match for the Su-57, if that ever enters service in real numbers. They've about 1-1.5 squadron's worth operational, and I suspect close towards the lower end of that range.
No one would describe a Ferrari as a "shitty design", just insanely expensive. F-22 and F-35 are very expensive, but as extremely effective as the F-35 has proven to be against late-model Russian and Chinese equipment, it's arguably worth it. I suspect the F-22 is more than a
@HowardAulsbrook@RadbadadRedo@CENTCOM But not out of range of US weapons. A boxer with a reach advantage that uses it to his advantage would never be described by a sports announcer as having pushed his opponent out of range of his fists, especially when the guy with the reach keeps landing blow after blow.
Your info is sadly out-of-date:
https://t.co/tevuJn6gMy
https://t.co/0eAEryttXz
https://t.co/v3riOM6hD9
When most new big trucks sold have some form of automatic, that's a HUGE clue, because fuel efficiency is much more important to truck fleets than to the average driver.
@Larry91130@SkullSmashed@TheCriticalDri2 There is no automatic that is more efficient than a manual. Less moving Parts equals more efficiency and less power required to move those parts. An automatic transmission and its components weigh a hell of a lot more than a manual transmission. It's just physics man
@ShamashAran Damn, but I saw a smaller-scale version of this in the Walmart that used to be just south of MicroCenter in Richardson, TX. Since that Walmart closed, the neighborhood has improved a bit. It it weren't for MicroCenter, I'd never, ever be in that neighborhood.
@ReliableBrain@Scivf4 You moron. Forced labor (of some) only got started in 1938, and only really took off after Friedrich Supp's decree of Dec. 20, 1938. I guaranfuckingtee the factory that built machine this existed **long** before that. MAYBE a Jew or two helped build this, but likely not, too.
https://t.co/1PDEdwOCmz, Nelson's flagship at the Battle of Trafalgar was a 104-gun 1st-rate ship of the line with 3 gun decks, 850 crewmen, and displaced 3,500 tons. Constitution was a 44-gun frigate with a crew of 450, and displaced 2,200 tons. There were bigger 1st-rates
it couldn't win. Those US frigates were very large for frigates (most were 28-36 guns), but they were still just frigates, and not ships of the line, the battleships of those days. "Ship of the line" referred to a ship capable of standing in the line of battle of a fleet action.