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  2. Anvil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anvil

    For example, a 3-1-5, if such an anvil existed, would be 3×112 lb + 1×28 lb + 5 lb = 369 lb ≈ 168 kg. Cheap anvils made from inferior steel or cast iron and often sold at retail hardware stores, are considered unsuitable for serious use, and are often derisively referred to as "ASOs", or "anvil shaped objects". [ 2 ]

  3. AB 500-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AB_500-1

    These were French made fragmentation bombs that the Germans captured after the Fall of France.There were two variants comprising two sub-variants. [5] The descriptions in TM 9-1985-6, French and Italian Explosive Ordnance and TM 9-1985-2, German Explosive Ordnance match the 10kg (P) more closely than the 10kg (P.A).

  4. Anvil (insecticide) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anvil_(insecticide)

    Anvil is an insecticide widely employed to combat West Nile fever, a mosquito-borne disease identified in approximately 10,000 residents of the United States from 1999-2006. It is sprayed in Chicago and many other cities.

  5. Hardy tool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardy_tool

    A hardy has a square shank, which prevents it from rotating when placed in the anvil's hardy hole. [2] The term "hardy", used alone, refers to a cutting chisel used in the square hole of the anvil. Other bottom tools are identified by function. Typical hardy tools include chisels and bending drifts. They are generally used with a matching top tool.

  6. Parrott rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parrott_rifle

    In terms of the ability to punch holes in fortifications, at that long range the light 24 lb (11 kg) shell would be expected to only breach a 6-inch-thick (150 mm) brick wall. In contrast, the greater mass and retained velocity of the 300 lb (140 kg) shell would enable it to penetrate 6 to 7 ft (180 to 210 cm) of brick (given the quality of the ...

  7. Adana Printing Machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adana_Printing_Machines

    Flat-bed Rotary Series withdrawn, possibly because of infringement on designs by a mysterious company called Anvil Ltd (1935) No 3 Quarto, an iron press weighing over 100 lbs, inside chase 10 in × 7.5 in (250 mm × 190 mm) (1938) QFB – 1945 Flat-Bed, Quarto Flat Bed, plywood construction (1945)