Americans who then occupied Kiska cut up one of the subs for scrap metal. A few are perhaps at the bottom of Kiska harbor. Part of another lies belly-up on a Kiska beach.

The recognizable one remains in the grass of the old sub base on the unoccupied island, as far from northern Japan as it is from Anchorage. Few people have seen the brown-orange reminder of when war came to Alaska. A deadline for that experience is approaching.

“Although the metal items on Kiska are surviving far better than the same items in the South Pacific, (the sub) will likely rust into oblivion,” Galloway wrote.
https://www.tracesofwar.com/upload/7169170703172237.jpg

https://www.tracesofwar.com/upload/9429170703171049.jpg

https://i.pinimg.com/736x/bf/18/fe/b...rines-wwii.jpg

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 08:17 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638379015.jpg

rattlsnak 12-01-2021 08:23 AM

Here is some more info on Kiska and better pictures..

https://www.google.com/search?q=kiska+island&hl=en&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw =2560&bih=1226&ei=TK-nYbfjL5KuqtsPjau4-Ak&iflsig=ALs-wAMAAAAAYae9XEkMft2-6HqMZ6Hozz_eYZlwfeFb&oq=kiska&gs_lcp=CgNpbWcQARgAM gUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQg AEIAEMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDoICAAQg AQQsQM6CAgAELEDEIMBOgsIABCABBCxAxCDAVDAC1ioE2D4IGg BcAB4AIABYogB2QOSAQE1mAEAoAEBqgELZ3dzLXdpei1pbWewA QA&sclient=img

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 08:28 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638379679.JPG

asphaltgambler 12-01-2021 08:37 AM

That explains it! Thank-you!

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 09:06 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638382002.jpg

icemann427 12-01-2021 09:35 AM

Ever since the problems with the pelican parts website, instead of seeing the actual jpeg pictures posted, I just see the links. Are the rest of you experiencing this or is just me? If it is just me, is there something I need to do to my computer so I can actually see the posted pictures? Thank you!

masraum 12-01-2021 09:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11534317)

Captured mini-deathstar? Only one storm trooper inside. I believe the project was abandoned when they realized that they never hit anything.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D2ulibSXcAAxHK_.jpg

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 10:03 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638385335.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638385335.jpg

Evidently they are on a beach in New Zealand. Corrections washed down form the hillside. Some of them are partially hollow!

Steve Carlton 12-01-2021 10:04 AM

There's a chunk of the moon following a erratic orbit that's supposed to drift off in the next 300 years. I was just reading about it this morning.

https://time.com/6116644/earth-second-moon/

masraum 12-01-2021 10:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11534380)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638385335.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638385335.jpg

Evidently they are on a beach in New Zealand. Concretion washed down form the hillside. Some of them are partially hollow!

FIFY
https://www.desertusa.com/rocks-mine...332_130529.jpg

https://pacificnorthwestadventures.w...305618.jpg?559

https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-4yazmvdph...25281%2529.jpg

https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-FOoZLVKIZ...25281%2529.jpg

https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/c...anner-16-9.jpg

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 11:31 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638390696.jpg

I had to check the engine during a recent flight.

masraum 12-01-2021 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11534464)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638390696.jpg

I had to check the engine during a recent flight.

I just saw that pic a day or two ago. It was some sort of endurance flight, where they were provided fuel and food from other planes in flight, and checked things or performed maintenance while in flight. Crazy!

< edit to add more info and pics >
Not the site where I originally saw it, but...

https://maisonbisson.com/post/on-building-the-plane-while-flying-it/

https://maisonbisson.com/post/on-bui...-the-plane.jpg

https://maisonbisson.com/post/on-bui...-refueling.jpg

https://maisonbisson.com/post/on-bui...n-ole-miss.jpg

Quote:

The golden age of endurance flights

For a period of time after the introduction of any technology, people spend time exploring what they can do with it. Aircraft were no different. The desire to push boundaries led pilots to cross oceans, and eventually circumnavigate the globe by air. And after meeting those challenges, pilots continued to ask: how far, how high, how long?

Air-to-air refueling allowed pilots and their aircraft to out-fly the limits of their fuel capacity, and soon they started setting endurance records for refueled flights. On 7 January 1929, Carl Spatz and four other members of the Army Air Corps landed their Atlantic-Fokker C2A named “Question Mark” for the first time in about six days. One of the problems the crew had to overcome was communication. According to the Air Force Museum:

Due to the unreliability and extra weight of air-to-air radios, the Question Mark and refueling planes did not carry radios. The aircrews communicated with hand signals, flashlight signals, ground panels, notes dropped to the ground, and by messages written on blackboards carried in the planes.

The communication worked. Forty-two times the crew met in formation with support aircraft to take on fuel, oil, food, and water, and they were forced to land only because the engines failed after continuous operation for 150 hours, 40 minutes and 14 seconds.

To prevent foreshortened flights due to mechanical failures, pilots had to figure out how to do basic engine maintenance in the air. Reginald Robbins and James Kelly started their attempt at a record in May 1929 with the addition of an exterior catwalk that allowed Kelly to step outside the cockpit and make his way forward to the engine to grease the rocker arms in the pair’s Ryan B-1 monoplane. Despite these efforts, Robbins and Kelly were forced down shortly after seven days due to damage to the propeller caused by Kelly’s belt striking it.

The summer of 1929 saw three more records set, all in July, extending the duration to just over 17 days. At least one of those records copied the Robbins and Kelly catwalk, and by July 1930, brothers John and Kenneth Hunter were ready with their version of the catwalk for their attempt.

After three weeks in the air, the brothers were exhausted and too tired to deal with a spate of failures in the oil system:

First, a feed line broke, spurting oil all over the plane. Then the motor began to pump oil. At 6 o’clock the fliers dropped a note, saying that an oil gauge had broken, again draining the oil.

They landed on the Fourth of July and went into the record books with a duration of 23 days, one hour and 41 minutes.

It would take five more years before a new record would be set, this one by another pair of brothers, Fred and Al Key—The Flying Keys. Like many before them, the Keys used a catwalk as well:

They built a kind of scaffold on both sides of the engine so that Fred could clamber out of the cabin and perform maintenance, including servicing the crankcase with oil. After the catwalk was installed, the Curtiss Robin looked like it had collided with a jungle gym, but the idea worked.

The brothers copied the catwalk, but they introduced a lasting innovation: a fueling system that started the flow of fuel as soon as the hose was properly connected to the custom tank, and stopped it as soon as it was disconnected—even if the disconnect was a result of buffeting blowing the planes apart. The custom fueling system and check value was designed by local mechanic A.D. Hunter and has been essential to aerial refueling since1.

The pair had made two prior attempts at the record. The first was thwarted on the fifth day by a loose engine cylinder that couldn’t be repaired, even with the help of the catwalk. The second was forced down after seven days by stormy weather that made refueling too dangerous to attempt, and which they couldn’t fly above or around.

The brothers started their third attempt quietly, but national recognition started to build after their tenth day. Then 20 days into the flight, Al Key had to lance his gums to relieve swelling from an abscessed tooth. A dentist gave instructions over the radio. A few days after that, on the same day the pair surpassed the previous record, they discovered one of the tires had lost air pressure, but it was out of reach for repair and wouldn’t be needed until they attempted their landing anyway.

Twenty-five, maybe 26 days in—sources differ—the plane caught fire:

During a refueling, one of the metal oil cans came in contact with some exposed electrical wiring in the plane, which caused a short circuit. A fire broke out and the plane, newly filled to capacity with gasoline, appeared ready to go down in flames. Al was flying and he cut the engine as Fred grabbed a fire extinguisher and blasted the flames — luckily, the fire went out, leaving the plane filled with smoke. Al pulled out of the dive, restarting the engine, less than 100 feet from the ground.

The brothers and the plane had been buffeted by storms during the flight. Multiple reports say the stabilizer was weakened in the storms, but the pilots could be forgiven for just being exhausted. The pair landed safely—despite the flat tire—after 27 days in the air.

varmint 12-01-2021 11:44 AM

The Hunter brothers
John and Kenneth piloted the primary aircraft, the “Chicago We Will” (later renamed the “City of Chicago”). The brothers managed to stay in the air for 264 hours – 11 days – but they were forced to land before breaking the record, as a heavy fog had prevented their refueling plane from making contact.

GH85Carrera 12-01-2021 11:50 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638391723.jpg

Two really small semis, or one crazy big funny looking truck of some sort.

Seahawk 12-01-2021 12:12 PM

I had forgotten about this and other like flights...the oil consumption must have been extreme.

What I love is the wooden props and the aero bend.

Wow.

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11534464)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638390696.jpg

I had to check the engine during a recent flight.


TimT 12-01-2021 12:25 PM

Quote:

Two really small semis, or one crazy big funny looking truck of some sort.
That's a very large earthmover/mining truck with the bed removed, probably transported separately..

That makes a Euclid or Terex look like a toy..

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638393918.png

WPOZZZ 12-01-2021 06:14 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638414725.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638414725.jpg

island911 12-01-2021 06:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by icemann427 (Post 11534348)
Ever since the problems with the pelican parts website, instead of seeing the actual jpeg pictures posted, I just see the links. Are the rest of you experiencing this or is just me? If it is just me, is there something I need to do to my computer so I can actually see the posted pictures? Thank you!

Site Settings?

IDK

Random


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

island911 12-01-2021 06:37 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638415927.jpg

red 928 12-01-2021 10:00 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638428398.jpg


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638428400.jpg

Racerbvd 12-02-2021 02:53 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638445846.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638445846.jpg

Racerbvd 12-02-2021 02:53 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638446012.jpg

Racerbvd 12-02-2021 02:56 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638446053.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638446103.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1638446103.jpg


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