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Wasps actually have two sets of wings which they use to fly at such fast speeds. These involve a larger set of forewings and a smaller set of hindwings that are attached to their thorax. A unique muscle contacts there and moves the wings incredibly fast.
A bit off topic but I fail to understand what purpose a D Can motor has in todays racing. Any of the FK size sealed motors will handle the slower end of the speed spectrum and the myriad of C Can motors available can handle everything on the faster end of the spectrum. And both of these smaller motors will handle better than a D Can on banked or flat tracks. IMO it's time to let the venerable old D Can fade into Slotcar history.
Earl, there is a reason these motors are not raced together in most racing groups. The rules try to make it up to the driver skills and not a horsepower war. Bracket drag racing is different. If you want a faster ET, you can go for more horses if the gear ratio does not give you a better time.
Handling is one factor on lap time that the smaller, lighter motors will always win. A longer stack armature will give more torque - if your chassis can make it work. An unbalanced Wasp and balanced Super Wasp have a slight edge on higher torque motors in 1/32 racers.
Just went out and weighted my PS S16Ds (30+ grams) and Super Wasps (20.5-21.7 grams). I'll take the Super Wasp over any D motor. Weight is the key advantage. Dave is right that the D motors are torque motors. The small arm SW is an RPM low torque motor so gear it properly and you'll reap the advantages of less weight and more RPM. You'll also have less tire wear and a gyroscopic effect to aid handling that you won't get in the bigger motors not to mention faster acceleration. A popular pro racer told me that for every gram of weight you gave up .01 in time. If you can save 10+ grams my math says that's .1 every lap. But to each his own mine will be Super Wasp when given a choice and in this case.
This past Wednesday I found myself thinking about Hollywood Horror Films while crouched along a hot sunny rock wall on the UW-Madison campus patiently waiting for one of our largest wasps to land mere inches from my face. What gives? Cicada Killers: One part cold-blooded killer, one part flying teddy bear (check out how fuzzy that thorax is!).
Territorial male cicada killer wasp trying to stare me down for getting too close to his rock. Photo credit: PJ Liesch, UW-Entomology [Click for a larger image]Part of their basic biology plays out like a B-Class horror movie: a victim (cicada) is injected with an incapacitating chemical before being dragged to an underground lair and left to be eaten alive. While it sounds bizarre, this is actually fairly common in the insect world and there are many examples of wasps that paralyze their prey and haul them off to their nests in the ground to feed to their young. (One of my favorites is the Zombie-making emerald cockroach wasp)
The Wasp WPL618 industrial barcode printer is the fastest, most rugged and highest-performing industrial label printer in the Wasp printer line - delivering advanced print speeds, durable construction, and high-volume barcode printing in mission-critical applications. Maximize efficiency and throughput with print speeds of up to 18 inches per second, supported by 512 MB Flash and 512 MB SDRAM memory.
The WPL618 industrial barcode printer is both versatile and easy to use with features like direct thermal and thermal transfer printing, 6-button color LCD resistive touch screen for fast configuration, and enhanced print quality \"Thermal Smart Control\" which tracks and precisely calculates the duration that each pixel needs to be heated to provide accurate, crisp and clear labels every time, whether you are printing one label at a time or thousands of labels in a batch.
This industry-leading workhorse is built with a die-cast aluminum print mechanism housed in a durable, yet light weight chassis will provide the durability to keep operations running in the most demanding 24/7 environments. Whether you are adopting barcode printers for the first time, upgrading from another brand, or adding to your existing Wasp printer line the ZPL,ZPL II, EPL, and WPL emulation that are included will ensure application compatibility.
Equipped with a 536 MHz processor, our fastest ever, the WPL618 boosts productivity with high-speed communications that provides ultra-fast printing speeds. The WPL618 comes standard with 203 DPI resolution but it can be upgraded to 300 DPI or 600 DPI for printing small barcode labels or labels that contain graphics.
Thor and Fast and Furious: Hobbs and Shaw star Idris Elba has a vicious new namesake: a parasitic wasp. Idris elba (the wasp, not the actor) lays its eggs inside the eggs of an invasive stinkbug called the bagrada bug. The newly-described species may eventually help protect crops from the invasive pest.
Enter Idris elba (the wasp, not the actor; Idris Elba the actor has no known position on invasive insect species). More than 300 wasp species in the genus Idris parasitize spider eggs, but Idris elba lays its eggs in bagrada bug eggs (again, not the actor, because that would just be weird, not to mention scientifically impossible). Parasitic species like Idris wasps can adapt to new hosts, of course, but biologist Jose Refugio Lomeli-Flores and his colleagues say it's unusual for a parasite to adapt so quickly to a host that's just moved into its environment. After all, Idris elba must have started parasitizing stinkbug eggs within the last decade or so. (That is definitely not a sentence one ever expects to write.)
So why did Lomeli-Flores and his colleagues name their new wasp species after Idris Elba, who voiced Chief Bogo in Zootopia? There was already a whole wasp genus named Idris, which had been on the taxonomic books since 1856, and as co-author Elijah Talamas told Smithsonian, "It was too funny not to do it." And that's science.
Next, notice what is around you. Is there more than one bee or wasp? Make sure to head away from their nest and not toward it. Also, some nests may be underground in a hole. Watch your step as you leave the area.
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