Short explanation is that rolling on vertical uplines isn't used in competition levels below Intermediate, which I only started training for this year.
Also, doing it in the Cap is demanding because it does not have enough power for more than 3-4 seconds in the vertical, putting a roll in is...
Had my first lesson of rolling on vertical lines today. Quite different from rolling straight ahead when you can see the horizon in front of you. In the vertical you don't have much to judge whether you are rolling straight, and if you don't, whatever maneuver follows the roll turns into a...
I found out yesterday that a work trip that originally was scheduled such that I would miss Sabaton's gig in Oslo, has now been moved and I will be able to see Sabaton after all. :cheers:
Random music snippet drops into my head. Inspires me to listen to the two songs I connect with it: Bruce's Darkside of Aquarius and then Maiden's Revelations. Since I was listening on my headset, my accompanying guitar playing and delightful singing may have gone a bit out of hand. Hope my...
What is remarkable is that with the exception of Orban's Hungary, all NATO countries are in favour of donating Leopard tanks. Except Germany. Where, as Perun says, the majority are also in favour of it ...
Lately I have been rotating Somewhere in Time and Seventh Son as driving music to and from work.
Normally if "Moonchild" starts playing as I start my car at home, I'll be parked at work before the guitar solo in "The Evil That Men Do". Today I had reached the instrumental part in SSOASS before...
Could happen, but only if the car was accellerating, or being in a turn so that it came more and more straight towards the person (i.e. the speed component towards the observer increasing).
If the car approaches at a steady speed along a straight line and passes at "zero" distance, the observer...
If we want to understand this, we need to remember what the doppler effect is, in the acoustic (non-relativistic) world. Or what sound is, actually. It is an object that vibrates and creates pressure waves in its surroundings (in the air, for example). For you as an observer, what you hear as...
I can come up with an explanation, but I'll need a bit more than five minutes so I'll have to do it tonight :) But a short hint to get your thinking started: It's not a constant number of wave peaks between you and the moving object.
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