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Jim,
I think I have the answers to your bonus quiz: Hanging Fire (or Hang Fire) - an old military term used when a black powder artillery piece did not immediately fire when the priming charge was lit (could be a few seconds delay before the main charge was ignited). Still used in this context whenever modern ammunition misfires. Doubling The Hill - this one is probably an old railroad term for the practice of seperating train cars and taking them up a steep hill in two runs, back when steam locomotives were common. Insufficient power to pull the entire train up the hill in one run would have necessitated this practice. 73, Leo On 19 Oct 2003 18:28:53 GMT, (N2EY) wrote: * special bonus trivia section - how did the phrases "hanging fire" and "doubling the hill" originate? |
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