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SpaceCadetBob posted:How does a warehouse that size not have a dock to drive that thing off of? WTF The question I have is, which guy was the REAL forklift driver? Or was he supposed to be in the middle lording over the other two drivers but called in sick (he's actually out fishing).
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 14:34 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:28 |
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schmug posted:holy poo poo. How? A car falling from 15m would impact the ground at about 60km/h. The driver was lucky to impact the ground nose-first, which is close to the sort of collisions cars are designed to make survivable at such speeds. If it landed on the roof it would have pancaked, and if it landed on the wheels the occupants' spines would have been crushed.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 14:42 |
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dreamin of semen posted:I like to design GUIs monolithburger posted:Is there any way to harness kickback for jumpage? I can see a potential fairground level competition in this. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mOqjFa4RskA Also there was at least one fatality in that car accident, although I can't find the story to confirm that right now. IIRC it killed a woman on the ground.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 14:44 |
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Dark Off posted:[removed video of fatality] sorry about RT link but: https://www.rt.com/news/474205-hyderabad-car-flyover-hits-pedestrian/ quote:A horrific car crash in India’s Hyderabad saw a vehicle fly right off an overpass and smash down onto the road below, killing one pedestrian and injuring several others. The overpass was also opened just in early November. Maybe they should move that bus stop to a safer place.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 14:47 |
dreamin of semen posted:I've always been curious about the UI/UX of the software involved in mining, industry and stuff like that since it seems like a place where a whole lot could go wrong, but I haven't heard many stories of people bypassing safety interlocks via software quirks, so I guess something is going right? Something related to hardware interlocks and actual safety regulations probably? I've designed some industrial UI along with industrial control systems and used a whole slew of them. There seems to be zero standards for generic industrial use. UI design takes backseat to function even if it should be easy to use. Usually people handwave ease of use and just say "it's industrial". CNC's are a good example though they've come leaps and bounds in the last decade. We've got some older CNC controls that are quite obtuse even by industrial standards. About the only place you see some decent design is with light curtains and robotic cells, but mostly because OSHA. My favorite example of bad UI is the M1A2 Abrams. If you pushed the MASTER OFF button before you pushed the SHUTDOWN button the computer system would poo poo the bed. I know this because as an E-2 Private fresh out of training someone told me "Turn it off!" and not "Shut it down!". So of course I pressed the button that said OFF. Two days later the GD techs were still fixing it.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 15:08 |
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Yooper posted:My favorite example of bad UI is the M1A2 Abrams. If you pushed the MASTER OFF button before you pushed the SHUTDOWN button the computer system would poo poo the bed. I know this because as an E-2 Private fresh out of training someone told me "Turn it off!" and not "Shut it down!". So of course I pressed the button that said OFF. Two days later the GD techs were still fixing it. You know how ye olde artillerymen used to spike their guns if they were about to be overrun by enemy? Spiking meant literally driving a nail or bayonet into the touch-hole after which the cannon would only be usable if you drilled a new hole which would take time, so the enemy couldn't turn your guns against you during the battle. Well, it sounds like you figured out how to spike a M1A2!
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 15:19 |
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Yooper posted:I've designed some industrial UI along with industrial control systems and used a whole slew of them. There seems to be zero standards for generic industrial use. UI design takes backseat to function even if it should be easy to use. Usually people handwave ease of use and just say "it's industrial". Non-industrial UIs work the same way.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 15:28 |
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chrisgt posted:I didn't intend to read over 100 pages, but that just sucked me in. Also HOLY gently caress some of those pictures are Why did I read that. I didn't completely lose my poo poo until I realized some of those loving photos were 2 loving YEARS after exposure and looked like it happened a day ago. God drat it. Off to the scheinfreund thread to detox. Maybe I'll look at some puppies too.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:11 |
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Nenonen posted:You know how ye olde artillerymen used to spike their guns if they were about to be overrun by enemy? Spiking meant literally driving a nail or bayonet into the touch-hole after which the cannon would only be usable if you drilled a new hole which would take time, so the enemy couldn't turn your guns against you during the battle. It's so weird to me that people could get hit by cannons, seems like they're slow as poo poo to setup and aim, but I don't know poo poo about poo poo so whatever.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:26 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJU-Q9gw_sg
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:26 |
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LifeSunDeath posted:It's so weird to me that people could get hit by cannons, seems like they're slow as poo poo to setup and aim, but I don't know poo poo about poo poo so whatever. Infantry formations were huge and when a battery hit one they'd go through like the men were bowling pins. The battle of Nieuwpoort in 1600, early and later stages:
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:44 |
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Nenonen posted:Infantry formations were huge and when a battery hit one they'd go through like the men were bowling pins. it's pretty goddamn OSHA that they would force dudes to just stand all clumped up and advance slowly when someone's also slowly pointing cannons at them.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:50 |
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LifeSunDeath posted:It's so weird to me that people could get hit by cannons, seems like they're slow as poo poo to setup and aim, but I don't know poo poo about poo poo so whatever. Cannons were for attacking fixed positions. Like Mons Megg was a 19" cannon (Cannonball weighing 150kg) with a muzzle velocity of something like 300 m/s and could fire possibly 3000m. So the cannon is really far away, the cannonball is going really fast, it's not trying to hit you just the building you are in.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:51 |
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Aramoro posted:Cannons were for attacking fixed positions. Cannons were totally not for only attacking fixed positions. Canister shot would not have been a thing if that were the case.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:53 |
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Whether the target was fixed or not, after the barrage they definitely were not! As for why people marched in such closed orders - cold steel was still the king of the battlefield and when it came to melee the side with the deepest and tightest formation generally had the upper hand. Artillery might seldom totally obliterate the formation like modern artillery would, but it could make holes into it or scatter the formation to make it more vulnerable to your assaulting cavalry or infantry. Nenonen fucked around with this message at 17:01 on Dec 4, 2019 |
# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:55 |
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LifeSunDeath posted:it's pretty goddamn OSHA that they would force dudes to just stand all clumped up and advance slowly when someone's also slowly pointing cannons at them. It’s civilized.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:56 |
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For the past several hundred years, artillery has caused the majority of casualties in every proper war. Napoleon (a former artillery officer himself) said, "It is with artillery that war is made."
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 16:59 |
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If Napoleon was so smart then why he die in exile
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:04 |
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Aramoro posted:Cannons were for attacking fixed positions. Like Mons Megg was a 19" cannon (Cannonball weighing 150kg) with a muzzle velocity of something like 300 m/s and could fire possibly 3000m. So the cannon is really far away, the cannonball is going really fast, it's not trying to hit you just the building you are in. This is broadly the case in the early days of cannon (pre-1600 or so) but by the time you get to the middle of the seventeenth century you see “light” (relative to siege guns) cannon being used on the battlefield effectively. Gustsvus Adolphus was running around loving poo poo up like that in the thirty years war, for example. As for why everyone is clumped together, it’s a command and control issue. The only way to effectively move 1000 men is to have them physically together and the only way to effectively control numerous groups like that at once is via flag and courier. You do have smaller groups of men operating independently but these are skirmishes and what we today would consider scouts and snipers. Enough to harass the enemy but not enough to really do the job alone.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:09 |
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Powered Descent posted:
Back in the day, I used to work in sales and distribution of flat panel TV's. This was when they just started getting affordable. We also sold wall mounts as part of a bundle. We were a VAR so most of our stuff was bundled. This picture was very common when customers would complain that the wall mount failed. It never occurred to them to find a stud. All of our stuff was UL certified. Even our long arm mounts would take the weight of a full grown man as long as you found a stud for at least one of the sides. They used heavy lag bolts. They were great. I still have a few of them in service in my house. The kit even came with bolts that would work in cinder block. Still, people think that drywall anchors are good enough for 75lbs of TV on a 24" swing arm. It tears out of the wall, destroys the TV, then they blame the retailer. People would threaten to sue for damages. We would refer them to the manual and the disclaimer that stated professional install only. I guess that I don't have a real point. This picture just brings back memories from the mid 2000's.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:26 |
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SLOSifl posted:Same, buddy It's literally my job (and in a context that is "passingly medical related" no less) welp, I feel kinda bad now Yooper posted:I've designed some industrial UI along with industrial control systems and used a whole slew of them. There seems to be zero standards for generic industrial use. UI design takes backseat to function even if it should be easy to use. Usually people handwave ease of use and just say "it's industrial". CNC's are a good example though they've come leaps and bounds in the last decade. We've got some older CNC controls that are quite obtuse even by industrial standards. About the only place you see some decent design is with light curtains and robotic cells, but mostly because OSHA. Genuinely enlightening! Pretty much lines up with what I expected, too, minus the uh tank part. "It's industrial" ABSOLUTELY lines up with the rest of the many excuses I've seen for not polishing the UI. also yeah, guess I know how to break an M1A2 now, if I ever need to for whatever reason. neat! The main reason I found myself interested in that kinda thing is actually pretty dead on for this thread, thinking about it. There's a ton of weird, often SCADA-based, industrial control system web UIs that show up with unauthenticated VNC ports open to the internet. There's thousands of them, and you could, if you wanted to, just connect to them and gently caress around with minimal effort. Not that I'd recommend that. This talk isn't great honestly, but the actual content contained within is pretty interesting in an e-voyeur, cospoppy kinda way. There's a frankly worrying amount of buttons that, if pressed, could potentially damage something. Like... really, an internet connected grain silo with aeration options and a big "empty silo" button? This thread taught me to respect the grain, and giving the silo unsecured remote control does not feel like respecting the grain, dammit!
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:29 |
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Its likely apocryphal (and propagated by Ralph Waldo Emerson at that), but there's a great tale of Napoleon seeing a Prussian column retreating over a lake of ice, so he had his artillery shell the ice and they all fell in
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:31 |
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Autistic Edgy Guy posted:Its likely apocryphal (and propagated by Ralph Waldo Emerson at that), but there's a great tale of Napoleon seeing a Prussian column retreating over a lake of ice, so he had his artillery shell the ice and they all fell in Ice Road Hussars.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:53 |
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I once shelled the ice my friend was standing on and he fell in. Sorry buddy.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 17:55 |
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Was I correct to say "shelled" as it pertained to Napoleonic-era cannons? Were they just cannonballs and not shells, kinda like the ole' clip v. magazine mistake?
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:12 |
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Kazak posted:If Napoleon was so smart then why he die in exile Land war in Asia.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:15 |
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Autistic Edgy Guy posted:Was I correct to say "shelled" as it pertained to Napoleonic-era cannons? Were they just cannonballs and not shells, kinda like the ole' clip v. magazine mistake? Wikipedia posted:The earliest record of shells being used in combat was by the Republic of Venice at Jadra in 1376. Shells with fuses were used at the 1421 siege of St Boniface in Corsica. These were two hollowed hemispheres of stone or bronze held together by an iron hoop.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:17 |
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I am listening to it and they have nothing nice to say about us here at the Something Awful forums. I should just post the link to the video.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:18 |
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only makes sense the world's most famous artillery officer and the shell projectile come from the same place
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:39 |
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They fought in those formations because that was the only way to make unrifled muskets shooting lumpy balls of lead deadly, just have a massive volume of fire. What is OSHA is that they still did this when rifled muskets firing the modern bullet looking Mini-Ball became a thing. This is one one of the reasons the US Civil War was so deadly, they were still marching in formation while using weapons much more accurate than a few decades earlier.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:46 |
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Goddamn I'm glad I took the time to catch up with this thread.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:54 |
dreamin of semen posted:The main reason I found myself interested in that kinda thing is actually pretty dead on for this thread, thinking about it. There's a ton of weird, often SCADA-based, industrial control system web UIs that show up with unauthenticated VNC ports open to the internet. There's thousands of them, and you could, if you wanted to, just connect to them and gently caress around with minimal effort. Not that I'd recommend that. This talk isn't great honestly, but the actual content contained within is pretty interesting in an e-voyeur, cospoppy kinda way. There's a frankly worrying amount of buttons that, if pressed, could potentially damage something. Like... really, an internet connected grain silo with aeration options and a big "empty silo" button? Yup, that's a thing. The higher grade Allen Bradley stuff will use something like FactoryTalk that comes with appropriate safeguards and encryption to prevent anyone from logging into it. But there are 2nd and 3rd tier suppliers who take outdated industrial controls, re-label it, and sell it as new. Mitsubishi is really good for this, the current generation is Mitsubishi while 2nd gen turns into Delta while 3rd gen is Huangzho or something like that. On top of that you get people with zero training in proper digital protection trying to set up a SCADA system remotely using only HTTP. Joe PLC Programmer will likely have no clue that people could actually log into his system. Stuxnet is a good example, though a bit deep, where "someone" tricked Siemens PLC or VFD controllers into behaving in a manner that would destroy Iranian uranium centrifuge bearings. They did it in such a way that the program itself showed that nothing was wrong. This is a very sophisticated example of the kind of havoc you can wreak on a normally robust industrial system. Hopefully these are just for monitoring. Edit : This one allows you, remotely and with no credentials, to empty a crucible containing 24000 kgs of liquid iron. Yooper fucked around with this message at 19:00 on Dec 4, 2019 |
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:55 |
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Applesnots posted:Please start an ask/tell thread. From many pages back, but; I'm just an office admin schmuck, unfortunately, I'm not a licensed funeral director and I'm not even allowed in the back rooms. Generally the gnarliest stuff I see is identification photos of someone whose family declined to do a viewing, or the occasional stillborn infant that got the Glamour Shots treatment by mom & dad despite being, indisputably and visibly very clearly, a deceased infant. No amount of little knitted hats and ducky-print blankets is gonna make that any less awful to see, and I have to see 'em on the reg because we make all our funeral items in-house, so I'm the one that has to photoshop them into all the memorial stuff. It sucks so bad. Wouldn't wanna do an A/T thread though because privacy is SUPER important in this industry, obviously, and worst case scenario would be me losing my job-- coworkers have been fired before for getting a little too lippy on Facebook, etc. But that doesn't mean I don't have stories... I just can't tell 'em online, unfortunately
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 18:58 |
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Imagined posted:For the past several hundred years, artillery has caused the majority of casualties in every proper war. Napoleon (a former artillery officer himself) said, "It is with artillery that war is made." Pretty much OSHA should ban wars.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:17 |
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Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Pretty much OSHA should ban wars. OSHA inspector standing on the lip of a foxhole, chewing on a pencil. "You know, I'll have to note a violation unless you properly shore that thing up."
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:30 |
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I remember seeing something about the Korean War where there were dudes fighting in the cold all shot up not bleeding cause the blood was freezing. Then they get them back to the hospital to warm up and they suddenly start bleeding to death from 5 gunshot wounds.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:32 |
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Private freezes in terror realizing he didn't put 'getting shot at by artillery' on his JSA
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:37 |
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one honest look at the battles of the American Civil War and all that Southern pride about it gets even more deranged and ugly. your young johnny rebs mostly rotted from disease at camp, starved, got trampled when their lines broke, or some other industrial-war horror that cant really be called "combat." same goes for the union side, really.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:38 |
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it's almost like war is... heck. or something
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:40 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 04:28 |
It should be noted that it is possible to hit targets at greater distances with smoothbore muskets. The problem is you need to use a tightly fitting bullet exactly sized to the bore, and black powder is extremely inefficient and coats the bore with soot after just a few shots. It gets progressively harder and harder to ram the balls down unless you use intentionally undersized bullets. The Brown Bess is nominally .75 caliber but used bullets of .69 caliber that would easily slide through a filthy barrel, at the cost of being completely incapable of hitting a man past 100 yards. This is also why rifles didn't become a big thing before the Minie ball and breechloaders. Rifling requires that tightly fitting bullet, which for a muzzleloader requires you to keep the barrel scrupulously clean. They could only be issued to small, specialized skirmisher units for precision use. Loading from the breech lets you avoid the problem of muzzleloading, but the technology of the time simply couldn't reliably and cheaply seal the breech against the hot combustion gases. Revolvers were the first solution, but they spray hot gas and possibly lead shavings from the front of the cylinder and you can't really grasp a revolver rifle properly. The Minie ball was the solution: an undersized lead bullet with a hollow base that would expand to grip the rifling when fired, allowing for rifles that were as fast to load as smoothbore muskets. The final innovation was the metal cartridge case, which expanded to seal the breech during combustion but relaxed afterward to let it be easily extracted. We could have had this in use faster, but at least for revolvers Rollin White patented the bored-through cylinder design and gave Smith & Wesson exclusive permission to use it. He aggressively fought any patent infringement even during the Civil War, which annoyed the gently caress out of the Union. His extension in 1869 got denied because he was needlessly hamstringing the army to protect his profits.
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# ? Dec 4, 2019 19:45 |