Tow bridlefor barge

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As revealed in a November 2015 issue of the Guardian, Jack Cover, the physicist-inventor of the infamous stun gun, named his martial brain-child after a fictional weapon described in the book, Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle. Released in 1911, the novel tells the story of White hunter who, armed with an electric rifle, travels to Africa in search of ivory. The name TASER is an acronym composed of the first letters in the phrase: Tom A Swift’s Electric Rifle. As Guardian author J. Lartey muses, it is more than a little unsettling that this popular weapon was “first imagined in a book in which ‘civilized’ whites entered the black wilds for the purpose of plunder, only to cast themselves as the saviors of the natives.”

3-point towingbridle

Thanks to its ignominious usage by law enforcement agencies beset with charges of prejudice inspired brutality against the civilian population, tasers have become a stable part of the US American lexicon. The weapon was originally designed to be a comparatively safe yet effective method of controlling suspects. However, the origin of this device’s name is also stepped in racist ideology.

The textile towing device SK2 is equivalent to our well-established SK1, but it additionally has an integrated towing support. That support helps to pre-accelerate the wing during towing in order to make towing phase safer by preventing deep stall and achieve more altitude. SK2 can only be attached to the main suspension of your harness. Fixed to the towing device are two line, which are fixed with brummel-hacken (sister clips) to the carrying strap. Line length is variable in order to achieve perfect pre-acceleration of 20-25%, dependent on the glider. If you don’t want the pre-acceleration, don’t connect the sister clips to the strap.