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HSTRIP

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Everything posted by HSTRIP

  1. Hi, Can someone recommend a good detailed tutorial for completing the easter egg with 2 players? youtube is flooded with horrible videos...
  2. So there are 8 lights? I'm sure this has been tried... but what if when doing Richtofen's EE instead of blowing money on the box for EMP's could you place four turbines at four lamps and then turn the power off? Effectively lowering the power by a factor of 4?
  3. So there are 8 lights? I'm sure this has been tried... but what if when doing Richtofen's EE instead of blowing money on the box for EMP's could you place four turbines at four lamps and then turn the power off? Effectively lowering the power by a factor of 4?
  4. Hi, I was doing the Richtofen EE with 4 players using the 2 player emp method, but I teleported to the same spot my friend just emp'ed. Waited for a max ammo, did it again and the same thing happened. Bad luck? Can the EE be done in "customize mode" on regular difficulty and does it get saved into the online profile this way? Or does it have to be a public match to save? Thanks
  5. pics or it didn't happen...
  6. I agree. NAV does stand for 'Net Asset Value' and it's right beside our money as opposed to on the bottom. Of course that doesn't explain the table you build...
  7. No. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Run Check it out. The "Green Run" was a secret U.S. Government release of radioactive fission products on December 2–3, 1949, at the Hanford Site plutonium production facility. Radioisotopes released at that time were supposed to be detected by U.S. Air Force reconnaissance. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to the U.S. Government have revealed some of the details of the experiment.[1] Sources cite 5,500 to 12,000 curies (200 to 440 TBq) of iodine-131 released,[1][2][3] and an even greater amount of Xenon-133. The radiation was distributed over populated areas, and caused the cessation of intentional radioactive releases at Hanford until 1962 when more experiments commenced.[3] There are some indications contained in the documents released by the FOIA requests that many other tests were conducted in the 1940s prior to the Green Run, although the Green Run was a particularly large test. Evidence suggest that filters to remove the iodine were disabled during the Green Run.[3][4] The project gets its name from the processing of uranium at Hanford. Due to the higher radioactivity involved, batch processing waited 83 to 101 days to allow the radioactive isotopes to decay. For the Green Run test, a batch was run with only a 16 day cooling period. The unfiltered exhaust from the production facility was therefore much more radioactive than during a normal batch. [edit]Oral history Health Physicist Carl C. Gamertsfelder, Ph.D. described his recollections as to the reasons for the Green Run by attributing it to the intentions of the Air Force to be able to track Soviet releases. "Herb Parker called me to request that I, and the groups that I supervised, cooperate with the Air Force in the conduct of an experiment which became known as the Green Run... And we didn't recommend, we wouldn't have recommended, that they operate it. We told them that. They wanted to run anyway, and they did run."[5] [edit]Modern Culture In the 2012 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops II, there is a 'Zombies' mode map called Green Run, which is set at Hanford; The layout of the map is near identical to that of Hanford.
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