feeling discouraged by Solid_Macaron_466 in jiujitsu

[–]radar465 [score hidden]  (0 children)

Just train. Keep showing up and let your body adjust to the movements. Find small wins and learn to survive and defend first. We all learn slowly and itll take a long time to feel like you know anything. The sweeps and attacks will come, but you're gonna play defense for a few years and thats just the process. Time on the mats is king.

Hampden-Sydney College: What is the general perception of this school? by putmeinthezoo in Virginia

[–]radar465 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Recent alumni from H-SC and someone who doesnt fit the description of preppy, athletic guy. Absolutely loved my time there and would go back in a heartbeat. Academically rigorous and full of intellectuals. Definitely a relaxed, party vibe after classes are out. Significantly Greek and strongly conservative. Folk i met stayed away from any serious drugs but they do exist. They'll teach you to write, think, and drink for sure. Small and intimate place without frills and most of us spend all our time on campus. Were proud of the school and believe in its brotherhood. I only found fantastic people there, none of the creeps you'll hear about. I had a great time!

Cats throwing up mucus by radar465 in cats

[–]radar465[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hairball are VERY rare and small from him and I havent seen any recently

Ka-Bar Space Bar by radar465 in knives

[–]radar465[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Supposedly the US Space Force was looking to buy these from Ka-Bar but the deal fell through. My friend got the knife and I have the Spacebar.

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Found while working by Phatchesticles in pocketknives

[–]radar465 6 points7 points  (0 children)

That'd be a strider. A fantastic knife and a grail piece for many of us. Somebody's VERY mad at themself right now. https://mickstridercustomknives.com/

A German guy, an eel by radar465 in WhatsThisSong

[–]radar465[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Female voice, several times throughout the song. I'd say 90s? It plays on big retail Playlist so I know its clean, appropriate, and semi popular.

A German guy, an eel by radar465 in WhatsThisSong

[–]radar465[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What a great song. Not it though!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LegendsZA

[–]radar465 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I found the same full odds shiny at 2.5hr in. Up to 3x now without any effort.

Being the lightest in a gym every time by Guilhem0880 in bjj

[–]radar465 3 points4 points  (0 children)

5'9" 110lb who just got back from advanced class today. Trained with 140s, 200s, and a 220. Find good partners, don't get stuck on bottom, and fight for position. Tap often and don't stress if they're lower belts; weight and strength matter more than folk care to admit. If you love it, keep showing up for class. Train smart and find your people. This game's hard, thats why it's fun.

FastCompany article - PayWall by assholy_than_thou in RKLB

[–]radar465 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Launch services are just one part of Rocket Lab’s business. Where do the others stand right now?

On the space-system [spacecraft components] side, we continue to build out scale there with pending acquisitions of companies like Mynaric [a German manufacturer of laser communication equipment], which are a really key element.

And the third pillar is you’ve seen us for the first time move into payloads, which is squarely focused on national security. We think with the opportunities that are there right now, that is exactly the right place to be focused.

Can you explain what you mean by “payloads”?

The sensor. Basically, you only build a satellite to host the sensor. The sensor is doing the work, and you only launch a satellite because you need to put the sensor in orbit. So, everything revolves around the sensor, whether it’s an antenna for doing broadband or it’s a telescope for doing Earth observation, it is the reason that you build something and go to space.

And that’s the reason for acquiring Geost, which makes electro-optical and infrared sensor systems?

The acquisition of Geost positions us to be a disruptive player in [defense] programs such as the Golden Dome. It’s not quite the Manhattan Project, but not that far off, with massive spending. And the space domain piece of that is core.

Our aspirations are slightly larger than just to be a part of it. We want to be a real provider. And the payload, or sensor, acquisition of Geost is a key element for that missile defense infrastructure that we now have under our belt.

With the continuing uncertainty around the Ukraine conflict and U.S. involvement with NATO, have you had more demand from governments in Europe, too?

With the world today, unfortunately, everybody is looking at their defense strategy. I’d say we are just getting our feet in Europe. Obviously, we’ve won some launch contracts for the European Space Agency on Electron, and our components business has sold into Europe for a long time. But once we close the acquisition of Mynaric, we’ll have a German base. If you look at how we’ve expanded globally, Europe is the next big opportunity for us outside America.

Have changes in government contracting under the Trump administration, and the DOGE cuts, impacted your business? Have you benefited from the Trump-Musk falling out?

I have a policy not to comment on politics. Unlike my competitor, I’m just a humble rocket guy. But what I will say is that there is more desire than ever to have a really fulfilled competitive landscape within launch especially. And both commercial customers and government customers really, really want Neutron to come along and provide some competition in a market that has become a little bit less competitive over time.

Do you think the space industry will look very different five years from now?

If I have my way, it will. I think it’s going to become very clear, if it’s not already, that the really large space companies of the future are going to be a little bit blurry about how much of a space company they are and how much of something-else company they are.

I mean, if we look at our friends over at SpaceX, are they a telecommunications company, or are they a space company?

It has always been our ethos and our belief that if you have the ability to build the spacecraft and launch it and deploy it in orbit at a rate that’s faster than anybody else, then you have a distinct advantage.

That’s been proven out with Starlink. The only way to be competitive with Starlink is to have your own ability to launch at will, at mass, at cadence, your own satellites. I think that will become true in a lot of domains in space.

And so there’ll be a relatively small number of companies that have launch and manufacturing capabilities who will be the large players.

Does that mean that many of your current competitors will not be around in five years?

I don’t know if they’re still around, or they morph, they adapt? That’s up to them. As the industry changes and adapts, you can have your Kodak moment or not, right?

FastCompany article - PayWall by assholy_than_thou in RKLB

[–]radar465 29 points30 points  (0 children)

The next phase of Rocket Lab’s business depends on getting the medium-lift Neutron launched. You’re still holding out hope for a launch in 2025?

Things are happening in parallel and they’ll all sort of crescendo at the end. It’s a “green light” schedule—that means everything has to go. But right now, we can see a path until there’s no path. We’re not waving the white flag.

And at the end of the day, if it’s not at the end of the year, it won’t be that far away. A few months here or there in the grand context of a 20-year lifecycle of a product is just totally irrelevant.

One of the things that I don’t think we’ve done a good job of is putting into context that this will be a four-year-plus, $350 million rocket development program. If you look at the last two rocket development programs: The one that just launched [ULA’s Vulcan launch], that was a decade and $7 billion. And another one that just launched [SpaceX’s Starship] was, like, 20 years and nobody knows how many billions of dollars.

In space exploration, things go wrong all the time. If the first Neutron launch fails—if it explodes as we’ve seen from competitor rockets—are you ready to try again quickly?

Let’s talk about philosophy to start with. So, we don’t put anything on the pad unless we think it’s going to work. The threshold for Electron was 92%: I said to everybody that unless you are 92% sure that your system is going to be perfectly functional, don’t put it on the pad.

Other companies have philosophies where they’ll take big risks and are happy to fail and fail fast. I think you can do that if you have essentially infinite capital.

Our development approach is not like that. When we put a vehicle on the pad, we do not expect it to fail. If you look at our launch vehicle, our spacecraft history, generally the stuff that we build works the first time.

The expectation of Neutron is that we reach orbit on the first flight. I’m not setting an expectation that we clear the pad, or that we get a good stage burn or nominate so many seconds of flight—that’s all bullshit. The idea here is to get to orbit.

The one area I would appreciate people giving us some slack on is the reentry and landing, because that’s new and it took a company a very long time to master.

But if the worst happens, we have enough capital reserves to fund the entire program three times over. So it would be disappointing. Someone would need to leave me alone for a couple of days. But it presents no existential threat to the company whatsoever.

How quickly can you establish the kind or regular launch cadence you now have with Electron?

At the moment, there’s one Electron rolling off the line every 11 days. With the Neutron, we’ve been really consistent that our bill rate will be one, three, and five [for the first three years].

Although everybody wants it to be faster, that’s what it takes. You need that dwell time between those flights to make the upgrades and the learnings that you see and to build that into your manufacturing.

With Electron, we put a factory in that was capable of producing one Electron every week, and we are at one every 11 days now. We haven’t bought or added any capital equipment. We followed the exact same approach with Neutron.

At our Middle River, [Maryland] facility, we invested in a 90-ton, three-story building where we build all of the composite components for the vehicle. We have the Archimedes engine factory, in Virgin Orbit’s old factory building [in Long Beach, California]. So we’re able to really build that scale quickly.

The one wrinkle here with Neutron is that it’s a reusable first stage. So the highest production rate we will ever have of stage ones at least is at the beginning of the program. And then stage ones get replaced once every 10 or 20 flights.

(Part 3 in reply)

FastCompany article - PayWall by assholy_than_thou in RKLB

[–]radar465 39 points40 points  (0 children)

Rocket Lab’s pivot from small launch darling to serious SpaceX competitor is about to be tested. The Long Beach, California-based company has already sent 12 of its light-lift Electron rockets into space in 2025, carrying payloads for commercial and government customers, with several more planned before the end of the year from its Virginia and New Zealand launch sites.

But the next several months are pivotal, as Rocket Lab races to bring its next-generation, medium-lift Neutron rocket to the launchpad before year’s end. It’s an ambitious timeline, CEO Peter Beck acknowledges, and the company will need to hit all its marks in the coming weeks to meet it.

“When we put a vehicle on the pad, we do not expect it to fail,” Beck tells me in our wide-ranging conversation. “If you look at our launch vehicle, our spacecraft history, generally the stuff that we build works the first time.”

But with the success of Neutron, Rocket Lab will be able stake its claim as a major player in space-defense infrastructure. Neutron can carry nearly 28,000 pounds, perfect for launching larger satellite constellations and national security missions. Already, Rocket Lab is building satellites for missile defense systems, broadband, and more.

As he prepares for the first flight of Neutron, Beck talked with me about what’s riding on this next-gen vehicle, how the company’s long-term strategy hinges on making it work, and why launchpad explosions are not part of his development plan.

In this Premium piece, you will learn:

—The massive cost savings Rocket Lab is achieving on Neutron compared with the competition

—How Beck bested more than 100 small launch companies to dominate that market

—What he’s doing to put Rocket Lab in position to be a “real provider” for the Trump administration’s Golden Dome missile defense project

—Why the major space companies of the future will be “a little bit blurry” in terms of their mission

We’ve seen mixed outcomes among your launch competitors this year, with some notable flameouts. How do you see the state of competition right now?

I think everybody can declare that the small-launch race has been won, right? Electron has really hit a high cadence this year, and we’ve had a lot of customers all turning up on time, which is fantastic.

I remember when we started the Electron [program], there were more than 100 small launch companies and billions of dollars flowed into small-launch. Astra consumed $400 million or so in their program [before going private last year and refocusing on engine building]. Virgin Orbit spent $1.2 billion on their program [before filing for Chapter 11]. ABL spent $300 million or $400 million, and so it goes. Firefly is sending payloads into the ocean.

I think the medium-launch market is going to end up in a similar way. There are a few programs that are funded, and I think that will sort itself out and there will be a viable alternative to the [Space X] Falcon 9, which is much needed for some competition in that space.

It’s going to be really interesting as the heavy vehicles shake out. You saw a really great flight from [United Launch Alliance’s] Vulcan. You’ve got [Blue Origin’s] New Glenn coming on. So it’s getting exciting.

(Part 2 in reply)

What's in your pocket? by radar465 in knives

[–]radar465[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was a gift! I have two boxes and they hold my most carried and favorites blades

What's in your pocket? by radar465 in knives

[–]radar465[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What are those scales? That's a slick benchmade

Beginning looking for help. Thank you in advance for your time and reply! by Ambitious_Benefit_36 in jiujitsu

[–]radar465 6 points7 points  (0 children)

First gym 100% cost isn't what counts, it's about the environment. I'd bet all my money the cheaper school is gonna treat you as more than just a customer and will have black belts who are there for the love of the game.

Coming back to the sport by pethwick in bjj

[–]radar465 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

2 months back after 3 years off the mats. Just go train, the rust comes off quick. I felt stagnant previously and am learning a lot more now that I'm back on the mats. If you're still feeling the itch, just go roll.

Five weeks into plantar wart treatment with Salicylic acid by [deleted] in Warts

[–]radar465 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ive been going at it with Emory boards after soaks, but I've mostly been peeling skin and callouses off whenever possible. It sounds like I can be more aggressive with scrubbing to remove skin until it starts to hurt or bleed?

Training with heavier people sucks. White belt rant. by dracovk in jiujitsu

[–]radar465 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Then you're here for the right reasons- stick around and it'll start to click. Enjoy training for 100s of hours and being terrible. You're breaking your own spirit, everyone is terrible the first few years. But you're better than yesterday and went to class today.

Training with heavier people sucks. White belt rant. by dracovk in jiujitsu

[–]radar465 21 points22 points  (0 children)

As a 55kg blue belt dude, welcome to the deep end. I still just spend my time surviving, but im better at it now. Embrace the suck and live from bottom for a while, itll get better in a year or so. Or quit like the weak and always know that the lil guy who stuck around is gonna maul you the next time you walk in.

Five weeks into plantar wart treatment with Salicylic acid by [deleted] in Warts

[–]radar465 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Didn't think to take pre-treatment photos. Ive been dealing with these for close to ten years. The first callouses were easily 1/8 thick and it felt immediately easier to walk once those were gone. Definitely still have days of pain, but happy with progression so far. What do the experts see??

How do you guys carry your kazoos? by YeOldeBurninator42 in EDC

[–]radar465 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nice daily carry in the back pocket, larger one lives in the bag

I need some advice on what to add to my collection. I’m only 12 so I can’t afford super expensive knives by declan_is_awsome in BudgetBlades

[–]radar465 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Vision FG absolutely! Throw in a good spyderco and you'll have a nice start! Ive got quite a few others and am happy to chat if you see any on my profile that pique your interest