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Remember Spring swaps snow for leaves

You'll be happy and wholesome again when the city clears and Sun ascends.

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  • oxfordcommaforever:

engineeringisawesome:

Transparent Aluminum
Transparent aluminum starts out as a pile of white aluminum oxynitride powder. That powder gets packed into a rubber mold in the rough shape of the desired part, and subjected to a procedure called isostatic pressing, in which the mold is compressed in a tank of hydraulic fluid to 15,000 psi, which mashes the AlON into a grainy “green body.” The grainy structure is then fused together by heating at 2000 °C for several days. The surface of the resulting part is cloudy, and has to be mechanically polished to make it optically clear.
All that work pays off. AlON can do amazing things. Here, for instance, a 1.6″ thick AlON plate successfully resists a huge, powerful .50 AP bullet that smashes easily through more than twice that thickness of conventional laminated glass armor, with plenty of energy left over to extremely kill a plastic mannequin head.
It’s expensive, of course, and so generally reserved for high-performance applications, especially in military fields. AlON is manufactured by Massachusetts-based Surmet Corporation for use in armored windows, lenses for battlefield optics, and “seeker domes,” which are the clear round windows covering the sensor heads on the business ends of many missiles. If you want to read further, Tom Scheve has prepared a good bibliography over at HowStuffWorks.

MAKE

They star wars a reality. Next stop, hyperdrive.


Look at 2:00. Star Trek did it first ;)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmGjB-G6v8

    oxfordcommaforever:

    engineeringisawesome:

    Transparent Aluminum

    Transparent aluminum starts out as a pile of white aluminum oxynitride powder. That powder gets packed into a rubber mold in the rough shape of the desired part, and subjected to a procedure called isostatic pressing, in which the mold is compressed in a tank of hydraulic fluid to 15,000 psi, which mashes the AlON into a grainy “green body.” The grainy structure is then fused together by heating at 2000 °C for several days. The surface of the resulting part is cloudy, and has to be mechanically polished to make it optically clear.

    All that work pays off. AlON can do amazing things. Here, for instance, a 1.6″ thick AlON plate successfully resists a huge, powerful .50 AP bullet that smashes easily through more than twice that thickness of conventional laminated glass armor, with plenty of energy left over to extremely kill a plastic mannequin head.

    It’s expensive, of course, and so generally reserved for high-performance applications, especially in military fields. AlON is manufactured by Massachusetts-based Surmet Corporation for use in armored windows, lenses for battlefield optics, and “seeker domes,” which are the clear round windows covering the sensor heads on the business ends of many missiles. If you want to read further, Tom Scheve has prepared a good bibliography over at HowStuffWorks.

    MAKE

    They star wars a reality. Next stop, hyperdrive.

    Look at 2:00. Star Trek did it first ;)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmGjB-G6v8

    Posted on January 20, 2012 via Engineering is Awesome with 93 notes

    Source: blog.makezine.com

    1. sciencyandgeeky reblogged this from dataesoterica
    2. kosmoskrap reblogged this from engineeringisawesome and added:
      I had no idea this had been created. Where I have I been? *picks up mouse* “Hello, computer.”
    3. jia1nee reblogged this from engineeringisawesome
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    7. perpetumobsessive reblogged this from aetherrithmetic and added:
      COUNT ME THE FUCK IN THEN!
    8. bat-lips liked this
    9. aetherrithmetic reblogged this from perpetumobsessive and added:
      Ah, international waters… The ancestral home of pirates! I’ll need a few years to get funding for my airship though. And...
    10. perpetumobsessive reblogged this from aetherrithmetic and added:
      Dumbfuckistan *giggles* Perhaps, perhaps. I plan on the UK, but who knows..if ACTA passes, I might have to move to..WAIT...
    11. aetherrithmetic reblogged this from perpetumobsessive and added:
      I’d say it’s probably something to do with the literal ocean between us. Also because I live in Dumbfuckistan, home of...
    12. riezapahlawan reblogged this from engineeringisawesome
    13. perpetumobsessive reblogged this from aetherrithmetic and added:
      Why can’t I live with you? I have no one to swordfight with :’(
    14. chatglobal liked this
    15. aetherrithmetic reblogged this from perpetumobsessive and added:
      True story. I was out at a park with some friends and some Force FX lightsabers. We were dueling and having a good time...
    16. perpetumobsessive reblogged this from aetherrithmetic and added:
      ANOTHER SUCCESS FOR THE TREKKIES! Btw guys, you’re welcome for the cellphones. HOW CAN ANYONE CONFUSE TREK WITH WARS?!
    17. 1simply-the-best1 liked this
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    20. kiwi-birdy reblogged this from oxfordcommaforever and added:
      Look at 2:00. Star Trek did it first ;) //www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmGjB-G6v8
    21. scientiafidei reblogged this from abcstarstuff and added:
      this is really cool
    22. abcstarstuff reblogged this from engineeringisawesome
    23. evillordzog reblogged this from namosays and added:
      Clealry that guy moved out of San Francisco after he helped Kirk’s people outfit the Botany Bay…
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    34. otalov reblogged this from engineeringisawesome and added:
      Awesmazing (awesome + amazing)
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    41. oxfordcommaforever reblogged this from engineeringisawesome and added:
      They star wars a reality. Next stop, hyperdrive.
    42. xcix3 liked this
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