Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator

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Ouch! Unsecured loads are a problem. I once had a refrigerator door fall off a flatbed trailer full of junk that was merging right in front of me and I had no choice but to run over it.

I was riding my bike to work and a truck going the same direction dropped a tailgate from a GM Square body on the ground right in front of me!

Then there are my two muffler stories. Was pulling a brand new fifth wheel trailer home from our first outing, southbound Highway 1 between Santa Cruz and Watsonville. "Suddenly" there was a muffler in my lane - complete with a length of crooked exhaust pipe. No time to cuss, swerve or anything. Truck hit it, the trailer hit it, everything rocked and it blew one of the trailer tires. No other damage, thank Goddess.

About a week later, I was driving home from work, northbound highway 1 near Sand City (Monterey area), in a Yugo. There was a lifted pickup in front of me, and there was a muffler hanging down right about eye level, and it was pulsing up and down with road motion. It looked about the same size as my car. I decided I really didn't need to be behind that thing, so I changed lanes. No sooner had I done so than sure enough the muffler fell off. I can remember looking out of my driver's window as it skated along the in the lane next to me making sparks. I then looked in my rear view mirror and watched cars going everywhere trying to avoid it!
 
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One of my worst (and irrational, I know) fears is having a big heavy object fall off a truck and come through the windshield and give me a game over light...

We were coming back from Apache Lake in my 1983 F250 diesel with a 11 foot Lance cabover and towing a boat, there was a tractor-trailer in front of us. Without warning a load bar fell off the top of the trailer, hit the road and bounced up in the air and was on it's way down when we hit it. Somehow it went under the bumper without damaging anything and I ran it over squarely with all 3 axles. Had we been much closer it would have come thru the windshield.
 
We were coming back from Apache Lake in my 1983 F250 diesel with a 11 foot Lance cabover and towing a boat, there was a tractor-trailer in front of us. Without warning a load bar fell off the top of the trailer, hit the road and bounced up in the air and was on it's way down when we hit it. Somehow it went under the bumper without damaging anything and I ran it over squarely with all 3 axles. Had we been much closer it would have come thru the windshield.

Oh, great. Rationalize my irrational fear….

(I’m glad you missed it!) (y)
 
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Game Wardens with Texas Parks and Wildlife arrested Ethan McNeely, a 39 year old Oregon transplant, yesterday after discovering him crouched in the woods below the dam at Lake Tawakoni attempting to hunt squirrels with nothing but his bare hands and teeth.
McNeely, who insists he’s “a primal predator, not a sportsman,” argued with officers that his “God-given claws and fangs” exempt him from needing a hunting license. “If I catch it with my molars, that’s between me and Mother Nature,” he reportedly told wardens while spitting out a mouthful of bark.
Authorities were not convinced. TPWD officials say that while McNeely’s hunting technique is unique, state law doesn’t make exceptions for “wannabe cavemen.” He was booked on charges of hunting without a license and disorderly conduct after growling at the officers.

McNeely maintains he’s being persecuted. “They can cage me,” he said, “but they’ll never cage my inner wolf!”
 
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Game Wardens with Texas Parks and Wildlife arrested Ethan McNeely, a 39 year old Oregon transplant, yesterday after discovering him crouched in the woods below the dam at Lake Tawakoni attempting to hunt squirrels with nothing but his bare hands and teeth.
McNeely, who insists he’s “a primal predator, not a sportsman,” argued with officers that his “God-given claws and fangs” exempt him from needing a hunting license. “If I catch it with my molars, that’s between me and Mother Nature,” he reportedly told wardens while spitting out a mouthful of bark.
Authorities were not convinced. TPWD officials say that while McNeely’s hunting technique is unique, state law doesn’t make exceptions for “wannabe cavemen.” He was booked on charges of hunting without a license and disorderly conduct after growling at the officers.

McNeely maintains he’s being persecuted. “They can cage me,” he said, “but they’ll never cage my inner wolf!”

Maybe I've been in Oregon too long, but I'm siding with wolfman here. If he can catch tree rats with his teeth they're all his.
 
View attachment 647605
Game Wardens with Texas Parks and Wildlife arrested Ethan McNeely, a 39 year old Oregon transplant, yesterday after discovering him crouched in the woods below the dam at Lake Tawakoni attempting to hunt squirrels with nothing but his bare hands and teeth.
McNeely, who insists he’s “a primal predator, not a sportsman,” argued with officers that his “God-given claws and fangs” exempt him from needing a hunting license. “If I catch it with my molars, that’s between me and Mother Nature,” he reportedly told wardens while spitting out a mouthful of bark.
Authorities were not convinced. TPWD officials say that while McNeely’s hunting technique is unique, state law doesn’t make exceptions for “wannabe cavemen.” He was booked on charges of hunting without a license and disorderly conduct after growling at the officers.

McNeely maintains he’s being persecuted. “They can cage me,” he said, “but they’ll never cage my inner wolf!”

His throat looks like he was attacked by a cougar. Maybe he is an animal🤔
 
https://taskandpurpose.com/news/marine-amphibious-vehicle-goodbye/

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The Marine Corps formally decommissioned the last of its “workhorse” amphibious landing vehicles in a ceremony in California last Friday, bidding farewell to the machines that have carried Marines from ship to shore and through combat zones around the world for more than 50 years.

The Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV) became part of the Marine Corps’ repertoire in 1972. It saw action from Grenada to Iraq, and was a critical tool in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina as one of the only vehicles adept at navigating the flooded streets of the Gulf Coast.

“We’re sad to see the AAV go,” Col. Lynn W. Berendsen, the commanding officer of the Assault Amphibian School at Camp Pendleton, California, said in an interview with Task & Purpose on Thursday. “It was a workhorse.”

The nearly 30-ton vehicle is fully tracked and covered with buoyant armor panels to both protect Marines in combat or deliver them to beachheads – both central functions for the amphibious service. It is being replaced with a newer landing vehicle known as the Amphibious Combat Vehicle, or ACV, an eight-wheeled platform.
 
https://nextgendefense.com/us-balloon-glide-kit/
US Firm Rolls Out Balloon-Dropped Glide Kit for Ultra-Long-Range Strikes
Piranha glider kit is Aventra’s modular, GPS-free system that turns unguided munitions into long-range precision weapons.

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Aventra has raised $3 million to turn unguided munitions into AI-driven weapons capable of striking targets up to 3,000 miles (4,800 kilometers) away.

The Virginia-based defense startup is developing a modular glide kit, called the Piranha, that retrofits existing ordnance with wings and guidance modules to create a low-cost precision strike capability.

The system can be deployed from high-altitude balloons at roughly 80,000 feet (24,000 meters) and uses stratospheric winds to extend its reach.

Compared with conventional cruise missiles, Aventra said its kit is 100-400 times cheaper, enabling mass fires at a fraction of the cost.
 
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An arrest has been made in the Palisades Fires that decimated Los Angeles and destroyed dozens of celebrity mansions in January.


Officials have not released the name of the suspect but said they will provide additional details later on Wednesday.

Attending the 9am local time news conference will be Acting United States Attorney Bill Essayli, LA Police Chief Jim McDonnell, and Special Agent in Charge Kenny Cooper of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The fire that erupted on January 7 killed 12 people and destroyed more than 6,000 homes and buildings in the Pacific Palisades, a wealthy coastal neighborhood of LA.

A-listers such as Paris Hilton, Tom Hanks and Mandy Moore lost their mansions in the fires.

Investigators still haven’t determined the cause of that blaze or the Eaton Fire, which broke out the same day in the community of Altadena and killed 18 people.

Both fires burned for days, reducing entire neighborhoods to rubble and ash.


burns_in_Pacific_Palisades_Cali-a-70_1759936851209.jpg


An outside review released in September found that a lack of resources and outdated policies for sending emergency alerts led to delayed evacuation warnings.

The report commissioned by Los Angeles County supervisors said a series of weaknesses, including 'outdated policies, inconsistent practices and communications vulnerabilities,' hampered the county’s response.

The Associated Press found that the first evacuation order covering neighborhoods closest to the start of the devastating Pacific Palisades wildfire didn’t come until about 40 minutes after some of those homes were already burning.

The wildfire, the most destructive in California history, spread rapidly in ornamental plantings and burning homes by 11:27 a.m. on January 7, recordings of scanner traffic reveal.

So many people fled on their own, as wind-whipped flames raced over the nearby hills, that by the time officials issued the order to evacuate at 12:07 p.m., traffic was gridlocked.

Authorities would eventually urge people to exit their cars and leave on foot, and then used a bulldozer to clear away abandoned vehicles and make way for fire crews.

Despite the timing of the order, nearly all the residents of Pacific Palisades made it to safety — a relief that some attributed to the hyper-awareness of fire danger in a region frequently scarred by it, the efforts of first responders, the initiative that many took to evacuate on their own, and the fact that the fire broke out in broad daylight, when those nearby were awake to notice it.

The time lag is one of several issues that may have complicated the fire response. With the severe winds preventing aerial firefighting, water hydrants ran dry amid unprecedented demand.

A reservoir near Pacific Palisades was empty because it needed repairs. Top Los Angeles Fire Department commanders decided not to deploy roughly 1,000 available firefighters and dozens of water-carrying engines in advance, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Link
 
An arrest has been made in the Palisades Fires that decimated Los Angeles and destroyed dozens of celebrity mansions in January.


Officials have not released the name of the suspect but said they will provide additional details later on Wednesday.

Attending the 9am local time news conference will be Acting United States Attorney Bill Essayli, LA Police Chief Jim McDonnell, and Special Agent in Charge Kenny Cooper of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The fire that erupted on January 7 killed 12 people and destroyed more than 6,000 homes and buildings in the Pacific Palisades, a wealthy coastal neighborhood of LA.

A-listers such as Paris Hilton, Tom Hanks and Mandy Moore lost their mansions in the fires.

Investigators still haven’t determined the cause of that blaze or the Eaton Fire, which broke out the same day in the community of Altadena and killed 18 people.

Both fires burned for days, reducing entire neighborhoods to rubble and ash.


View attachment 647737

An outside review released in September found that a lack of resources and outdated policies for sending emergency alerts led to delayed evacuation warnings.

The report commissioned by Los Angeles County supervisors said a series of weaknesses, including 'outdated policies, inconsistent practices and communications vulnerabilities,' hampered the county’s response.

The Associated Press found that the first evacuation order covering neighborhoods closest to the start of the devastating Pacific Palisades wildfire didn’t come until about 40 minutes after some of those homes were already burning.

The wildfire, the most destructive in California history, spread rapidly in ornamental plantings and burning homes by 11:27 a.m. on January 7, recordings of scanner traffic reveal.

So many people fled on their own, as wind-whipped flames raced over the nearby hills, that by the time officials issued the order to evacuate at 12:07 p.m., traffic was gridlocked.

Authorities would eventually urge people to exit their cars and leave on foot, and then used a bulldozer to clear away abandoned vehicles and make way for fire crews.

Despite the timing of the order, nearly all the residents of Pacific Palisades made it to safety — a relief that some attributed to the hyper-awareness of fire danger in a region frequently scarred by it, the efforts of first responders, the initiative that many took to evacuate on their own, and the fact that the fire broke out in broad daylight, when those nearby were awake to notice it.

The time lag is one of several issues that may have complicated the fire response. With the severe winds preventing aerial firefighting, water hydrants ran dry amid unprecedented demand.

A reservoir near Pacific Palisades was empty because it needed repairs. Top Los Angeles Fire Department commanders decided not to deploy roughly 1,000 available firefighters and dozens of water-carrying engines in advance, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Link

Probably a scapegoat.
 
An arrest has been made in the Palisades Fires that decimated Los Angeles and destroyed dozens of celebrity mansions in January.


Officials have not released the name of the suspect but said they will provide additional details later on Wednesday.

Attending the 9am local time news conference will be Acting United States Attorney Bill Essayli, LA Police Chief Jim McDonnell, and Special Agent in Charge Kenny Cooper of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The fire that erupted on January 7 killed 12 people and destroyed more than 6,000 homes and buildings in the Pacific Palisades, a wealthy coastal neighborhood of LA.

A-listers such as Paris Hilton, Tom Hanks and Mandy Moore lost their mansions in the fires.

Investigators still haven’t determined the cause of that blaze or the Eaton Fire, which broke out the same day in the community of Altadena and killed 18 people.

Both fires burned for days, reducing entire neighborhoods to rubble and ash.


View attachment 647737

An outside review released in September found that a lack of resources and outdated policies for sending emergency alerts led to delayed evacuation warnings.

The report commissioned by Los Angeles County supervisors said a series of weaknesses, including 'outdated policies, inconsistent practices and communications vulnerabilities,' hampered the county’s response.

The Associated Press found that the first evacuation order covering neighborhoods closest to the start of the devastating Pacific Palisades wildfire didn’t come until about 40 minutes after some of those homes were already burning.

The wildfire, the most destructive in California history, spread rapidly in ornamental plantings and burning homes by 11:27 a.m. on January 7, recordings of scanner traffic reveal.

So many people fled on their own, as wind-whipped flames raced over the nearby hills, that by the time officials issued the order to evacuate at 12:07 p.m., traffic was gridlocked.

Authorities would eventually urge people to exit their cars and leave on foot, and then used a bulldozer to clear away abandoned vehicles and make way for fire crews.

Despite the timing of the order, nearly all the residents of Pacific Palisades made it to safety — a relief that some attributed to the hyper-awareness of fire danger in a region frequently scarred by it, the efforts of first responders, the initiative that many took to evacuate on their own, and the fact that the fire broke out in broad daylight, when those nearby were awake to notice it.

The time lag is one of several issues that may have complicated the fire response. With the severe winds preventing aerial firefighting, water hydrants ran dry amid unprecedented demand.

A reservoir near Pacific Palisades was empty because it needed repairs. Top Los Angeles Fire Department commanders decided not to deploy roughly 1,000 available firefighters and dozens of water-carrying engines in advance, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Link


A 29-year-old Uber driver has been arrested in connection to the Palisades Fires that decimated Los Angeles and destroyed dozens of celebrity mansions in January.

Jonathan Rinderknecht was charged with 'maliciously' starting the catastrophic fire, according to Acting US Attorney Bill Essayli.

'The complaint alleges that Rinderknecht's started a fire in Pacific Palisades on New Year's Day — a blaze that eventually turned into one of the most destructive fires in Los Angeles history, causing death and widespread destruction,' Essayli said.

'Among the evidence that was collected from his digital devices was an image he generated on ChatGPT depicting a burning city.'

Rinderknecht was arrested on Florida, according to officials. His first court appearance is scheduled for today at 1.30pm in Orlando.

He was charged with destruction of property by means of fire - a felony that carries a mandatory minimum five-year prison sentence and is punishable by up to 20 years.

The fire that erupted on January 7 killed 12 people and destroyed more than 6,000 homes and buildings in the Pacific Palisades, a wealthy coastal neighborhood of LA.


102816221-15174183-image-a-2_1759940178274.jpg


Among the evidence that was collected from his digital devices was an image he generated on ChatGPT depicting a burning city,' officials said



Rinderknecht is a former resident of the Palisades and allegedly lit the fire with an open flame after he completed an Uber ride, per the criminal complaint.

Investigators still haven’t determined the cause of that blaze or the Eaton Fire, which broke out the same day in the community of Altadena and killed 18 people.

Both fires burned for days, reducing entire neighborhoods to rubble and ash.


Link
 
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Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator