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  2. Ice drilling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_drilling

    [75] [76] As of 2017 IDDO maintains both 3-inch and 4-inch diameter versions of the new auger for the use of US ice drilling research programs, and these are now the most-requested hand augers provided by IDDO. [77] The Prairie Dog auger, designed in 2007, adds an outer barrel to the basic coring auger design.

  3. 8-inch/55-caliber Mark 71 gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8-inch/55-caliber_Mark_71_gun

    The U.S. Navy's Major Caliber Lightweight Gun (MCLWG) program was the 8"/55 caliber Mark 71 major caliber lightweight, single-barrel naval gun prototype (spoken "eight-inch-fifty-five-caliber") that was mounted aboard the destroyer USS Hull in 1975 to test the capability of destroyer-sized ships to replace decommissioned cruisers for long-range shore bombardment. [1]

  4. History of ice drilling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ice_drilling

    Agassiz's demonstration of the great difficulty of drilling deep holes in glacier ice discouraged other researchers from further efforts in this direction. [12] It was decades before further advances were made in the field, [12] but two patents, the first ice-drilling related ones to be issued, were registered in the United States in the late 19th century: in 1873, W.A. Clark received a patent ...

  5. Ice core - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_core

    Ice auger patented in 1932; the design is very similar to modern augers used for shallow drilling. [11] Ice cores are collected by cutting around a cylinder of ice in a way that enables it to be brought to the surface. Early cores were often collected with hand augers and they are still used for short holes. A design for ice core augers was ...

  6. 8-inch/55-caliber gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8-inch/55-caliber_gun

    The 8"/55 caliber gun (spoken "eight-inch-fifty-five-caliber") formed the main battery of United States Navy heavy cruisers and two early aircraft carriers. United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun barrel had an internal diameter of 8 inches (203 mm), and the barrel was 55 calibers long (barrel length is 8 inch × 55 = 440 inches ...

  7. 8-inch/45-caliber gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8-inch/45-caliber_gun

    The 8-inch (203 mm)/45 caliber gun was developed after the Spanish–American War to use the new smokeless powder that had recently been adopted by the Navy. This gun was much stronger than its predecessor, the 8-inch/40 caliber gun, [1] which were incapable of handling the new powder.