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Fredrik Axelsson had been an avid airgun enthusiast since he started shooting since 5 years of age. [4] At the end of 1989, he started making things for airguns after being disappointed by an English-made .22 caliber spring-piston air rifle he purchased for shooting pigeons in a tree, with which he had done very little actual shooting because the spring broke after a couple of months.
The .22 CHeetah (both C and H are upper-case, [1] referring to Carmichel / Huntington [2]) is a .22 wildcat cartridge developed in the 1970s or 1980s by Jim Carmichel and Fred Huntington. [ 3 ] The .22 CHeetah is essentially a Remington .308 BR (empty .308 Winchester cases [ 4 ] [ 5 ] ), modified to fit the .22 caliber . [ 6 ]
By the late 1930s, the British had developed a version of the Mk.VI Light Tank armed with four machine guns that were known as Light Tank AA Mk.I, and also a twin 15 mm version based on the Light Tank Mk.V was built. Among early pre-war pioneers of self-propelled AA guns were the Germans.
A complex, pivotal moment in the life of author Flannery O'Connor receives sensitive treatment by the father-daughter filmmaking duo, joined by Laura Linney.
Wildcat Mk.IX Cosworth DFX V8 t: Gordon Johncock: 20 1 14 16th 20: March 83C 23 26 26 Wildcat Mk.IX Chip Ganassi: 21 9th 56: Wildcat Mk.IXB 6 3 3 5 Wildcat Mk.IX 60 8 13 8 26 25 Danny Ongais: 12 20th 14: March 83C 20 24 10 5 40 28 23 18 Wildcat Mk.IX Johnny Rutherford: 18 DNQ 46th 0: Wildcat Mk.IXB 21 DNP 23 24 20 1984: LBH: PHX: INDY: MIL: POR ...
The nature documentary "Wildcat" transcends the genre to go deep into the bond between a month-old ocelot kitten and a British army veteran with PTSD.
The Firearms WikiProject's A-Class review process is a more formal process for determining if an article, as viewed by the project, meets featured article criteria. Articles successfully passing A-Class review typically soon become featured article candidates. You can submit an article for A-Class review via the project's A-Class review page.
The March 86A, also designated as the March 86/A, [2] was an open-wheel formula race car, designed, developed and built by British manufacturer March Engineering, for the American Racing Series (later Indy Lights), between 1986 and 1992. [3]