Daleandee
Final Approach
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2020
- Messages
- 6,911
- Display Name
Display name:
Dale Andee
IDK why, but it was inevitably a .30-30 or .444 lever with iron sights here.
Got to be a 12 gauge on the rack too ...
IDK why, but it was inevitably a .30-30 or .444 lever with iron sights here.
It was Bill Coors who engineered that opening. He was also the engineer who pioneered the use of aluminum in making beer cans . Or so he told me at one of our chats at a growers meetings . Also said his biggest mistake was going national. Much better as a regional brewer.And the more obscure transitional design that Coors used for a few years. Push in the small button to release pressure, then the big one to drink. It worked pretty well as the earliest commercial solution to opening a drink can without having to remove and discard a pull tab.
View attachment 135820
I always used a section of 1/2 inch copper pipe with one end plugged. The proper technique included bending the fuse first upwards then downwards at the midpoint creating an upside down V that would hold the bottle rocket in place at the pipe rim while you lit it. When the fuse burnt half way, it would then drop into the pipe for precise aiming at your friend's eyes, ears or anywhere else that might cause maiming.Those plastic whiffle ball bats had a little hole in each end due to the molding process. If you enlarged the hole in the big end, you could put the stick for your bottle rocket in there and make a bottle rocket "rifle" for better accuracy in your bottle rocket wars.
Those plastic whiffle ball bats had a little hole in each end due to the molding process. If you enlarged the hole in the big end, you could put the stick for your bottle rocket in there and make a bottle rocket "rifle" for better accuracy in your bottle rocket wars.
I always used a section of 1/2 inch copper pipe with one end plugged. The proper technique included bending the fuse first upwards then downwards at the midpoint creating an upside down V that would hold the bottle rocket in place at the pipe rim while you lit it. When the fuse burnt half way, it would then drop into the pipe for precise aiming at your friend's eyes, ears or anywhere else that might cause maiming.
This totally what the other kids and myself would be doing back then.We'd be saying, "Cool, Dad has some copper pipe... hey Brian, do you have any matches?"
I have a nice LC Smith double that will look nice.
I’m restoring my great grandfathers 52 Ford F1 and will put one in. I have a nice LC Smith double that will look nice.
Homeland Security would have had a field day at my 9th and 10th grade chemistry classes. (We put those slate tables to the test.)This totally what the other kids and myself would be doing back then.
Were those fancier than New England Arms?. . . . LC Smith. Choke on the left side was so tight a dime wouldn't drop in the hole . . .
Were those fancier than New England Arms?
Yah, we pulled stuff that would have gotten us expelled or worse.Homeland Security would have had a field day at my 9th and 10th grade chemistry classes. (We put those slate tables to the test.)
The schools had different concerns back then. They wanted to make sure we didn't make any fatal errors while learning. I wonder if learning is even a concern today.Yah, we pulled stuff that would have gotten us expelled or worse.
Of course it's a concern. However, litigation from our sue-happy society has forced them into keeping potential weapons out of kids hands. Far easier for schools to say "no knives" than it is to pay for millions in lawsuits so that Timmy can carry a pocketknife every day.The schools had different concerns back then. They wanted to make sure we didn't make any fatal errors while learning. I wonder if learning is even a concern today.
I made (small quantities of) napalm and black powder with a teacher's supervision. We blew stuff up (from a safe distance) with acetylene gas we made from carbide. Students made flintlock pistols, halberds, and bowie knives in shop class.
My oldest son wasn't allowed to carry his grandfather's boy scout knife into the same gymnasium that I carried school owned .22 rifles through to get to the range set up behind the gym. The grandchildren of those a couple years ahead of me in school get warnings for looking at things that are "pointy" or "sharp" on school issued laptops.
So, in eighth grade, I answered an add in the back of a magazine and got 91 feet of cannon fuse for $1. I cut it into 1.5 inch pieces and sold it at school for 1 cent per piece.Homeland Security would have had a field day at my 9th and 10th grade chemistry classes. (We put those slate tables to the test.)