Monday… well, it’s a holiday

Iran tests another missile?
Keep your eyes on a niche company, RocketLab. Not exactly a household name, but they do some interesting stuff.
You know those gee-whiz hypersonic missiles everyone is all about? Gotta test that stuff somehow – pushing a chunk of aluminum and titanium through the atmosphere at 5000mph is going to generate a lot of heat friction.
The space stock recently announced the Cassowary Vex mission — complete with the cheeky launch nickname “That’s Not A Knife” — is set to lift off no earlier than late February from Rocket Lab’s Wallops Island, Va., launch site.
This will be Rocket Lab’s fourth hypersonic test mission for the military in under six months, deploying the DART AE hypersonic demonstrator drone from Australia’s Hypersonix Launch Systems. The quick cadence of these flights shows how Rocket Lab is helping accelerate the U.S. military’s hypersonic capabilities, while quickly establishing its role as the defense industry’s go-to launch partner for next-generation technology.
They are expected to use their own HASTE launch system modified for high speed rather than payload and can reach speeds of Mach 20. That would be, what, roughly 4 miles per second?
This setup lets customers, such as government agencies and private companies, test their tech in real high-speed conditions repeatedly, without the huge cost of a full orbital mission.
The star of the show is DART AE — short for Delta-Velocity Autonomous Reusable Test – Airframe Experiment — a sleek, 3D-built, self-piloting hypersonic test vehicle built by Hypersonix. It’s about 10 feet long, weighs around 660 pounds, and is designed to fly at Mach 7 — about 5,300 mph — for distances up to 620 miles.
What makes it special is its engine: the SPARTAN scramjet, which burns hydrogen fuel. Unlike traditional jet engines, a scramjet works best at very high speeds — it lights itself, can turn on and off multiple times for more flexible flight paths (not just a straight ballistic arc), and produces no carbon emissions.Yahoo Finance
All the science fiction we are living just boggles the mind…

And remember when we talked about Canada’s vaunted ban on assault weapons and government mandated confiscation buyback program? Six years in the making, blown well past its original budget, and they still have next to no participation from gun owners to show for it. But they still say they will finish it by the end of this year. In at least three provinces, that could be interesting.
Complicating the buyback is the fact that Canada has plenty of guns, more than the program alone can collect. The federal government estimates that it has the funds to buy 136,000 firearms, but Canada has roughly 2 million registered and 10 million unregistered guns, according to a 2017 release from the Small Arms Survey, an independent research group based in Switzerland.
The buyback has also been met with friction in western Canada. The province of Alberta has said it won’t participate in the buyback and barred its police forces from taking part. Saskatchewan and Manitoba have also said they won’t participate.
So they are underbudgeted, have no cooperation from local police, and think 2,500 banned types of weapons are going to be easy to find? Oh, and here is the buyback by price:
Category Proposed Compensation Amount (in Canadian Dollars) AR Platform $1,337 Cx4 Storm $1,317 CZ Scorpion $1,291 M14 Rifle $2,612 Robinson Armament $2,735 Ruger Mini-14 $1,407 SG550 and SG551 $6,209 SIG Sauer MCX, MPX $2,369 VZ.58 $1,139 Firearms with a bore diameter of 20 mm or greater $2,684 Firearms with a muzzle energy >10,000 Joules $2,819
Category: "The Floggings Will Continue Until Morale Improves", Canada, Science and Technology





Is this considered a Holiday Open Thread? If so, Hack Stone claims “First!”.
I’m very happy that our upcoming hypersonic missiles are environmentally friendly. What say you, Greta?
Sig MCXs currently sells for around $2600 US on gun broker before shipping, taxes and transfer fees. A VZ58 will set you back $1500 list. I can’t think of any complete rifles that produce over 10k joules that are less than mid four figures to low five figures.
With an M14 condition is everything but; cut receiver part kits are selling for $2200, finding a complete original condition rifle at the above price is optimistic at best.
You can buy an AR for $500 or $5000 depending upon what it is. Too bad it isn’t a US “buy back” program, there would be money making potential there.
Sold my M1A years ago when I downsized to the AR platform. With a bayonet and that steel butt plate it was quite
the weapon in trained hands, ammo or not.
Now that I am an old man the Armalite AR-15 fits the bill with
the Colt 1911A1 for carry. Those two are not for sale at any
price. I will however, entertain offers from Canader for the
Sig with a scope.
(snicker) I know it’s VERY HIGHLY unlikely, but I’d like to imagine a US gun buyer meeting a Canuck gun seller in some quiet obscure quiet part of the US/Canuckistan border, and exchanging goods.
Bypass the Gooberment “gun buyback” and throw everybody’s gun registry in a tizzy.
ROFLOL!!!!
The Dunning-Krueger Effect is on full display. No wonder the Euros think Americans are stupid. The Dems trot out this imbecile. First, she delivers a Kamala-esque word salad about Taiwan. Then she has this ridiculous take where giggles to herself because she thinks Cowboys came for ‘Mexico and descendent of enslaved African peoples’. Can you believe people are touting this fucking ninny as Presidential material?
https://x.com/uricohenisrael/status/2023198619327746391
Dumber than a box of Crocketts. And no, I ain’t talking about Davey.
Spaniards definitely brought the cowboy tradition with them. They were all over California and the West before Central and Northern Europeans started showing up in numbers.
They were a lot wilder too. They wouldn’t just fight bulls in a ring but California Grizzles as well with only a sword. I don’t know if that is a fight I’d take on.
They brought horses with them. Horses are not native to the Americas. Can’t have cowboys without horses.
Of course they brought horse but also cows. Impossible to have cowboys without cows.
Hard for some to believe that there were no horses, chickens, cows, goats, sheep, pigs and small cats. Dogs were here already here but the breeds present died off from the introduction of various diseases, much like the existing human population likely did.
There were only five families of land animals with a body weight over 120lbs in the Americas when Europeans arrived; Bear, Deer (moose, elk, Caribou), Llama, Tapirs and lions. Alligators are of course semi aquatic.
A big part of the reason that the Americas didn’t develop advanced technology was because they had no domesticated animals to provide cheap labor and faster transport of people, goods and services. Llamas were ok pack animals but nothing like a mule or a horse.
Davy killed him a bear before he was three.
Someone said he killed the bear when he was only three>
AOC once rook an IQ test and it came back negative.
She’s done FUBAR-ed her shot at ’28… although, honestly, I can’t say it changed my mind any. 😉
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/mark-halperin-warns-major-screw-212213439.html
So, tranny goes bezerk with an ebil gun and they want more gun control (on top of their usual Euro-style stuff) on everyone else…