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olredalert 10-25-2020 09:33 PM

----Lincoln Auto Wreckers was where the 7 mile 67 L88 Corvette ended up from the original owner. It's a long story but the car was bought by a guy to race. He took it apart instantly upon delivery, and sent the engine out to be built. The story stopped there for years. Then the car (without engine and other parts) ended up at L.A.W. From there it went to a collector who slapped it together incorrectly and ended up with one of our best customers at Classic Motors. He was from Wisconsin and eventually sold it to another of our customers who was partners on it with Dave Burroughs of BGold fame. Then it was put back together correctly with the exception of the original engine. The original, to my knowledge was never found. An NOS correctly dated L88 engine was found for it. Never stamped. Can't remember at this moment where it resides today, but Tim G would probably know......Bill S

Keith Seymore 10-25-2020 10:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lee Stewart (Post 1519582)

What's that ugly color on the Garlits car?

K

Lee Stewart 10-25-2020 10:50 PM

https://i.postimg.cc/Wzqh79tM/BB17BXqV.png

Lee Stewart 10-25-2020 10:51 PM

https://i.postimg.cc/BtWt7x1R/BB194kpq.jpg

Lee Stewart 10-25-2020 10:51 PM

https://i.postimg.cc/v84zjbVv/BB194i4B.jpg

Lee Stewart 10-25-2020 10:54 PM

https://i.postimg.cc/XJpwTkpv/ckp4dmtavdq7fizotrx8.png

Season 2 premiers this Friday (10/30) on Disney+. A new episode will appear each Friday afterwards (8 in Season 2)

earntaz 10-26-2020 01:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 70 copo (Post 1519509)
That is the Titanium "Bath tub" that protects the pilot from ground fire. A company I worked for 35 years ago made them to the Mil-Spec for DOD.

Many of the AF fighters have the cockpit profile on the belly of the aircraft. In the case of the Hog, the tub is actually much smaller than the profile on its belly.

Lee Stewart 10-26-2020 04:04 AM

In the heat of aerial battle, simple visual cues can throw off pilots and make dramatic split-second differences. Any camouflage helps, but fighters need to be sleek and maneuverable so design solutions likewise have to be physically unobtrusive.

Working within this limitation, one particularly clever strategy for throwing off enemy planes involves painting a false canopy on the underside of an aircraft. Essentially: the transparent cockpit enclosure on the top of a plane is visually mimicked on its underside — a confused enemy pilot might thus mistake the bottom of a craft for its top in the heat of combat. Like many camouflaging strategies, this design approach borrows from precedents found in nature.


https://i.postimg.cc/02LQ0Rgj/a-10-Thunderbolt.jpg

It is a type of automimicry found, for instance, in fish and other animals. Unlike conventional camouflage, however, that blends with surrounding environments, automimicry involves self-imitation. In the case of creatures, similar markings on the head and tail can confuse a potential predator about the speed and direction of their target — like a fish with a pair of fake eyes toward its rear.

https://i.postimg.cc/9Mr0BWf4/fish-automimic.jpg

Likewise with aircraft, a fake canopy painted on the bottom can create confusion around the craft’s attitude and potential maneuvers.

https://i.postimg.cc/nVWcnbh2/false-canopy-top.jpg

Lee Stewart 10-26-2020 08:09 AM

https://i.postimg.cc/wB65ksJw/download.jpg

Lee Stewart 10-26-2020 08:11 AM

https://i.postimg.cc/50rw17rr/d.jpg


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