BELT POSITIONING BOOSTER SEAT SYSTEM. BELT POSITIONING BOOSTER

BELT POSITIONING BOOSTER SEAT SYSTEM. SOFT GIGGLES POTTY SEAT. GRACO PINK INFANT CAR SEAT.

Belt Positioning Booster Seat System


belt positioning booster seat system
    booster seat
  • (Booster Seats) Are intended to be used as a transition to lap and shoulder belts by older children who have outgrown convertible seats (over 40 pounds). They are available in high backs, for use in vehicles with low seat backs or no head restraints, and no-back; booster bases only.
  • An infant safety seat, also known as a child safety seat, a child restraint system, a restraint car seat, or ambiguously just as a car seat, is a restraint which is secured to the seat of an automobile equipped with safety harnesses to hold an infant or small stature people in the event of a crash.
  • An extra seat or cushion placed on an existing seat for a small child to sit on
  • (Booster Seats) Booster seats are not permitted in any Spaceships vehicle.
    positioning
  • In marketing, positioning has come to mean the process by which marketers try to create an image or identity in the minds of their target market for its product, brand, or organization.
  • Put or arrange (someone or something) in a particular place or way
  • Portray or regard (someone) as a particular type of person
  • aligning: causing to fall into line or into position
  • Promote (a product, service, or business) within a particular sector of a market, or as the fulfillment of that sector's specific requirements
  • placement: the act of putting something in a certain place
    system
  • A set of connected things or parts forming a complex whole, in particular
  • A set of organs in the body with a common structure or function
  • A set of things working together as parts of a mechanism or an interconnecting network
  • (physical chemistry) a sample of matter in which substances in different phases are in equilibrium; "in a static system oil cannot be replaced by water on a surface"; "a system generating hydrogen peroxide"
  • instrumentality that combines interrelated interacting artifacts designed to work as a coherent entity; "he bought a new stereo system"; "the system consists of a motor and a small computer"
  • a group of independent but interrelated elements comprising a unified whole; "a vast system of production and distribution and consumption keep the country going"
    belt
  • A belt worn as a sign of rank or achievement
  • endless loop of flexible material between two rotating shafts or pulleys
  • A strip of leather or other material worn around the waist or across the chest, esp. in order to support clothes or carry weapons
  • a band to tie or buckle around the body (usually at the waist)
  • belt out: sing loudly and forcefully
  • A belt of a specified color, marking the attainment of a particular level in judo, karate, or similar sports

Sperry Model A-1 Mid-upper Turret
Sperry Model A-1 Mid-upper Turret
The Sperry Model A-1 mid-upper turret served with distinction on B-17s on many war fronts. It was powered hydraulically by a self-contained electro-hydraulic unit. The gunsight gave the gunner a computed impact point, being developed from the larger K-2 computer-controlled sight, and was known as the Model K-3 (the inverted K-4 was fitted to the ball turret). Visibility was restricted in the first Model A-1s; two metal segments of the cupola to the sides were criticised by gunners, and were replaced by Perspex sections manufactured in the UK for the Eighth AAF in Europe. This modification was soon adopted on the production line. The gunner could enter the turret from the pilot's cabin or, as was usually the case on an operation, over the bomb bay, when he had to crawl between two columns, turn round, and then rise from a stooped position to stand in the turret. The footrests were adjusted so that the gunner's eyes were behind the optical head of the sight. There was also a sling-type seat which he could clip under him. He then engaged the rotation and elevation clutches, using small crank handles above the ammunition cans. The main circuit-breaker near his left shoulder was switched on, and the sight rheostat adjusted for brightness. In front of the control handles were the ammunition booster motor switches, which were closed. The twin handle controller was operated in the normal way, with the exception that the right handle incorporated a twist grip which adjusted the sight reticles to the size of an attacking fighter. On the left handle was a safety lever which ensured the turret could not move unless the gunner was in position. Triggers were mounted under the index fingers and a press-to-talk button controlled by the left thumb. A simple method of cocking the guns was by means of two handles suspended from pulleys in the roof of the cupola, which pulled back the charging handles of the guns. Oxygen was supplied from a demand-type regulator under the control unit, below which was the heated-suit plug. The interphone jacks for the gunner's headphones and throat microphones were situated in a junction box near his left shoulder. A trouble light and switch were mounted in a small box forward of the oxygen, and a Fairchild gun camera could be mounted on the left side of the sight cradle. The twin 12.7 mm (0.5 in) Browning M2 guns were fed from 125-round ammuntion cans which were loaded from the front of the turret, they were loaded with the rounds pointed to the outside of the turret, pushed forward on to rollers and clipped into position. using two 25-round lengths of ammuntionas feed strips the rounds were fed into the gun feedway and over the booster-unit sprockets. The single link of the feed strip belt was then fixed on to the double link of the leading belt link in the can, using a single round to join them. Each gun was fed from three 125-round cans which were linked together giving a continouous 375-round belt. The cans could be reloaded during a lull in firing. Fastened to the gun's ejection chute were canvas bags to collect the spent rounds. The Sperry K-3 computer gunsight gave a computed impact point. Information fed into the sight was (1) rate and direction of rotation, (2) angle and direction of elevation, and (3) range given by the gunner adjusting the illuminated sighting graticules and position of aircraft-type indicator set by gunner on the sight body. The Sperry A-1 was a very efficient turret which, with an experienced gunner able to track smoothly and use the sight to advantage, posed a threat to any attacking fighter. Details of the Sperry Model A-1 Mid-upper Turret. Aircraft Type: Boeing Flying Fortress Mks. II, IIA, and III (B-17E, F and G) Position in aircraft: Mid-upper Armament: Two 12.7 mm (0.5 in) Browning M2 guns Ammunition: Three 125-round rechargeable cans Gunsights: Sperry K-3 computing sight, also fitted with ring-and-bead as standby. Gunfire interrupter: Limit stops preventing mechanical damage, fire cut-off system preventing fire damage to airframe. Field of fire: Traverse: 360 degrees Elevation: 0 degrees to 85 degrees Depression: n/a Motive power: Electro hydraulic unit. Fire control: Electrical solenoid units. Turret speed: 40 degrees/sec.
Different position
Different position
Life puts we as human in different positions, too many times we think to ourself that our place , our condition is the result of our superiority, of our work, so we forget the essence.... we are placed into the world by destiny like microscopic drop into the ocean infinity.... La vita mette noi umani in diverse posizioni, troppe volte noi pensiamo che il nostro posto, la nostra condizione sia il risultato della nostra superiorita, del nostro lavoro, cosi noi dimentichiamo l'essenza .... noi siamo piazzati nel mondo dal destino come microscopiche gocce nell'infinita dell'oceano ....

belt positioning booster seat system
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