I don’t make memes but if I did right now it would be a pawn stars “best I can do is ghey street fighter”This thread, and BBI's Portugal thread has me itching like a tweaker right now...
I don’t make memes but if I did right now it would be a pawn stars “best I can do is ghey street fighter”This thread, and BBI's Portugal thread has me itching like a tweaker right now...
I don’t make memes but if I did right now it would be a pawn stars “best I can do is ghey street fighter”
@jamil you started this.
Oh. You’re very welcome. I try my best to serve INGO.@jamil you started this.
I was there with the inaugural coed class. It wouldn't have mattered. They were pretty much all dating upper-classmen by the end of Orientation. (Only mostly an exaggeration.)I was accepted at Rose - too small and no girls (at that time).
My (dearly departed) Dad was an electronic and software engineer who came up the way engineers can't anymore. Civilian and Army technical school, technician, draftsman working for an engineer, apprentice to an engineer, then an engineer. 20 years at Bendix doing space and missile stuff including parts of the Saturn V and Talos missile guidance. 25+ years at Miles (then Bayer) designing medical devices including the memory and self-reporting features on the Glucometer. He and his team obtained a few patents for that work including for the algorithm that runs the insulin pumps that test the blood and inject insulin automatically. It's just that it took until recently for the tech to get small enough to be wearable rather than rolling around on a cart.Two of my friends are Purdue Engineering Grads. The ball busting is huge, Im like what happened, Did Maryland College Park and Hulman turn you down?
I once gave one a tee shirt that I had printed,
Perdue Engineering.
It was money well spent.
Interesting. I did a stint at both Rose and PU. Add in a junior college too.Now you’re just bragging.
Rose turned me down, I had to make a last minute decision between Wabash and Purdue engineering, and quit Purdue after one year.
Hence the screen name.
Go Fightin' Engineers!Dad graduated Rose (Poly) in 1942 as a civil engineer. He was also a fullback at 155 lbs.
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He was also referred to as "155 lbs. of human dynamite".Go Fightin' Engineers!
I have felt your fathers perdue pain before myself. He and I would have been friends.My (dearly departed) Dad was an electronic and software engineer who came up the way engineers can't anymore. Civilian and Army technical school, technician, draftsman working for an engineer, apprentice to an engineer, then an engineer. 20 years at Bendix doing space and missile stuff including parts of the Saturn V and Talos missile guidance. 25+ years at Miles (then Bayer) designing medical devices including the memory and self-reporting features on the Glucometer. He and his team obtained a few patents for that work including for the algorithm that runs the insulin pumps that test the blood and inject insulin automatically. It's just that it took until recently for the tech to get small enough to be wearable rather than rolling around on a cart.
I say all this to say this....sure, as to his work, he was a crotchety old man...even when not old, but I never heard him say much positive about Purdue engineers. Granted, the ones he worked for were engineers with MBA and were brought in to manage more than engineer. My Dad wasn't a complainer...except when it came to managers (without any patents) who were telling the guys who had been there and done that to do things they tried and rejected decades ago.
That is one awesome helmet too.He was also referred to as "155 lbs. of human dynamite".
Concussions shmoncussions...That is one awesome helmet too.
Back in steerage or business or first?I wonder which airline serves the best beef for dinner?
And go...
Paul Kersey approves of that choiceIn the early 80's, took a trip to St Thomas,
Back then you flew into San Juan and took a prop hop to St Thomas.
The hops we took were on Prinair, it was more fun that a piston DC 3 ride to Greenland.
Blue smoke, stress cracks that escaped the riveted repair and a 2,000 ft mandated ceiling.
What kind of a/c? I've flown some where 130 would be uncomfortably slow and some where 130 would be cruising at climb power - and a couple that could only get to 130 going straight downFlying a plane probably get boring for the pros, but when ATC try's to divert you away from Hopkins in Cleveland to Burke because of the weather and then tells you you will have to maintain 130 knots on approach if you want in, and you take it, solid intruments almost all the way to the ground and you get in, you feel like the baddest things walking on two legs for a while. I miss that ego elixer, it was good while it lasted.
What kind of a/c? I've flown some where 130 would be uncomfortably slow and some where 130 would be cruising at climb power - and a couple that could only get to 130 going straight down