15996 pts · August 22, 2015
It works surprisingly well just having a small chat with a non functional machine https://youtu.be/tAGlUUAmjxk?si=wklI9CPlMEFSLqTl
I like how there are beer glasses in the officers mess.
And very nice that you made each screw by yourself. It's a good thing you didn't try to force the screws, brass is not a fan of that.
No love for Desmond King?
Looks very nice. An old teacher of mine would say that you need to line up the slots on the screws though.
Almost the same as working with horn. If you saw or rasp that the smell is almost the same.
This is also an old play with Jim Davidson. Pretty funny.
Also with powder extinguishers give them a shake every month or so as the powder settles in the bottom of the extinguisher.
An oxygen boost. Fire needs three things: fuel, oxygen, and heat.
An old overhead projector works as well and can be picked up really cheap. You can try to find a school that has them stowed away
Interesting article and site! Thanks for sharing.
uses the column to advance and then deploy to line but a lot of contemporary accounts tell of the French staying in column.
Yes by Paddy Griffith and described in the book French Napoleonic infantry tactics 1792-1815. This also describes that the 1791 reglement
This was only for the attack though and defensive battles were mostly fought in line.
was not always the case and up to the commander. 13% was fought in line, 8% in order mixte and 1% in skirmish order.
Of the analysed French attacks between 1792 and 1815 78% were fought as columns. They might tried to deploy into line later but that 1/2
Mostly smaller Jäger units though and not exclusively equipped with rifles. The Jäger rifle was the base for the Baker rifle though.
Also training and aiming came into play. Sometimes they just pointed it in the general direction of the enemy.
Just don't watch it for the historical accuracy.
I've tried to improve it a bit, probs still quite some mistakes in there.
The Aubrey Maturin series is good as well but my favorite for that time period must be the Alan Lewrie series.
Sorry for the grammar. English is only my third language.
Kap is great.
That is a river cruise ship actually, not a boarding deck. Used loads in Europe on the big rivers.
The speed that the log is fed into the saw is also controlled by the wind. More wind = saw blades move faster = quicker feed.
Don't go of a ruler. If you want a consistent spacing mark one spacing on the stick and slide that along for every spacing 2/2
Keep on trying. Make sure you have razor sharp tools and for marking use a knife. For spacing on the kumiko use a story stick 1/2
Yes it's glued on the inside of the panels.
That boat is actually an ambulance!
Dachlawine
It works surprisingly well just having a small chat with a non functional machine https://youtu.be/tAGlUUAmjxk?si=wklI9CPlMEFSLqTl
I like how there are beer glasses in the officers mess.
And very nice that you made each screw by yourself. It's a good thing you didn't try to force the screws, brass is not a fan of that.
No love for Desmond King?
Looks very nice. An old teacher of mine would say that you need to line up the slots on the screws though.
Almost the same as working with horn. If you saw or rasp that the smell is almost the same.
This is also an old play with Jim Davidson. Pretty funny.
Also with powder extinguishers give them a shake every month or so as the powder settles in the bottom of the extinguisher.
An oxygen boost. Fire needs three things: fuel, oxygen, and heat.
An old overhead projector works as well and can be picked up really cheap. You can try to find a school that has them stowed away
Interesting article and site! Thanks for sharing.
uses the column to advance and then deploy to line but a lot of contemporary accounts tell of the French staying in column.
Yes by Paddy Griffith and described in the book French Napoleonic infantry tactics 1792-1815. This also describes that the 1791 reglement
This was only for the attack though and defensive battles were mostly fought in line.
was not always the case and up to the commander. 13% was fought in line, 8% in order mixte and 1% in skirmish order.
Of the analysed French attacks between 1792 and 1815 78% were fought as columns. They might tried to deploy into line later but that 1/2
Mostly smaller Jäger units though and not exclusively equipped with rifles. The Jäger rifle was the base for the Baker rifle though.
Also training and aiming came into play. Sometimes they just pointed it in the general direction of the enemy.
Just don't watch it for the historical accuracy.
I've tried to improve it a bit, probs still quite some mistakes in there.
The Aubrey Maturin series is good as well but my favorite for that time period must be the Alan Lewrie series.
Sorry for the grammar. English is only my third language.
Kap is great.
That is a river cruise ship actually, not a boarding deck. Used loads in Europe on the big rivers.
The speed that the log is fed into the saw is also controlled by the wind. More wind = saw blades move faster = quicker feed.
Don't go of a ruler. If you want a consistent spacing mark one spacing on the stick and slide that along for every spacing 2/2
Keep on trying. Make sure you have razor sharp tools and for marking use a knife. For spacing on the kumiko use a story stick 1/2
Yes it's glued on the inside of the panels.
That boat is actually an ambulance!
Dachlawine