Duct Tape
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Sopwith Camel had same design, I think made the plane twist to the left. Pilots said it turned so quick that "both eyes were on the same side of your head".
* 2 Ruger Bearcat stainless, w/ EWK ejector housings & Wolff springs
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
- bearandoldman
- Ye Loquacious Olde Pharte
- Posts: 4194
- Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2005 10:30 am
- Location: Mid Michigan
Just need a leather jacket and a leather helmet with a Red streaming tassel on the top anf a white silk scarf, flung over your shoulder.greener wrote:And literally held together with glue and bailing wire. A plane for a real manly man.
You have great day and shoot straight and may the Good Lord smile on you.


- bearandoldman
- Ye Loquacious Olde Pharte
- Posts: 4194
- Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2005 10:30 am
- Location: Mid Michigan
Thart I could believe, a rapid application of rhrorrle must have made a need for a lot of alerion correction to maintain a level attitude..ruger22 wrote:Sopwith Camel had same design, I think made the plane twist to the left. Pilots said it turned so quick that "both eyes were on the same side of your head".
You have great day and shoot straight and may the Good Lord smile on you.


- bearandoldman
- Ye Loquacious Olde Pharte
- Posts: 4194
- Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2005 10:30 am
- Location: Mid Michigan
I rode Harleys that had the spark advance on the left had grip, a hand shift on the left side of the tank and a foot operated clutch. There were very few cars when I started to drive that had anything other than a manual shift ans they just got on the steering column./ My grandfather had one of the first automatic transmission cars in town, a brand new 1947 Oldsmobile with a Hydramatic and I think on the Olds and The Caddie had them , not sure if Buick had the Dynaflow in that year or not.bgreenea3 wrote:Every thing from that era was more more difficult to operate....would you want to have to adjust the spark advance, fuel mixture choke, throttle, and drive today's cars like they did on the old model a's and t's?
You have great day and shoot straight and may the Good Lord smile on you.


I got to try to drive a Model T and a Model A once each in my life.
With the T the throttle and spark are both on the steering wheel. Three pedals to select the gears, and what looks like a handbrake is the clutch. Once around a big parking lot was an accomplishment. Only saving case is the planetary transmission used bands inside like an modern automatic, so you don't need synchronized gears. Took three arms to steer.
The Model A wasn't as bad, more like a modern car except for needing synchronizers it didn't have. I got a slight crunch or two shifting.
With the T the throttle and spark are both on the steering wheel. Three pedals to select the gears, and what looks like a handbrake is the clutch. Once around a big parking lot was an accomplishment. Only saving case is the planetary transmission used bands inside like an modern automatic, so you don't need synchronized gears. Took three arms to steer.
The Model A wasn't as bad, more like a modern car except for needing synchronizers it didn't have. I got a slight crunch or two shifting.
* 2 Ruger Bearcat stainless, w/ EWK ejector housings & Wolff springs
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols
* Ruger SP-101 .22LR, w/ Wolff springs
* 2 NAA Guardian .32ACP
* 3 Zastava M70 .32ACP
* S&W 15-22 Sport (.22LR AR)
* 2 Ruger SR22 .22LR pistols