On the 33rd of Nevuary.So when will these be available for those with Class 3 licenses? They are secksi.
On the 33rd of Nevuary.
So they invented the helicopter?What do you think about this project?
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/10/darpas-flying-humvee-goes-diesel/
What do you think about this project?
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/10/darpas-flying-humvee-goes-diesel/
So they invented the helicopter?
I am crushed I tell you. C-R-U-S-H-E-D!
p.s. please give Foggy some pointers on using the Ignore List. She can't seem to keep me there, but makes constant claims I am there.
For her own good and awl!!!!
The new Meme (Mrs Exclamation Mark, Exclamation)
*winkers and all that jazz*
I think they are trying to make a much cheaper version of the V22 Osprey.
Never gonna see full deployment. And it's a limited application weapon.
I don't seeing as how a HMMWV only carries 4 or 5 people, and the Osprey carries as many as 16. So you'd need 4 times and many and I'd imagine at least 2x the fuel of an Osprey.I think they are trying to make a much cheaper version of the V22 Osprey.
IEDs can destroy everything. I've seen one lift a 66 ton tank in the air and flip it over.not cheap enough, IEDs could knock them out or flat out destroy these expensive hummers - not worth the cost, so stop it now before it gets too embedded to cancel
not cheap enough, IEDs could knock them out or flat out destroy these expensive hummers - not worth the cost, so stop it now before it gets too embedded to cancel
I can see the advantage of something that can fly out of a messy situation, of course we don't know how long it would take to deploy the rotors?
if look closely, there are not only two fixed wings to be deployed (likely manually) in addition to the rotors - this would expose the troops and rotors/wings to fire from the enemy
now maybe flying into a sticky situation to assist ground troops - maybe, but still too expensive
ps i spent over 25 years working in aerospace ending my career as a systems analyst