lmFao!The guy with the bat hit the ball. The pitcher caught it.
I had to let it loop a few times, not enough lead in before the swing.Thanks, didn't see it.
I wonder how many lived to make it back to Germany"The German army after their surrender in Russia View attachment 141644
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Any one know which ship this is? Photos I can find of the Hornet and Yorktown don't show and planes on the deck when it was sinking and though the Lexington had planes on deck it was on fire when abandoned.
That's Lisa Ann (very NSFW).
This was the "Special Weapon" carried by the aircraft I worked on.Because I actually love the history of bombs and warfare:
Wow!Because I actually love the history of bombs and warfare:
This is 'Mike.'
A hydrogen bomb set off for the first time on the small island of Elugelab November 1, 1952. It completely vaporized the island, leaving a 6,000 foot deep crater in its wake. View attachment 141702
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The detonation produced a crater 6,240 feet (1.90 km) in diameter and 164 feet (50 m) deep where Elugelab had once been;[8] the blast and water waves from the explosion (some waves up to twenty feet high) stripped the test islands clean of vegetation, as observed by a helicopter survey within 60 minutes after the test, by which time the mushroom cloud had blown away. The island "became dust and ash, pulled upward to form a mushroom cloud that rose about twenty-seven miles into the sky. According to Eric Schlosser, all that remained of Elugelab was a circular crater filled with seawater, more than a mile in diameter and "fifteen storeys deep".[9] The blast yielded 10.4 megatons of explosive energy, 700 times the energy that leveled central Hiroshima.[10]