@BondeDoNikeAir.XATUBAMAN
I think you meant helo
Please write correctly before you post.
Dumbass.
@K-かみ
I clearly understand the fact that anime fangays couldn't count.
@信仰
Your thanks worth no penny
You penny worth my thanks though.
Also, read before you post, as ignoring the numbers only made you look clumsy and foolish.
I just don't wanna put sarcastic quotes on that yellow headed smiley adult minion.
193
@captain KEEL
I don't mind if you share your dog food though
@SirIronSights
Still lost
How sad.
@Yami Yugi
Must be a yu gi oh fangay.
Do you like your beloved card game dying?
If you're not a fangay
You are dying.
@Positivity Spreader
*There is no such word such as Positivity, change your name to Positiveness
Let's do this after your name changed ;)
I believe you will after it actually reach 1k
Dumbass, as always.
198
My blood cries out for the vengeance of my people's blood, which can only be repaid with at least twice as much blood! Or maybe three times as much blood!
Like if you went to hell, and it was full of blood, and that blood was on fire, and it was raining blood, then maybe that would be enough blood! Eh… but probably not.
200
You wanna get the undead? I'll tell you how to get the undead. One of their men pulls a knife, your man pulls a gun.
They send your man to the hospital, you send their man to the morgue. That's how you get the undead.
Yes, pandas will dominate dotabuff
Lead dotabuff to a new era
And make dotabuff great again!
If that doesn't happen
Blame Cptn.Canuck
He didn't manage the forum well.
Pandaface is offering free consultation
about how to make dotabuff great again
If you are interested
Count to a million.
And when that happens
Nothing happens.
206 I commented like 4 pages back on this thread. Disproving your stance against moderators, but I let this live. We count down and that's the way life is now son.
@Cptn.Canuck
I can easily sue you for child abuse.
Thou shall beg may 4 mercay
Or shall I, the pandaface, lay judgement on lu.
Anyways,
You're so dumb that you only noticed life is always counting down at this age.
213
213 (group)
213 (pronounced "Two One Three") was an American hip hop trio supergroup from Long Beach, California composed of Snoop Dogg, Warren G and Nate Dogg. The name derives from Los Angeles' original telephone area code 213, which served the city of Long Beach at the time of the band's formation.[1][2]
213
Origin
Long Beach, California, U.S.
Genres
West Coast hip hop, gangsta rap, G-funk
Occupation(s)
Rapping
Years active
1991–2011
Labels
TVT, Doggystyle Records, Priority Records, Death Row Records
Past members
Warren G
Snoop Dogg
Nate Dogg (deceased)
Background
Discography
Singles
Other charted songs
Guest appearances
References
Last edited 16 days ago by Fusionn1
RELATED ARTICLES
@SubscripToPeuDiPay
214 is a composite number and a 37-gonal number.
214!! − 1 is a 205-digit prime number.
The 11th perfect number 2106×(2107−1) has 214 divisors.
In other fields
214 is a song by Rivermaya.
214 Aschera is a Main belt asteroid.
E214 is the E number of Ethylparaben.
The Bell 214 is a helicopter.
The Tupolev 214 is an airliner.
Type 214 submarine
There are several highways numbered 214.
Form DD 214 documents discharge from the U.S. Armed Forces.
214 is also:
The first area code of metropolitan Dallas, Texas
The number of bones in a normal human skeleton according to Sarah in Terminator 2: Judgment Day
The number of Chinese radicals for the writing of Chinese characters according to the 1716 Kangxi Dictionary.
SMTP status code for help message
The Dewey Decimal Classification for Theodicy (the problem of evil).
The year AD 214 or 214 BC
Let's hear the song 214:
Am I real?
Do the words I speak before you
Make you feel
That the love I have for you
Will see no ending?
Well, if you look into my eyes
Then you should know
That there is nothing here to doubt
Nothing to fear
And you can lay your questions down
'Cause if you'll hold me
We can fade into the night
And you'll know
The world could die
And everything may lie
Still you shan't cry
'Cause time may pass
But longer than it'll last
I'll be by your side
Take my hand
And gently close your eyes
So you could understand
That there's no greater love tonight
Than what I've for you
Well, if you feel the same way for me
Then let go
We can journey to a garden no one knows
Life is short, my darling
Tell me that you love me
So we can fade into the night
And you'll know
The world could die
And everything may lie
Still you shan't cry
'Cause time may pass
And everything won't last
But I'll be by your side
Forever by your side
So you won't cry
218
@SirIronSights
Pandas can never be estimated with worth because their value is highest than bill gate's net worth
Opezdals are extremely low on demand that makes them price-less.
They can never be estimated by their price as it's just too less to be counted with humanoid eyes. The seller may even need to pay the buyers for buying them.
No one wants them,
Even if they do,
They eat them as food.
221
221 series
The 221 series (221系 221-kei) is a suburban electric multiple unit (EMU) train type operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in the Kansai Region of Japan since March 1989.[1][2]
221 series
JR West 221 Yamatoji rapid.jpg
A 221 series formation in March 2008
Manufacturer
JR-West Gotō Works, JR-West Takatori Works, Hitachi, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Kinki Sharyo
Built at
Kobe, Yonago, Kudamatsu, Higashiōsaka
Replaced
113 series, 117 series
Constructed
1989–1992
Entered service
March 1989
Refurbishment
2012–
Number built
474 vehicles
Number in service
474 vehicles
Formation
2/4/6/8 cars per trainset
Operator(s)
JR-West
Depot(s)
Aboshi, Nara, Kyoto
Line(s) served
Tōkaidō Main Line, Sanyō Main Line, Hokuriku Main Line, Kosei Line, Akō Line, Bantan Line, San'in Main Line, Osaka Loop Line, Nara Line, Yamatoji Line, Wakayama Line, Sakurai Line
Specifications
Car body construction
Steel
Car length
20,000 mm (65 ft 7 in)
Width
2,950 mm (9 ft 8 in)
Doors
3 pairs per side
Maximum speed
120 km/h (75 mph)
Traction system
Resistor control + field system superimposed field excitation control
Electric system(s)
1,500 V DC overhead line
Current collection method
WPS27 scissors-type pantograph
Braking system(s)
Regenerative brake, electronically controlled pneumatic brakes, snow-resistant brake
Safety system(s)
ATS-P, ATS-SW
Coupling system
Shibata-Type
Multiple working
223/225 series
Track gauge
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Operations
Formations
Interior
History Edit
The first 221 series trains were introduced from the start of the revised timetable in March 1989.[2]
The 221 series received the Laurel Prize in 1990.[4]
Refurbishment Edit
The first refurbished set, K12, in December 2012
From December 2012, a programme of refurbishment started, which will ultimately cover the entire fleet of 474 vehicles.[5] Interior improvements include new universal access toilets, provision of wheelchair spaces, and flip-up seating next to the doorways.[5] The first refurbished set, 4-car set K12, was returned to revenue service on 11 January 2013.[6]
References
Last edited 4 months ago by Redalert2fan
RELATED ARTICLES
207 series
Japanese train type
683 series
Japanese train type
225 series
Japanese train type
Wikipedia
Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
Terms of UsePrivacyDesktop
223 (two hundred [and] twenty-three) is the natural number between 222 and 224.
223 is a prime number. It is the smallest prime for which the two nearest primes on either side of it are 16 units apart. Among the 720 permutations of the numbers from 1 to 6, exactly 223 of them have the property that at least one of the numbers is fixed in place by the permutation and the numbers less than it and greater than it are separately permuted among themselves.
In connection with Waring's problem, 223 requires the maximum number of terms (37 terms) when expressed as a sum of positive fifth powers, and is the only number that requires that many terms
In addition as you may want a gun tomorrow,
.223 Remington
223 Remington.jpg
A variety of .223 Remington cartridges and a .308 Winchester (right) for comparison. Bullets in .223 cartridges (left to right): Montana Gold 55 grain full metal jacket, Sierra 55 grain Spitzer boat tail, Nosler/Winchester 55 grain combined technology, Hornady 60 grain V-Max, Barnes 62 grain Tipped Triple-Shock X, Nosler 69 grain hollow point boat tail, Swift 75 grain Scirocco II.
Type Rifle
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer Remington Arms
Designed 1962
Produced 1964–present
Variants .223 Ackley Improved, 5.56×45mm NATO
Specifications
Parent case .222 Remington
Case type Rimless, bottleneck
Bullet diameter 0.224 in (5.7 mm)
Neck diameter 0.253 in (6.4 mm)
Shoulder diameter 0.354 in (9.0 mm)
Base diameter 0.376 in (9.6 mm)
Rim diameter 0.378 in (9.6 mm)
Rim thickness 0.045 in (1.1 mm)
Case length 1.76 in (45 mm)
Overall length 2.26 in (57 mm)
Rifling twist 1 in 12 inch (military style rifles use 1:7 to 1:10 to stabilize longer bullets)
Primer type Small rifle
Maximum pressure (SAAMI) 55,000 psi (380 MPa)
Maximum pressure (CIP) 62,366 psi (430.00 MPa)
Maximum CUP 52000 CUP
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
36 gr (2 g) JHP 3,750 ft/s (1,140 m/s) 1,124 ft⋅lbf (1,524 J)
55 (3.5 g) Nosler ballistic tip 3,240 ft/s (990 m/s) 1,282 ft⋅lbf (1,738 J)
60 (3.9 g) Nosler partition 3,160 ft/s (960 m/s) 1,330 ft⋅lbf (1,800 J)
69 (4.48 g) BTHP 2,950 ft/s (900 m/s) 1,333 ft⋅lbf (1,807 J)
77 (5 g) BTHP 2,750 ft/s (840 m/s) 1,293 ft⋅lbf (1,753 J)
Test barrel length: 24 inches (61 cm)
Source(s): [1][2]
The .223 Remington (a.k.a.: 5.56×45mm or M193) is a rifle cartridge developed in 1957, for the ArmaLite AR-15. In 1964, the ArmaLite AR-15 was adopted by the United States Army as the M16 rifle and it would later become the standard U.S. Military rifle. The military version of the cartridge uses a 55 gr full metal jacket bullet and was designated M193. In 1980, the .223 Remington was transformed into a new cartridge, a 62 gr full metal jacket bullet with a seven grain steel core for better penetration and designated 5.56×45mm NATO (a.k.a.: SS109 or M855).
The development of the cartridge which eventually became the .223 Remington was intrinsically linked to the development of a new lightweight combat rifle. The cartridge and rifle were developed by Fairchild Industries, Remington Arms and several engineers working toward a goal developed by U.S. Continental Army Command (CONARC). Early development work began in 1957. A project to create a small caliber high velocity (SCHV) firearm was created. Eugene Stoner of ArmaLite was invited to scale down the AR-10 (7.62×51mm NATO) design. Winchester was also invited to participate.[4][3] The parameters requested by CONARC were:
.22 caliber
Bullet exceeding supersonic speed at 500 yards [4][3]
Rifle weight 6 lbs
Magazine capacity of 20 rounds
Select fire for both semi-automatic and fully automatic use
Penetration of US steel helmet one side, at 500 yards
Penetration of .135" steel plate at 500 yards
Accuracy and ballistics equal to M2 ball ammunition (.30-06 M1 Garand)
Wounding ability equal to the M1 Carbine[3]
Springfield Armory's Earle Harvey lengthened the .222 Remington cartridge case to meet the requirements. It was then known as the .224 Springfield. Concurrently with the SCHV project Springfield armory was developing a 7.62 mm rifle. Harvey was ordered to cease all work on the SCHV to avoid any competition of resources.
Eugene Stoner of ArmaLite (a division of Fairchild Industries) had been advised to produce a scaled down version of the 7.62×51mm NATO AR-10 design. In May 1957 Stoner gave a live fire demonstration of the prototype of the ArmaLite AR-15 for General Wyman. As a result, CONARC ordered rifles to test. Stoner and Sierra Bullet's Frank Snow began work on the .222 Remington cartridge. Using a ballistic calculator they determined that a 55 grain bullet would have to be fired at 3,300 ft/s to achieve the 500 yard performance necessary.[3]
Robert Hutton (technical editor of Guns and Ammo magazine) started development of a powder load to reach the 3,300 ft/s goal. He used DuPont IMR4198, IMR3031 and an Olin powder to work up loads. Testing was done with a Remington 722 rifle with a 22" Apex barrel. During a public demonstration the round successfully penetrated the US steel helmet as required, but testing showed chamber pressures to be excessively high.[4][3]
Stoner contacted both Winchester and Remington about increasing the case capacity. Remington created a larger cartridge called the .222 Special. This cartridge is loaded with DuPont IMR4475 powder.[3]
During parallel testing of the T44E4 (future M14) and the ArmaLite AR-15 in 1958 the T44E4 experienced 16 failures per 1,000 rounds fired compared to 6.1 for the ArmaLite AR-15.[3] Because of several different .222 caliber cartridges which were being developed for the SCHV project, the .222 Special was renamed .223 Remington. In May 1959 a report was produced stating that five to seven man squads armed with ArmaLite AR-15 rifles have a higher hit probability than 11 man squads armed with the M-14 rifle. At an Independence Day picnic air force general Curtis Le May tested the ArmaLite AR-15 and was very impressed with it. He ordered a number of them to replace M2 carbines that were in use by the air force. In November of that year, testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground showed the ArmaLite AR-15 failure rate had declined to 2.5/1,000, resulting in the ArmaLite AR-15 being approved for air force trials.[3]
In 1961 a marksmanship testing compared the AR-15 and M-14. 43 % of ArmaLite AR-15 shooters achieved Expert while only 22 % of M-14 rifle shooters did. Le May ordered 80,000 rifles.[3] In July 1962, operational testing ended with a recommendation for adoption of the ArmaLite AR-15 rifle chambered in .223 Remington.[3] In September 1963 the .223 Remington cartridge was officially accepted and named "Cartridge, 5.56 mm ball, M193". The following year, the ArmaLite AR-15 was adopted by the United States Army as the M16 rifle and it would later become the standard U.S. Military rifle. The specification included a Remington-designed bullet and the use of IMR4475 powder which resulted in a muzzle velocity of 3,250 ft/s and a chamber pressure of 52,000psi.[3]
In the spring of 1962 Remington submitted the specifications of the .223 Remington to the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute (SAAMI). In December 1963, Remington introduced its first rifle chambered for .223 Remnington a Model 760 rifle.
.223 Remington maximum C.I.P. cartridge dimensions. All sizes in millimeters (mm).[6]
Americans would define the shoulder angle at alpha/2 = 23 degrees. The common rifling twist rate for this cartridge is 305 mm (1 in 12 in), 6 grooves, Ø lands = 5.56 millimetres (0.219 in), Ø grooves = 5.69 millimetres (0.224 in), land width = 1.88 millimetres (0.074 in) and the primer type is small rifle.
According to the official C.I.P. (Commission Internationale Permanente pour l'Epreuve des Armes à Feu Portatives) rulings the .223 Remington can handle up to 430.00 MPa (62,366 psi) Pmax piezo pressure. In C.I.P. regulated countries every rifle cartridge combo has to be proofed at 125% of this maximum C.I.P. pressure to certify for sale to consumers.[6] This means that .223 Remington chambered arms in C.I.P. regulated countries are currently (2016) proof tested at 537.50 MPa (77,958 psi) PE piezo pressure. This is equal to the NATO maximum service pressure guideline for the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge.
The SAAMI pressure limit for the .223 Remington is set at 379.212 MPa (55,000 psi), piezo pressure.[7][8] Remington submitted .223 Remington specifications to SAAMI in 1964.[3] The original diagrams use English Inch measurements.
Barrel length helps determine a specific cartridge's muzzle velocity. A longer barrel will typically yield a greater muzzle velocity, while a short barrel will yield a lower one. The first AR-15 rifles used a barrel length of 20". In the case of the .223 Remington (M193) ammunition loses or gains approximately 25.7 feet-per-second for each inch of barrel length, while 5.56×45 mm NATO (M855) loses or gains 30.3 feet-per-second per inch of barrel length.
The .223 Remington has become one of the most popular cartridges and is currently used in a wide range of semi-automatic and manual action rifles and even handguns; such as the Colt AR-15, Ruger Mini-14, Remington Model 700, Remington XP-100, etc.[17][18] The popularity of .223 Remington is so great, that in the US it virtually eliminated all other similar .22 caliber center-fire varmint rifle cartridges.[19][20]
It is commercially loaded with 0.224 inch (5.7 mm) diameter jacketed bullets, with weights ranging from 35 to 85 grains (2.27 g to 5.8 g), with the most common loading by far being 55 grains (3.6 g). Ninety and ninety-five grain Sierra Matchking bullets are available for reloaders.
Also,
Year 223 (CCXXIII) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Maximus and Aelianus (or, less frequently, year 976 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 223 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
That's all for today
Greetings!
No more positivity I guess.
Positiveness is the real deal.
But you can't seem to handle the pressure/ too disabled to type positiveness
;)
Pandaface is giving free medicine
Appreciate it.
29 hmmmm? thanks
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ I can spam on this tread again つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
192
@BondeDoNikeAir.XATUBAMAN
I think you meant helo
Please write correctly before you post.
Dumbass.
@K-かみ
I clearly understand the fact that anime fangays couldn't count.
@信仰
Your thanks worth no penny
You penny worth my thanks though.
Also, read before you post, as ignoring the numbers only made you look clumsy and foolish.
I just don't wanna put sarcastic quotes on that yellow headed smiley adult minion.
@SirIronSights
I'm waiting.
Oh wait...
You can do that?
200 wow even ken posted here
the gift that keeps on giving
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ +=======>
The real opezdal warriors unite against the panda つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
999
lol how is it little panda? how do you like your* rule being violated? do you like it?
1000
Let's do this
193
@captain KEEL
I don't mind if you share your dog food though
@SirIronSights
Still lost
How sad.
@Yami Yugi
Must be a yu gi oh fangay.
Do you like your beloved card game dying?
If you're not a fangay
You are dying.
@Positivity Spreader
*There is no such word such as Positivity, change your name to Positiveness
Let's do this after your name changed ;)
I believe you will after it actually reach 1k
Dumbass, as always.
194
Roast me please so Ima roast you like pork chop
#Freshindeed
Slowly getting there
195
196
@Alex
Just like how you walk.
197
Keep the roastin' on
198
My blood cries out for the vengeance of my people's blood, which can only be repaid with at least twice as much blood! Or maybe three times as much blood!
Like if you went to hell, and it was full of blood, and that blood was on fire, and it was raining blood, then maybe that would be enough blood! Eh… but probably not.
199
@GhostDE
Bloodseeker is coming for you.
Panda too.
do you know what "countdown" means? 1000001
200
You wanna get the undead? I'll tell you how to get the undead. One of their men pulls a knife, your man pulls a gun.
They send your man to the hospital, you send their man to the morgue. That's how you get the undead.
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ opezdal will rule this world, till the mods mute him again つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ I bet panda isn't so powerful that the mods have to stop him
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
201
@the drubbing giver
Do you know what disgusting is?
Your profile.
@GhostDE
Undying?
I thought you're dead.
@SirIronSights
Opezdal is already muted when he was killed by a panda, kungfu panda
the gods in this forums have to mute me for a couple of days cause I'm too strong for any mortal to face.
202
Come bois
Beat the panda
203
202. This is now a count down to 0 thread.
201 help captain cuck take over the thread
200 will this ever end?
204
@Feachairu
Now shall I approve you as my slave.
At least you supported.
@Cptn.Canuck
I still get more comments and attention and that's all a panda needs.
Wait shit, are you a moderator?
@captain KEEL
Support me and those dog food stored in my fridge will be yours.
@Positivity Spreader
No.
205
Ignoring Cptn.Canuck, a dotabuff staff member makes panda a honorable keyboard warrior.
206
Shall I lead the panda warriors to whack Cptn.Canuck's ass,
Or shall thou be a panda warrior instead?
207
Cptn.Canuck will never beat the mistake he/she created.
The only way to stop pandaface is to delete dotabuff.
And thou shall obey to thy pandaface
Or shall I curse thou to hell.
208
Yes, pandas will dominate dotabuff
Lead dotabuff to a new era
And make dotabuff great again!
If that doesn't happen
Blame Cptn.Canuck
He didn't manage the forum well.
Pandaface is offering free consultation
about how to make dotabuff great again
If you are interested
Count to a million.
And when that happens
Nothing happens.
207 i join panda army only if you link me a cute panda profile pic
p.s. *it has to be an angry panda*
206 I commented like 4 pages back on this thread. Disproving your stance against moderators, but I let this live. We count down and that's the way life is now son.
How to git vhs
how to git gf
209
@captain KEEL
Here is it!
Your profile pic.
@Cptn.Canuck
I can easily sue you for child abuse.
Thou shall beg may 4 mercay
Or shall I, the pandaface, lay judgement on lu.
Anyways,
You're so dumb that you only noticed life is always counting down at this age.
@fx
Comment 210
@captain KEEL
Don't eat dog food.
210
@fx
Just count.
211
Thread is good
212
Panda is good
213
213 (group)
213 (pronounced "Two One Three") was an American hip hop trio supergroup from Long Beach, California composed of Snoop Dogg, Warren G and Nate Dogg. The name derives from Los Angeles' original telephone area code 213, which served the city of Long Beach at the time of the band's formation.[1][2]
213
Origin
Long Beach, California, U.S.
Genres
West Coast hip hop, gangsta rap, G-funk
Occupation(s)
Rapping
Years active
1991–2011
Labels
TVT, Doggystyle Records, Priority Records, Death Row Records
Past members
Warren G
Snoop Dogg
Nate Dogg (deceased)
Background
Discography
Singles
Other charted songs
Guest appearances
References
Last edited 16 days ago by Fusionn1
RELATED ARTICLES
214
@SubscripToPeuDiPay
214 is a composite number and a 37-gonal number.
214!! − 1 is a 205-digit prime number.
The 11th perfect number 2106×(2107−1) has 214 divisors.
In other fields
214 is a song by Rivermaya.
214 Aschera is a Main belt asteroid.
E214 is the E number of Ethylparaben.
The Bell 214 is a helicopter.
The Tupolev 214 is an airliner.
Type 214 submarine
There are several highways numbered 214.
Form DD 214 documents discharge from the U.S. Armed Forces.
214 is also:
The first area code of metropolitan Dallas, Texas
The number of bones in a normal human skeleton according to Sarah in Terminator 2: Judgment Day
The number of Chinese radicals for the writing of Chinese characters according to the 1716 Kangxi Dictionary.
SMTP status code for help message
The Dewey Decimal Classification for Theodicy (the problem of evil).
The year AD 214 or 214 BC
Let's hear the song 214:
Am I real?
Do the words I speak before you
Make you feel
That the love I have for you
Will see no ending?
Well, if you look into my eyes
Then you should know
That there is nothing here to doubt
Nothing to fear
And you can lay your questions down
'Cause if you'll hold me
We can fade into the night
And you'll know
The world could die
And everything may lie
Still you shan't cry
'Cause time may pass
But longer than it'll last
I'll be by your side
Take my hand
And gently close your eyes
So you could understand
That there's no greater love tonight
Than what I've for you
Well, if you feel the same way for me
Then let go
We can journey to a garden no one knows
Life is short, my darling
Tell me that you love me
So we can fade into the night
And you'll know
The world could die
And everything may lie
Still you shan't cry
'Cause time may pass
And everything won't last
But I'll be by your side
Forever by your side
So you won't cry
Mine is better.
Yours sucked.
215
215
199
Counting down actually a non violation to the very tittle, but hey, Panda loves to be violated
so, its 216!
let's violate him some more!
198. Better fall in line panda boy or i'll make this a spiderman thread and we're all going down in flames.
217
@Yami Yugi
I don't like being violated by shitstain.
Please get a bath before violating panda, you're too stinky.
I give you my respect as you mentioned the number 216
But still, you're a shitstain.
@Cptn.Canuck
At least you're dying with me, in flames.
Thank me now guys, I just sacrificed myself to kill the only mod alive, now you guys are free to talk shit!
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ pandas are worthless つ ◕_◕ ༽つ
つ ◕_◕ ༽つ opezdal is pricelessつ ◕_◕ ༽つ
218
@SirIronSights
Pandas can never be estimated with worth because their value is highest than bill gate's net worth
Opezdals are extremely low on demand that makes them price-less.
They can never be estimated by their price as it's just too less to be counted with humanoid eyes. The seller may even need to pay the buyers for buying them.
No one wants them,
Even if they do,
They eat them as food.
219
This is not a disasta thread
It's a living loving fairy god mother that cures your sickness
220
220
221
221 series
The 221 series (221系 221-kei) is a suburban electric multiple unit (EMU) train type operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR-West) in the Kansai Region of Japan since March 1989.[1][2]
221 series
JR West 221 Yamatoji rapid.jpg
A 221 series formation in March 2008
Manufacturer
JR-West Gotō Works, JR-West Takatori Works, Hitachi, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Kinki Sharyo
Built at
Kobe, Yonago, Kudamatsu, Higashiōsaka
Replaced
113 series, 117 series
Constructed
1989–1992
Entered service
March 1989
Refurbishment
2012–
Number built
474 vehicles
Number in service
474 vehicles
Formation
2/4/6/8 cars per trainset
Operator(s)
JR-West
Depot(s)
Aboshi, Nara, Kyoto
Line(s) served
Tōkaidō Main Line, Sanyō Main Line, Hokuriku Main Line, Kosei Line, Akō Line, Bantan Line, San'in Main Line, Osaka Loop Line, Nara Line, Yamatoji Line, Wakayama Line, Sakurai Line
Specifications
Car body construction
Steel
Car length
20,000 mm (65 ft 7 in)
Width
2,950 mm (9 ft 8 in)
Doors
3 pairs per side
Maximum speed
120 km/h (75 mph)
Traction system
Resistor control + field system superimposed field excitation control
Electric system(s)
1,500 V DC overhead line
Current collection method
WPS27 scissors-type pantograph
Braking system(s)
Regenerative brake, electronically controlled pneumatic brakes, snow-resistant brake
Safety system(s)
ATS-P, ATS-SW
Coupling system
Shibata-Type
Multiple working
223/225 series
Track gauge
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Operations
Formations
Interior
History Edit
The first 221 series trains were introduced from the start of the revised timetable in March 1989.[2]
The 221 series received the Laurel Prize in 1990.[4]
Refurbishment Edit
The first refurbished set, K12, in December 2012
From December 2012, a programme of refurbishment started, which will ultimately cover the entire fleet of 474 vehicles.[5] Interior improvements include new universal access toilets, provision of wheelchair spaces, and flip-up seating next to the doorways.[5] The first refurbished set, 4-car set K12, was returned to revenue service on 11 January 2013.[6]
References
Last edited 4 months ago by Redalert2fan
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223
223 (two hundred [and] twenty-three) is the natural number between 222 and 224.
223 is a prime number. It is the smallest prime for which the two nearest primes on either side of it are 16 units apart. Among the 720 permutations of the numbers from 1 to 6, exactly 223 of them have the property that at least one of the numbers is fixed in place by the permutation and the numbers less than it and greater than it are separately permuted among themselves.
In connection with Waring's problem, 223 requires the maximum number of terms (37 terms) when expressed as a sum of positive fifth powers, and is the only number that requires that many terms
In addition as you may want a gun tomorrow,
.223 Remington
223 Remington.jpg
A variety of .223 Remington cartridges and a .308 Winchester (right) for comparison. Bullets in .223 cartridges (left to right): Montana Gold 55 grain full metal jacket, Sierra 55 grain Spitzer boat tail, Nosler/Winchester 55 grain combined technology, Hornady 60 grain V-Max, Barnes 62 grain Tipped Triple-Shock X, Nosler 69 grain hollow point boat tail, Swift 75 grain Scirocco II.
Type Rifle
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer Remington Arms
Designed 1962
Produced 1964–present
Variants .223 Ackley Improved, 5.56×45mm NATO
Specifications
Parent case .222 Remington
Case type Rimless, bottleneck
Bullet diameter 0.224 in (5.7 mm)
Neck diameter 0.253 in (6.4 mm)
Shoulder diameter 0.354 in (9.0 mm)
Base diameter 0.376 in (9.6 mm)
Rim diameter 0.378 in (9.6 mm)
Rim thickness 0.045 in (1.1 mm)
Case length 1.76 in (45 mm)
Overall length 2.26 in (57 mm)
Rifling twist 1 in 12 inch (military style rifles use 1:7 to 1:10 to stabilize longer bullets)
Primer type Small rifle
Maximum pressure (SAAMI) 55,000 psi (380 MPa)
Maximum pressure (CIP) 62,366 psi (430.00 MPa)
Maximum CUP 52000 CUP
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
36 gr (2 g) JHP 3,750 ft/s (1,140 m/s) 1,124 ft⋅lbf (1,524 J)
55 (3.5 g) Nosler ballistic tip 3,240 ft/s (990 m/s) 1,282 ft⋅lbf (1,738 J)
60 (3.9 g) Nosler partition 3,160 ft/s (960 m/s) 1,330 ft⋅lbf (1,800 J)
69 (4.48 g) BTHP 2,950 ft/s (900 m/s) 1,333 ft⋅lbf (1,807 J)
77 (5 g) BTHP 2,750 ft/s (840 m/s) 1,293 ft⋅lbf (1,753 J)
Test barrel length: 24 inches (61 cm)
Source(s): [1][2]
The .223 Remington (a.k.a.: 5.56×45mm or M193) is a rifle cartridge developed in 1957, for the ArmaLite AR-15. In 1964, the ArmaLite AR-15 was adopted by the United States Army as the M16 rifle and it would later become the standard U.S. Military rifle. The military version of the cartridge uses a 55 gr full metal jacket bullet and was designated M193. In 1980, the .223 Remington was transformed into a new cartridge, a 62 gr full metal jacket bullet with a seven grain steel core for better penetration and designated 5.56×45mm NATO (a.k.a.: SS109 or M855).
The development of the cartridge which eventually became the .223 Remington was intrinsically linked to the development of a new lightweight combat rifle. The cartridge and rifle were developed by Fairchild Industries, Remington Arms and several engineers working toward a goal developed by U.S. Continental Army Command (CONARC). Early development work began in 1957. A project to create a small caliber high velocity (SCHV) firearm was created. Eugene Stoner of ArmaLite was invited to scale down the AR-10 (7.62×51mm NATO) design. Winchester was also invited to participate.[4][3] The parameters requested by CONARC were:
.22 caliber
Bullet exceeding supersonic speed at 500 yards [4][3]
Rifle weight 6 lbs
Magazine capacity of 20 rounds
Select fire for both semi-automatic and fully automatic use
Penetration of US steel helmet one side, at 500 yards
Penetration of .135" steel plate at 500 yards
Accuracy and ballistics equal to M2 ball ammunition (.30-06 M1 Garand)
Wounding ability equal to the M1 Carbine[3]
Springfield Armory's Earle Harvey lengthened the .222 Remington cartridge case to meet the requirements. It was then known as the .224 Springfield. Concurrently with the SCHV project Springfield armory was developing a 7.62 mm rifle. Harvey was ordered to cease all work on the SCHV to avoid any competition of resources.
Eugene Stoner of ArmaLite (a division of Fairchild Industries) had been advised to produce a scaled down version of the 7.62×51mm NATO AR-10 design. In May 1957 Stoner gave a live fire demonstration of the prototype of the ArmaLite AR-15 for General Wyman. As a result, CONARC ordered rifles to test. Stoner and Sierra Bullet's Frank Snow began work on the .222 Remington cartridge. Using a ballistic calculator they determined that a 55 grain bullet would have to be fired at 3,300 ft/s to achieve the 500 yard performance necessary.[3]
Robert Hutton (technical editor of Guns and Ammo magazine) started development of a powder load to reach the 3,300 ft/s goal. He used DuPont IMR4198, IMR3031 and an Olin powder to work up loads. Testing was done with a Remington 722 rifle with a 22" Apex barrel. During a public demonstration the round successfully penetrated the US steel helmet as required, but testing showed chamber pressures to be excessively high.[4][3]
Stoner contacted both Winchester and Remington about increasing the case capacity. Remington created a larger cartridge called the .222 Special. This cartridge is loaded with DuPont IMR4475 powder.[3]
During parallel testing of the T44E4 (future M14) and the ArmaLite AR-15 in 1958 the T44E4 experienced 16 failures per 1,000 rounds fired compared to 6.1 for the ArmaLite AR-15.[3] Because of several different .222 caliber cartridges which were being developed for the SCHV project, the .222 Special was renamed .223 Remington. In May 1959 a report was produced stating that five to seven man squads armed with ArmaLite AR-15 rifles have a higher hit probability than 11 man squads armed with the M-14 rifle. At an Independence Day picnic air force general Curtis Le May tested the ArmaLite AR-15 and was very impressed with it. He ordered a number of them to replace M2 carbines that were in use by the air force. In November of that year, testing at Aberdeen Proving Ground showed the ArmaLite AR-15 failure rate had declined to 2.5/1,000, resulting in the ArmaLite AR-15 being approved for air force trials.[3]
In 1961 a marksmanship testing compared the AR-15 and M-14. 43 % of ArmaLite AR-15 shooters achieved Expert while only 22 % of M-14 rifle shooters did. Le May ordered 80,000 rifles.[3] In July 1962, operational testing ended with a recommendation for adoption of the ArmaLite AR-15 rifle chambered in .223 Remington.[3] In September 1963 the .223 Remington cartridge was officially accepted and named "Cartridge, 5.56 mm ball, M193". The following year, the ArmaLite AR-15 was adopted by the United States Army as the M16 rifle and it would later become the standard U.S. Military rifle. The specification included a Remington-designed bullet and the use of IMR4475 powder which resulted in a muzzle velocity of 3,250 ft/s and a chamber pressure of 52,000psi.[3]
In the spring of 1962 Remington submitted the specifications of the .223 Remington to the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute (SAAMI). In December 1963, Remington introduced its first rifle chambered for .223 Remnington a Model 760 rifle.
.223 Remington maximum C.I.P. cartridge dimensions. All sizes in millimeters (mm).[6]
Americans would define the shoulder angle at alpha/2 = 23 degrees. The common rifling twist rate for this cartridge is 305 mm (1 in 12 in), 6 grooves, Ø lands = 5.56 millimetres (0.219 in), Ø grooves = 5.69 millimetres (0.224 in), land width = 1.88 millimetres (0.074 in) and the primer type is small rifle.
According to the official C.I.P. (Commission Internationale Permanente pour l'Epreuve des Armes à Feu Portatives) rulings the .223 Remington can handle up to 430.00 MPa (62,366 psi) Pmax piezo pressure. In C.I.P. regulated countries every rifle cartridge combo has to be proofed at 125% of this maximum C.I.P. pressure to certify for sale to consumers.[6] This means that .223 Remington chambered arms in C.I.P. regulated countries are currently (2016) proof tested at 537.50 MPa (77,958 psi) PE piezo pressure. This is equal to the NATO maximum service pressure guideline for the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge.
The SAAMI pressure limit for the .223 Remington is set at 379.212 MPa (55,000 psi), piezo pressure.[7][8] Remington submitted .223 Remington specifications to SAAMI in 1964.[3] The original diagrams use English Inch measurements.
Barrel length helps determine a specific cartridge's muzzle velocity. A longer barrel will typically yield a greater muzzle velocity, while a short barrel will yield a lower one. The first AR-15 rifles used a barrel length of 20". In the case of the .223 Remington (M193) ammunition loses or gains approximately 25.7 feet-per-second for each inch of barrel length, while 5.56×45 mm NATO (M855) loses or gains 30.3 feet-per-second per inch of barrel length.
The .223 Remington has become one of the most popular cartridges and is currently used in a wide range of semi-automatic and manual action rifles and even handguns; such as the Colt AR-15, Ruger Mini-14, Remington Model 700, Remington XP-100, etc.[17][18] The popularity of .223 Remington is so great, that in the US it virtually eliminated all other similar .22 caliber center-fire varmint rifle cartridges.[19][20]
It is commercially loaded with 0.224 inch (5.7 mm) diameter jacketed bullets, with weights ranging from 35 to 85 grains (2.27 g to 5.8 g), with the most common loading by far being 55 grains (3.6 g). Ninety and ninety-five grain Sierra Matchking bullets are available for reloaders.
Also,
Year 223 (CCXXIII) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Maximus and Aelianus (or, less frequently, year 976 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 223 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
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