Shut up and take #2 from the deli counter thingy.I think I get first dibs for starting this thread.
Shut up and take #2 from the deli counter thingy.I think I get first dibs for starting this thread.
I get dibs on his UNICOR desk calendar. I can't get those anymore, not at my job anyway. I miss being able to change people's lives with a simple calendar.I think I get first dibs for starting this thread.
Gee whiz...I thought this was going to be about the REAL Tetris...you know...the one from 1989 utilizing the Nintendo “grey brick” machine.
For the record, I beat the [metaphorical] pants off of EVERY air det knucklehead and EVERY black shoe knucklehead on ALL deployments...unfuckingdefeated, bitches...
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The lockpin materials were but I don't think the bifilars had anything dangerous like that.I'm trying to remember if any of these are made out of berrylium or some other hazmat /heavy metal.
Look, you're getting the calendar. Maybe he can toss in the tacks and you can be happy?Anyone gonna call dibs on Rob's office mate's ten thousand dollar fidget spinner?
If I recall you and @Jim123 are both right. Or both half right. I recall both the droop stops and the lockpin pullers having that same dull gold color and being standard PC board answers to, "what should you not lick on the aircraft?"I believe it's the droop stops that are made from copper-berrylium, but Rob can confirm.
There's a "your mom" joke here that would make a totally inappropriate yet epic answer in a HAC board."What should you not lick on the aircraft?"
Sorry. It's not the weight, is one of the bifilar bearings. A bifilar weight wouldn't really spin on your desk very long, if at all.Anyone gonna call dibs on Rob's office mate's ten thousand dollar fidget spinner?
How many times have you told a Specialist, "Go up there and see if the droop stop is warm."They get hot, and if a short exists, you can get shocked. Or so I've been told.![]()
I'm a little skeptical about asking Specialist to do anything. Remember, I'm in the Guard, not the "real" Army. It is rare for one of our full time mechanics to be a specialist. A weekend only Specialist can only reliably climb up on and climb down from the helicopter without assistance and with little supervisory direction. I'm pretty sure that phrase is standard boiler plate for their evals.How many times have you told a Specialist, "Go up there and see if the droop stop is warm."
Sorry. It's not the weight, is one of the bifilar bearings. A bifilar weight wouldn't really spin on your desk very long, if at all.