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Bogger may refer to: LHD (load, haul, dump machine), an articulated mining vehicle; A vehicle used in mud bogging, an off-road sport; Bogger Mushanga (born 1952 ...
An example of mud bogging. Mud bogging (also known as mud racing, mud running, mud hogging, mud drags, mud dogging, or mudding) is a form of off-road motorsport popular in the United States and Canada in which the goal is to drive a vehicle through a pit of mud or a track of a set length.
The early vehicles used ordinary sIG 33s, but an sIG 33/1 was developed for use on later vehicles. The 15 cm Sturmhaubitze 43 gun used on the Sturmpanzer IV was an entirely new design developed by Skoda that used the same ammunition as the sIG 33.
The SGS 2-33, indicating Schweizer Glider, Sailplane, 2 Seats, Model 33, was designed by Ernest Schweizer. The aircraft was a derivative of the 2-22, which in turn was based on the SGU 1-7 single place glider of 1937. The 2-33 retained the 2-22 and 1-7's metal wing, single spar and single strut arrangement. [1] [2] [5]
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The Hunter 33 is an American sailboat that was designed by John Cherubini and first built in 1977. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The design was originally marketed by the manufacturer as the Hunter 33 , but is often confused with the 2004 Hunter 33-2004 , which was also sold as the Hunter 33, and the 2012 Hunter E33 , which is in production as the Marlow ...
Martin B-10, 25th Bombardment Squadron, Panama Canal Zone Martin B-10 during exercises over Oahu, Hawaii, 1941 The B-10 began a revolution in bomber design. Its all-metal monoplane airframe, along with its features of closed cockpits, rotating gun turrets (almost simultaneously with the 1933 British Boulton & Paul Overstrand biplane bomber's own enclosed nose-turret), retractable landing gear ...
In north-western dialects the word 'boggart' was used in a number of sentences. In Lancashire, a skittish or runaway horse was said to have "took boggarts"—that is, been frightened by a, usually invisible, boggart. [9] 'Boggart muck' seems to have been a word for owl pellets in much of North West England. [10]