“Kinda makes you feel insignificant, don’t it?“
18 December, 2009
13 December, 2009
Yes, it was cheesey. Yes, it was a Raiders knockoff. I still loved it when I was a teen.
Tales of the Gold Monkey was a prime-time show on ABC in 1982 looking to cash in on Raiders (just as CBS had Bring ’em Back Alive), but the flavor was closer to some of the 1930s adventure movies like Only Angels Have Wings, which the creator, Donald Bellisario, claims was more the inspiration. (He had been trying to get the series made since the 1970s, predating the Lucas-Speilberg spectacle.)
The show took place in 1938 in the South Pacific and featured a young (and improbable) Stephen Collins as a rough around the edges contract pilot, Jake Cutter. Other backup characters followed the Bellisario Magnum PI, Airwolf, JAG motif of hero, comedic sidekick (in this case his drunk mecnahic, Corky), and a bar owner/fixer (Bon chance Louie, played by Roddy McDowell.) The love interest was a female American spy. And of course, there was Jake’s one-eyed dog, Jack — who was alleged to answer yes/no questions with a number of banks…that no one could remember which was which.
Central to the series was the building Japanese menace, led by a “dragon lady” type — Japanese princess Koji (of course, not played by a Japanese actress, Marta DuBois [some might remember her as the alien posing as the Devil in Star Trek: The Next Generation].)
There were 21 episodes in all, and while I’m a bit worried that it won’t hold up to a mature screening (much like Heavy Metal), I would love to see a DVD release.
11 December, 2009
Feds Go “Tough Guy” on CanadianSci-Fi Writer
Posted by blackcampbell under News and Politics, Science Fiction1 Comment
Yet another example of why I am rapidly losing patience for, and increasingly distrust, Federal law enforcement…
9 December, 2009
My old Nolan N-01 helmet is six years old, and while it’s held up remarkably well, the thing is old and the padding starting to lose it’s thickness. I ordered up an HJC Sy-Max II flip-face helmet from PJ Triumph Ducati here in Albuquerque and took possession today.
First impressions: it’s a bit flimsier feeling than the original Sy-Max. Granted, the plastics technology is improved int eh last eight years, but it’s incredibly light compared to my Nolan. The helmet does have a better chin bar release system than the Nolan, which has two tabs to push on either side of the chin bar; the Sy-Max has one in the center. Easy to get to, easy to manipulate. the helmet is comfortable, but there’s a space over the ears in the padding (probably for a bluetooth sound system) that will most likely give more wind noise that the Nolan.
Another plus: the helmet has an integrated sunscreen. There is a small lever on the top of the helmet that lowers a sun shade over the eyes. It is far enough out it does not impact glasses — meaning I don’t need to swap from sunglasses to normal glasses when riding. A single button releases the shade into the helmet. It works well.
The ventilation seems pretty good, but I’ll find out more about that tomorrow morning when I ride to work, as I will with the road noise. The color I chose was anthracite — metallic gray. It looks good, seems well built, and other than the slightly chintzy feel due to the light weight (which I’m sure I will like when I’m wearing the thing for extended periods of time), it seems like a quality helmet.
Not bad for $200…
6 December, 2009
I found a Kimber CDP II Ultra in the local gun store, used, for under $1000. I had looked earlier in the day at one in another store for $1300. My wife likes the 1911 platform, and the 9mm round is still cheap and easy to get, so I figured getting her off of the .45acp round might be advantageous for the next 3-5 months, while the ammo supply catches up to demand.
Appearance: Fit and finish are top notch, as one would expect from Kimber’s Custom Shop. The CDP is an alloy frame in black, with a silver slide (the opposite of my CZ-85’s look) with cocobolo grips. I find the grips a bit thick for the gun, but not uncomfortably so. It’s a 3″ barrel, 8 round single stack magazine, with beavertail, skeletonized trigger and hammer. (Guessing the trigger pull at about 3-4 pounds.)
Nice gun. Looks great, light weight, and small enough to easily conceal.
We took it out to the local indoor range and put 150 rounds through it, the first 100 were 230 gr Winchester FMJ, the last 50 Brown Bear 230 gr FMJ. We did have double feed malfunctions on the magazine that came with the gun (there were small dents in the left side of the mag), but the extra Kimber mag bought had no troubles. All of the malfunctions were the wife’s, I had none and suspect they were due to her limp-wristing the gun for the first 60 or so rounds. She only had one or two more malfunctions on the original magazine after that.
The accuracy for me at 10 yards are about 2″ at a speedy pace of shooting. Her accuracy was about Texas at 7 yards, but by the time she was done shooting, she was blasting 2-3″ groups at 10 yards. One magazine fired at 15 yards by me gave up another 2.25″ group. Accuracy is solid, recoil is surprisingly stout for a 9mm due to the light weight, but still much more controllable than her Rock Island Officer’s Model in .45acp.
After the range, cleaning is the usual Kimber headache where you have to capture the recoil spring with a little bit of paper clip or the wee tool for it (that Kimber makes you buy separately!) Lock the slide open, capture the spring, drop the magazine and move slide forward to get the slide stop out. Take off the slide and barrel. Move the lug back to get the spring assembly out. Remove the barrel. Reverse once done cleaning. Getting the friggin’ slide to get back onto the frame is fun and takes a bit of patiences…but it works.
Overall, the wife gives the gun top marks for looks (5 out of 5), a 3.5 of 5 for accuracy, a 3 out of 5 for reliability, and a 3 out of 5 for ease of cleaning. I give it an excellent (5 out of 5) for the looks, 4 out of 5 for the accuracy and reliability, and 3 for ease of cleaning. My marks were higher on the reliability and accuracy, as I had none of the troubles she did.
For this reason, I expect that a few more trips to the range will increase her ratings on the handling of the gun. It’s a bit pricey for a 1911, in my opinion; a lot of the current crop are too expensive, especially when you can get the fantastic CZ or Tanfoglio for half the price. But if you want a 1911 in 9mm, it’s this or Kimber’s Aegis, the Springfield Armory EMP, or the STI.
Here it is with the CZ-85…


