maar ik denk dat jij vervoersmiddelen bedoel
Idd, dat bedoelde ik. Veel belangrijke vervoersmiddelen vertellen namelijk niet alleen een militair verhaal, maar ook een politiek. Zeer interessant, in het tijdschrift Kijk staan er vaak leuke artikelen over in.
misschien is de spectre meer iets voor jou?
Rambo in de lucht.
laatste aanpassing
Zo één heb ik ook (maar dan met gele balletjes )
Heb 2 van die nepdingen, had er altijd één in m'n auto voor als ik alleen terug moest rijden in de nacht. Kan alleen tegenwoordig niet meer want als ze je met zo'n nepdingen pakken ben je ook de lul
Wapens kunnen inderdaad mooi zijn, maar ik vind ze vooral eng om wat ze bij een mens los kunnen maken
P90 vinnik zelf ook een mooi wapen maar is wel heel erg storinggevoelig, zeker in warme gebieden. P90 met geluidsdemper en subsonische munitie daar hoor je echt nix van.
Ben ook bekend met de Barett .50, nog niet mee geschoten overigens, maar is heel indrukwekkend.
En die Glock 18 is zeker wel een slag groter dan de 17?
Ben ook bekend met de Barett .50, nog niet mee geschoten overigens, maar is heel indrukwekkend.
En die Glock 18 is zeker wel een slag groter dan de 17?
calasnikof (of hoe je `t schrijft)
Waarschijnlijk bedoel je deze, de AK-47 (de meest bekende Kalashnikov)
mja iedereen zo zn afwijking he...ben een erg kortzichtig persoon..zwart/wit denker...denk nie verder dan mn neus lang is..moet je na gaan met mijn neus(je)..ja geef je echt helemaal gelijk
Zal ik ook maar ff kortzichtig doen: STELLETJE PACIFISTEN!
Is toch gewoon mooi..
laatste aanpassing
F-4 Phantom II - veel lawaai, veel rook...
Katyusha, ook wel genoemd stalin orgel.
Van het gejank sloeg de vijand al op de vlucht.
SS20 ook wel "satan" genoemd. Het is moeilijk om dit mooi te vinden, maar de werking ervan is gewoon geniaal. Helaas zal het afvuren van 1 zo''n raket al miljoenen mensen het leven laten. Een goede reden dus om geen oorlog meer te voeren
Oude vertrouwde slagschip de Bismarck.
Dus ...
Zolang het maar hard en luid gaat, vindt ik alles prachtig
aldus een maat van me!
De natte droom van het Pentagon en Columbiaanse drugskartels, hehehe :
Gun whips up a Metal Storm
By CNN's Geoff Hiscock
Friday, June 27, 2003 Posted: 3:22 PM EDT (1922 GMT)
Metal Storm's high-speed gun, capable of firing at a rate of a million rounds a minute.
BRISBANE, Australia (CNN) -- Imagine a gun that fires a million rounds a minute -- enough to shred a target in a blink of an eye, or throw up a defensive wall against an incoming missile.
This is Metal Storm, a weapons system that forsakes old-style mechanics for the speed of electronics.
Its inventor is Mike O'Dwyer, a one-time grocer in the Australian city of Brisbane. He's spent 30 years and much of his own money to develop the technology.
Now, finally, the doors are opening for him at the Pentagon, the U.S. Defense Department's headquarters.
O'Dwyer says that the real value comes from Metal Storm's electronic capability to deliver rates of fire and different types of projectiles very precisely.
The weapons range from a handgun that can only be operated by an authorized user to a grenade launcher that can fire either lethal or non-lethal ammunition.
While much of the technology is a closely guarded secret, the firing mechanism has no moving parts. Instead, it uses electronic ballistics technology. Unlike other guns, the only parts which move are the bullets.
The Metal Storm handgun employs electronic locking, which can limit firing access and stop unauthorized use. It can even be programmed not to fire within, say, the grounds of a school.
Its grenade launcher can give the same defensive security as a minefield, but without physically putting any explosives in the area being guarded. Instead, sensors can alert an operator to any intrusion. The operator can then decide whether to use lethal or non-lethal grenades to warn off -- or destroy -- the intruder.
O'Dwyer is a passionate advocate of applying technology to modern warfare and the rise of networking in defense thinking.
"Where network-centric warfare is going is moving the principal systems of weapons from the big, heavy, slow stuff to the small, light, fast, inexpensive (weapons), many of (which) -- and here's the important part -- is very smart."
It's this promise of speed and flexibility that has got the American and Australian military to commit $60 million in research and development funding for O'Dwyer's array of weapons.
Metal Storm started in a small Brisbane workshop, where all the prototypes have been built.
Increasingly, the project looks to the United States, where most of its staff are now based and where it hopes to clinch sales to defense agencies and police forces next year.
Going global has been in O'Dwyer's sights for many years. It's a target that gets a little larger and a little closer every day.
A 16-pod grenade launcher -- one of the Metal Storm range.
CNN
By CNN's Geoff Hiscock
Friday, June 27, 2003 Posted: 3:22 PM EDT (1922 GMT)
Metal Storm's high-speed gun, capable of firing at a rate of a million rounds a minute.
BRISBANE, Australia (CNN) -- Imagine a gun that fires a million rounds a minute -- enough to shred a target in a blink of an eye, or throw up a defensive wall against an incoming missile.
This is Metal Storm, a weapons system that forsakes old-style mechanics for the speed of electronics.
Its inventor is Mike O'Dwyer, a one-time grocer in the Australian city of Brisbane. He's spent 30 years and much of his own money to develop the technology.
Now, finally, the doors are opening for him at the Pentagon, the U.S. Defense Department's headquarters.
O'Dwyer says that the real value comes from Metal Storm's electronic capability to deliver rates of fire and different types of projectiles very precisely.
The weapons range from a handgun that can only be operated by an authorized user to a grenade launcher that can fire either lethal or non-lethal ammunition.
While much of the technology is a closely guarded secret, the firing mechanism has no moving parts. Instead, it uses electronic ballistics technology. Unlike other guns, the only parts which move are the bullets.
The Metal Storm handgun employs electronic locking, which can limit firing access and stop unauthorized use. It can even be programmed not to fire within, say, the grounds of a school.
Its grenade launcher can give the same defensive security as a minefield, but without physically putting any explosives in the area being guarded. Instead, sensors can alert an operator to any intrusion. The operator can then decide whether to use lethal or non-lethal grenades to warn off -- or destroy -- the intruder.
O'Dwyer is a passionate advocate of applying technology to modern warfare and the rise of networking in defense thinking.
"Where network-centric warfare is going is moving the principal systems of weapons from the big, heavy, slow stuff to the small, light, fast, inexpensive (weapons), many of (which) -- and here's the important part -- is very smart."
It's this promise of speed and flexibility that has got the American and Australian military to commit $60 million in research and development funding for O'Dwyer's array of weapons.
Metal Storm started in a small Brisbane workshop, where all the prototypes have been built.
Increasingly, the project looks to the United States, where most of its staff are now based and where it hopes to clinch sales to defense agencies and police forces next year.
Going global has been in O'Dwyer's sights for many years. It's a target that gets a little larger and a little closer every day.
A 16-pod grenade launcher -- one of the Metal Storm range.
CNN