Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
- From: renaborney@xxxxxxx
- Date: 13 Sep 2005 13:40:50 -0700
Arndt teh *** wrote:
>
> You're full of *** as usual.
SNIP
Arndt muttered after gazing at his fat, ugly visage in the mirror as
the *** dribbled from his ears
Von Braun was a student of Oberth and
> Noordung and THEIR ideas predate Goddard's puny liquid fuelled rocket
> launch.
SNIP
That's nice, they had IDEAS
Goddard actually produced something that WORKED
And, by the way, if you want to talk about IDEAS, it was a Russian,
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, who first proposed liquid fuled rockets,
As for puny, I gues Goddard's device was when you compare it to the
liquid fuled rockets that Oberth and Noordung (speaking of dung, that
reminds me of AtA and his ear problem...) from his ears) had managed to
launch prior to that.
Ooops, I forgot, there weren't any...
In Germany, Von Braun credited Oberth but once he worked for
> NASA (not prosecuted for war crimes and given US citizenship) of course
> he took full credit for everything and talked about Goddard. God forbid
> he admitted following the Nazi cause to his own spaceflight ends,
> especially being in the US.
SNIP
No, it's based on Goddard's examination of captured German V-2's.
"As his first order of business, he hoped to get his hands on a
captured V-2. From what he had heard, the missiles sounded disturbingly
like his more peaceable Nells. Goddard's trusting exchanges with German
scientists had given Berlin at least a glimpse into what he was
designing. What's more, by 1945 he had filed more than 200 patents, all
of which were available for inspection. When a captured German
scientist was asked about the origin of the V-2, he was said to have
responded, "Why don't you ask your own Dr. Goddard? He knows better
than any of us." When some V-2s finally made their way to the U.S. and
Goddard had a chance to autopsy one, he instantly recognized his own
handiwork. "Isn't this your rocket?" an assistant asked as they poked
around its innards. "It seems to be," Goddard replied flatly."
http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/profile/goddard03.html
> Second, Oberth
SNIP
NOT a member of the Master(bating) Race, by the way - he was Romanian
by birth
proposed artillery rockets in WW1 himself but was
> rejected.
SNIP
Go ahead and provide us with a citation from something besides The
Little Nazi's BIG Coloring Book of Wunderwaffen to prove that
assertion.
Which, if true, just makes him as unsuccessful as Goddard in
interesting the military in rockets
> Third, the Germans had plenty of rocket weapons the Allies did not like
> the Panzerfaust which became the Soviet RPG postwar and still exists in
> huge numbers. I don't see any bazooka's around anymore unless you go to
> Africa.
SNIP
That's because you're effing blind, you cretinous moron
What do you think the Russian RPG-29 is, ***?
http://world.guns.ru/grenade/gl04-e.htm
What do you think the US SMAW (evolved from the Israeli B-300) is,
moron?
http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/smaw.htm
What do you thgink the the British LAW-80 is, cretin?
http://www.army.mod.uk/infantry/current_equipment/the_infantry_support_weapons.htm
I could go on and on and on, but I've made my points
1) Bazooka type weapons are in use by the leading armies of this planet
2) Arndt is an ignorant ass suking posuer with no knowledge of military
weapons, tactics or strategy
The Germans had Nebelwerfers and AFVs that carried rockets
> (38cm Sturmtiger, Opel Maultier, Sdkfz 251)
SNIP
The Allies had Calliope and Land Matress to name a few Wesetrn weapons
and, most memorably, the varieties of Katyushka (mounted on Lend-Lease
Studebaker trucks) in the artillery of the Red Army of Workers and
Peasants
As a survivor of the Eastern Front what he thoight about the "Stalin
Organs"
I will admit, I don't know which weapon, the Nebelwerfer or Katyushka
was used first, but I woudn't be surprised to find out it wa sthe
Soviet one.
as well as the first
> wire-guided ATW- the X-7 which was testing in 1945.
SNIP
And if the Queen had enough balls, she would have been the king.
> BTW, did you read all the German rocket science books published in the
> 1920s yet?
SNIP
Why should ANYONE wxcept a pathetic nazi wannabe like Arndt - or some
poor devil of a PhD candidate sentenced to producing a thesis on the
early history of rocketry that no one will ever read want to wade
through tracts that are 70 plus years out of date?
> Of course not, you were proven wrong and still are.
SNIP
Sure, ***, except forthe teensy-weeny fact that I can back my
claims with citations.
You attempt "back" yours with asinine rants
You are a prick grasping at straws because you are proven wrong.
SNIP
An excellent self description by Arndt!
Spaceflight came courtesy of the
> Germans,
SNIP
Who - as shown above, with citations - COPIED Goddard's work that he
conducted AFTER he built and the world's FIRST liquid fuel rocket
launch
not Goddard.
SNIP
Bull***.
The Germans built on Goddard's work
Just as the US, USSR and UK built on the German's work.
Isaac Newton put science into perspective this way, "If I have seen
further than most, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of
giants"
The fact that the Germans led both the US and
> Soviet programs
SNIP
Sergei Korolov sounds SO Germanic....
"Korolyov, Sergey Pavlovich
(b. Jan. 12, 1907 [Dec. 30, 1906, Old Style], Zhitomir, Russia--d. Jan.
14, 1966, Moscow), Soviet designer of guided missiles, rockets, and
spacecraft.
Korolyov was educated at the Odessa Building Trades School, the Kiev
Polytechnic Institute, and the Moscow Higher Technical School, where he
studied aeronautical engineering under the celebrated designers Nikolay
Yegorovich Zhukovsky and Andrey Nikolayevich Tupolev. Becoming
interested in rocketry, he and F.A. Tsander formed the Moscow Group for
the Study of Reactive Motion, and in 1933 the group launched the Soviet
Union's first liquid-propellant rocket.
During World War II Korolyov was held under technical arrest but spent
the years designing and testing liquid-fuel rocket boosters for
military aircraft. After the war he modified the German V-2 missile,
increasing its range to about 426 miles (685 km). He also supervised
the test firing of captured V-2 missiles at the Kapustin Yar proving
ground in 1947. In 1953 he began to develop the series of ballistic
missiles that led to the Soviet Union's first intercontinental
ballistic missile. Essentially apolitical, he did not join the
Communist Party until after Stalin's death in 1953.
Korolyov was placed in charge of systems engineering for Soviet launch
vehicles and spacecraft; he directed the design, testing, construction,
and launching of the Vostok, Voskhod, and Soyuz manned spacecraft as
well as of the unmanned spacecraft in the Cosmos, Molniya, and Zond
series. He was the guiding genius behind the Soviet spaceflight program
until his death, and he was buried in the Kremlin wall on Red Square.
In accordance with the Soviet government's space policies, his identity
and role in his nation's space program were not publicly revealed until
after his death."
postwar must have eluded you as well fuckwit.
SNIP
What seems to have eluded you, moron, is the facts of history
AtA, pathetic cretin that he is, thinks (an odd termn to use when
describing AtA), that no one else besides Germans made contributions
On the otherhand, I ackowledge the German contribution, up to the point
where reality cuts out and fantasy begins
> p.s. The German copying of the Bazooka
SNIP
RED LETTER DAY
Arndt admits the Germans copied a weapons design!
the Loon.
SNIP
Obviously a reference to AtA
*** off
> asswipe.
SNIP
Arndt just keeps on mumbling to himself, doesn't he?
.
- References:
- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
- From: Rob Arndt
- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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- Re: The 'Sonic Laser' (HyperAcoustics)
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