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On 3/7/14, 1:01 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 07 Mar 2014 12:48:23 -0500, F*O*A*D wrote: On 3/7/14, 12:26 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 07 Mar 2014 10:40:54 -0500, F*O*A*D wrote: On 3/7/14, 10:30 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 07 Mar 2014 06:43:41 -0500, F*O*A*D wrote: On 3/7/14, 1:23 AM, thumper wrote: On 3/6/2014 10:36 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: Believe it or not one of the most effective types of jammers is also the oldest and first type of RF transmitter used. It's called a spark-gap transmitter and it generates RF interference across a very broad range of frequencies simultaneously. The operation of a spark-gap transmitter is illegal now-a-days for exactly that reason but are simple to make and can be of more than enough power to temporarily wipe out communications to virtually any radio controlled device. And some things you really don't want to interfere with that will draw attention. Controlled bandwidth jammers are pretty easy to make and way less obnoxious. More fun would be a hardened backyard toy chopper of your own, armed with sharp steel rotor blades that could be used to slice and dice the toy choppers of nosy neighbors whose devices violate your air space. Chopper wars! It's the 'Merican way. One can envision the escalation, all the way up to MINI NUKES, available soon from the NRA. Cool idea, FOAD! How about missiles - already available! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNQ_5yd_1AA Sharp steel rotor blades would damage the other aircraft, but would also be damaged by the impact. Plus, if one came flying off while powering up, you could lose your head! The design of the blades on my 'copter allow for strikes against walls, ceilings, furniture, etc, without damage to either. Airborne miniature lasers...or maybe ground to air lasers. I got one of these for the Sig. Don't think it would do much damage to an RC quadcopter though. http://cdn1.cheaperthandirt.com/ctd_...d/9-167035.jpg They're a big help in practicing a steady grip. I have a steady grip. I've never used a laser pointer on a pistol, but I do have a red dot sight I can use on the one semi-auto pistol I've kept. Well, there you go. I still can't keep that red dot in one spot at ten yards. It moves around. I'd like to get steady, like you are, but I'll need to practice. I doubt I could keep a laser pointer very steady, either...too much compensating for minute movements, I think. Much easier using a red dot to sight in on a target, though I admit that the purposes of a red dot vs. a laser sight are not the same. |
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