crs100
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| Joined: 13 Sep 2009 |
| Total Posts: 12342 |
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| 23 Feb 2016 06:57 PM |
This happened yesterday. One kid started using it.
It's the second day now. About 3 kids are using it now.
Help |
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| 23 Feb 2016 06:58 PM |
| we gotta nuke the school sorry fam |
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| 23 Feb 2016 06:59 PM |
get an iphone and hide remember your home? YEAH, DONT RUN OR YOU WILL BE DAMNED |
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ZetaHaru
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| Joined: 21 Feb 2016 |
| Total Posts: 538 |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:01 PM |
Pop-up[edit] In pop-up bombing, the pilot approaches from low altitude in level flight, and on cues from the computer pulls up at the last moment to release the bomb. Release usually occurs between 20° and 75° above the horizontal, causing the bomb to be tossed upward and forward, much like an underarm throw of a ball.
Level toss[edit] Although "pop-up" bombing is generally characterized by its low-level approach, the same technique of a toss starting from level flight can be used at any altitude when it is not desirable to overfly the target. Additional altitude at release gives the bomb additional time of flight and range, at the cost (in the case of unguided munitions) of accuracy due to windage and the increased effect of a slight deviation in flight path.
Dive toss[edit] The Dive-toss delivery technique was the first "toss" bombing method developed after WWII at the US Navy's rocket development center at Inyokern, California in 1947 as a method to attack heavily defended targets without unduly endangering the attacking aircraft.[2] Although toss bombing might seem the direct opposite to dive bombing, where the plane pitches downward to aim at its target, toss bombing is often performed with a short dive before the bomber raises its nose and releases its bomb. This variant is known as "dive tossing". This gives both the bomb and aircraft extra momentum, thereby helping the aircraft regain altitude after the release and also ensuring that airspeed at the calculated release point is still sufficient to get the bomb to the target.
Over-the-shoulder[edit] A more dynamic variant of toss bombing, called over-the-shoulder bombing, or the LABS (Low Altitude Bombing System) maneuver (known to pilots as the "idiot's loop"), is a particular kind of loft bombing where the bomb is released past the vertical so it is tossed back toward the target. This tactic was first made public on 7 May 1957 at Eglin AFB, when a B-47 entered its bombing run at low altitude, pulled up sharply (3.5 g) into a half loop, releasing its bomb under automatic control at a predetermined point in its climb, then executed a half roll, completing a maneuver similar to an Immelmann turn or Half Cuban Eight. The bomb continued upward for some time in a high arc before falling on a target which was a considerable distance from its point of release. In the meantime, the maneuver had allowed the bomber to change direction and distance itself from the target.[3]
Author and retired USAF pilot Richard Bach describes such an attack in his book Stranger to the Ground:
The last red-roofed village flashes below me, and the target, a pyramid of white barrels, is just visible at the end of its run-in line. Five hundred knots. Switch down, button pressed. Timers begin their timing, circuits are alerted for the drop. Inch down to treetop altitude. I do not often fly at 500 knots on the deck, and it is apparent that I am moving quickly. The barrels inflate. I see that their white paint is flaking. And the pyramid streaks beneath me. Back on the stick smoothly firmly to read four G on the accelerometer and center the needles of the indicator that is only used in nuke weapon drops and center them and hold it there and I'll bet those computers are grinding their little hearts out and all I can see is sky in the windscreen hold the G's keep the needles centered there's the sun going beneath me and WHAM.
My airplane rolls hard to the right and tucks more tightly into her loop and strains ahead even though we are upside down. The Shape has released me more than I have released it. The little white barrels are now six thousand feet directly beneath my canopy. I have no way to tell if it was a good drop or not. That was decided back with the charts and graphs and the dividers and the angles. I kept the needles centered, the computers did their task automatically, and the Device is on its way.
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:03 PM |
it didnt come to my school yet hope i dont jinx it |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:04 PM |
| WHATS THE DANIEL THING?!?!?! |
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farway
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| Joined: 15 Jan 2012 |
| Total Posts: 15418 |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:04 PM |
| I might spread it to my school for the lulz |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:05 PM |
| Seriosuly what am I missing out on??? |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:05 PM |
It came to my school 2 days ago
one kid used it that day
now the entire grade is using it
i'm the last one left who hasn't been infected
i'm holding out in the gymnasium and broadcasting from some dead kid's iphon-THEY'RE BREAKING IN
HELP-THIS IS NOT HOW I END-DAAAAMMMMNDANIELAJSNWJSNWJ-BACK AGAIN WITH THE WHITE V-JANWJANSE
*a loud explosion is heard*
*broadcast terminated* |
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R2649806
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| Joined: 23 Feb 2016 |
| Total Posts: 321 |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:20 PM |
At least I'm homeschooled.
Tra la la ~ Ashil. |
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| 23 Feb 2016 07:21 PM |
| So far no one in my school uses it. |
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