miércoles, 29 de mayo de 2019

You've got to check this out...(2 days left)


 

I just discovered this and suggest you see this immediately...

This is the most REALISTIC flight simulator game I've ever come across with over 20,000 real world airports and 120 aircrafts to fly.

Cool thing is, I've been using this flight sim for the past 2 months to preview it realism... and I'm blown away.

It maps the real world military data for the entire globe to provide stunning accuracy and realism.

Here's why its so cool:

- Over 120+ different aircrafts to fly
- Over 20,000 real world airports to land
- Based on actual military world data
- 100% flight freedom and weather control
- Multiplayer support for PC & Mac

You'll love it.

Check it out now as the 50% offer ends in 2 days:

Use this link below to grab your 50% discount (time sensitive):
 










rience in surveying was in settling boundary disputes. Geddes had only used a surveying instrument for a few hours before his work on the Canal. Canvass White was a 27-year-old amateur engineer who persuaded Clinton to let him go to Britain at his own expense to study the canal system there. Nathan Roberts was a mathematics teacher and land speculator. Yet these men "carried the Erie Canal up the Niagara escarpment at Lockport, maneuvered it onto a towering embankment to cross over Irondequoit Creek, spanned the Genesee River on an awesome aqueduct, and carved a route for it out of the solid rock between Little Falls and Schenectady—and all of those venturesome designs worked precisely as planned". (Bernstein, p. 381) Construction began July 4, 1817, at Rome, New York. The first 15 miles (24 km), from Rome to Utica, opened in 1819. At that rate, the canal would not be finished for 30 years. The main delays were caused by felling trees to clear a path through virgin forest and moving excavated soil, which took longer than expected, but the builders devised ways to solve these problems. To fell a tree, they threw rope over the top branches and winched it down. They pulled out the stumps with an innovative stump puller. Two huge wheels were mounted loose on the ends of an axle. A third wheel, slightly smaller than the others, was fixed to the center of the axle. A chain was wrapped around the axle and hooked to the stump. A rope was wrapped around the center wheel and hooked to a team of oxen. The mechanical advantage (torque) obtained ripped the stumps out of the soil. Soil to be moved was shoveled into large wheelbarrows that were dumped into mule-pulled carts. Using a scraper and a plow, a three-man team with oxen, horses and mules could build a mile in a year. The remaining problem was finding labor; increased immigration helped fill the need. Many of the laborers working on the canal were Irish, who had recently come to the United States as a group of about 5,000. Most of them were Roman Catholic, a religion that raised much suspicion in early America due to its hierarchic structure, and many lab

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