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robert meeker

The History Of Army Skydiving « Sky Diving Weblog - 0 views

    • robert meeker
       
      oka site
    • robert meeker
       
      high light at botim of page
  • Today we enjoy skydiving as a breathtaking leisure sport, but its origins lie within the army.  The history books are chock full of dates and occurrences where skydiving has played an important part.
  • Army skydiving had a big role to play in the Second World War, when paratroopers dropped into enemy zones to fight
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  • Skydiving is a natural sport to develop from army training.
  • many expert skydivers found their passion after joining the army.
  • So it seems army skydiving has gone from being a skill developed to get into enemy territory quickly and efficiently, to a spectator sport appreciated by the masses.
Deepankar Sinha

U.S. Army Fact Files - 0 views

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    army factfiles
Deepankar Sinha

United States Army - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    wikipedia us army
Deepankar Sinha

What guns are currently used by the US Army? - Yahoo! Answers - 0 views

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    army guns
Deepankar Sinha

United States Military Weapons of War - 0 views

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    waepons about us army
Bibin John

History Who Really Invented the Airplane Part 2 - Trivia-Library.com - 0 views

  • Ader kept working to perfect his airplane, and finally, with the financial backing of the French Army, he built Avion III, a flying machine similar in design to the Eole but with a longer wingspan and two four-blade propellers. On Oct. 14, 1897, Ader tested his Avion at Satory with a military observer team present. Ader claimed that that day he had again flown, but three witnesses disagreed with each other about whether Ader actually took off and flew the Avion before it crashed.
  • SAMUEL PIERPONT LANGLEY
  • Langley was soon experimenting with models, the first of which were powered by rubber bands
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  • The result was the completion of a series of test planes.
  • Alexander Graham Bell
  • This 30-lb. craft with a steam engine flew for 1 min. 20 sec. at an altitude of 70 to 100 ft. for a distance of 3,000 ft.
  • It was the first successful flight of an unmanned heavier-than-air flying machine. Langley's Aerodrome Number 6 had mechanical problems that day, but it flew 4,200 ft. in November of 1896.
  • In 1898, at President William McKinley's instigation, the U.S. Army awarded Langley $50,000 to develop a plane that would carry a man aloft. In December, 1903, nine days before the Wrights' test at Kitty Hawk, Langley tried out his new gasoline-powered experimental model. A mishap with the catapult caused the airplane to plunge to the bottom of the Potomac, and Langley gave up his experiments after being criticized by the press for the great expense to the taxpayers.
Deepankar Sinha

Army Special Weapon Facilities - 0 views

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    weapon of mass destruction
Deepankar Sinha

US army has laser guns in its sights - tech - 02 September 2008 - New Scientist - 0 views

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    sights laser weapons
Deepankar Sinha

U.S. Army Is Developing Plasma Weapons! - It will be used to stun and disorient the ene... - 0 views

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    Plasma Weapons
Deepankar Sinha

U.S. Army Helicopter Weapons - 0 views

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    helicopters
Deepankar Sinha

List of individual weapons of the U.S. Armed Forces - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    weapons used in us army
anhony battaglia

Aerospace Engineer - Army, Field Operating Office of Office of Secretary Job Posting - 0 views

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    Field Operating Office of Office of Secretary brJob Announcement Number:br AI-FCP-08-477 br brAerospace EngineerbrSALARY RANGE: 42,290.00 - 52,046.00 USD per yearOPEN PERIOD: Monday, February 04, 2008br to Tuesday, September 30, 2008brSERIES & GRADE: GS-0861-07/07POSITION
Ashley T

Working dogs, handlers share special bond - 0 views

  • Working dogs, handlers share special bond
  • A military working dog team here is waiting to find out whether a canine warrior will be awarded the Combat Action Badge.
  • Besides training, the handlers also care for the dogs.
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  • The emotional bond between handler and dog is a strong one.
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    website
Ashley T

MILITARY DOGS - 0 views

  • Dogs have been a part of military life for as long as there have been armies.
  • dog companions as part of camp life
  • man's best friend even when the man is a soldier.
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  • began before World War I
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    website
Deepankar Sinha

U.S. Army Weapons - AAManual - 0 views

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    aamanual weapons
robert meeker

Skydiving-Guide.com - History of skydiving - 0 views

    • robert meeker
       
      best site yet!!!!!!
    • robert meeker
       
      very good web site
  • Eventhough parachutes seem to have been used in China since the 1100s and that Leonardo da Vinci of Italy had invented devices similar to parachutes nowadays, worldwide skydivers state that the French inventor André-Jacques Garnerin is the one to make the first parachute. In 1797 he jumped from a balloon over Paris using a parachute and kept on making other jumps in France and also in England.
  • In World War I , that is between 1914 and 1918, the military began using parachutes in their missions
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  • Barnstormers, who were in fact aerial showmen, fired the imagination of aviators and skydivers after World War I. The barnstormers showed airborne performances and parachute jumps and travelled every year throughout the United States. Competitions began as a result of the increase of parachuting awareness. The first contest of accuracy landing was held in 1930 in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).
  • The military used paratroopers in World War II , that is between 1939 and 1945. The paratroopers were parachute-equipped soldiers and had the most famous use on D-Day, the invasion of Normandy (Normandie), France, on June 6, 1944
  • The surplus of nylon parachute equipment after World War II and the fact that the U.S. Army had started the first military sport parachuting clubs, set the grounds of skydiving in the United Dtates, as a pleasant and relaxing activity. The same thing happened in many other countries, and thus , the first parachuting world championships were organized in 1951 in Yugoslavia.
  • Little by little, in the mid 1960, systems specially made for sport parachutes took the place of the military surplus systems. Parachutists started to call this activity skydiving and calling themselves skydivers. In order to improve the opening characteristics and to make them more maneuverable, there were a few sport modifications to military parachutes. A French Canadian kite builder, Domina Jalbert, developed in 1964 the the ram-air design, that has set the tendencies for parachutes in skydiving from then on.
  • Sport skydivers constantly tested new and revolutionary designs and materials. Apart from sport uses , there have also been designed sport-generated designs like military HAHO (high altitude, high opening) designs, smoke jumping designs and many types of equipment for two-person and four-person tandem jumping. The military HAHO designs allowed soldiers to silently fly over large areas. The smoke jumping designs aimed to put firefighters into remote forest fires from low altitude.
  • Skydiving has kept on becoming more and more popular after the late 1980s, and this is because the equipment, that is reliable, lightweight, and easy-to-operate, picture this sport as accesible to many people. The U.S. president George H. W. Bush also jumped , thus increasing the popularity of skydiving.
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