Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It was amended to specify performance requirements for anthropomorphic test dummies seated in the front outboard seats of passenger cars and of certain multi-purpose passenger vehicles, trucks, and buses, including the active and passive restraint systems.
CPI was soon mandatory on Canadian Air Force aircraft working in the far north. In one instance, an aircraft in the Yukon mountains was found by CPI in a location where visual location would have been impossible. In another, a USAF aircraft crashed into the ocean at night, but its injured crew was rescued after the CPI broadcast was detected.
A physical restraint is a device that impairs the freedom of movement of the body in some way. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
The TM 31-210 manual appeared as an "Easter egg" in the 1995 CGI animated film, Toy Story.In the scene where Woody is trapped under a blue plastic box in Sid's bedroom, it's possible to see behind him a document titled "TM 31-210 Improvised Interrogation Handbook", a clear reference to the actual document.
The stimulus can be manual through brute force and placing pressure on pain-sensitive areas on the body. Painful hyperextension or hyperflexion on joints is also used. [ 2 ] Tools such as a whip , a baton , an electroshock weapon , or use chemicals such as tear gas or pepper spray are commonly used as well.
%PDF-1.3 %Äåòåë§ó ÐÄÆ 4 0 obj /Length 5 0 R /Filter /FlateDecode >> stream x ½\[s É’~çWÔÓ Ž ½} üd Èj ! °}¼ë Œ„,ÎHà ä9>¿h æ~Y™Õ÷F šØð å¾ÕWyϬ,ý©~U *§c9¾r|Ë »ÝŽ Ú ÕvU;ô¬0TÛ¥ú¬ÖøŸåûªÝÁOG¹^×r;ʶ}ÿ^îú^Ç Ó7 x9}³ ò;žß¶: úô½òœ€>Cï–Ý>Ÿ«–mÙ ÐoÌo €¶Ûí «lüà º €v|« høf¨æOê¿æsG9j~¯þG5£± ...
The Hutchens device was developed by engineer Trevor Ashline. [2] [3] [4] It was named after Bobby Hutchens, who also helped develop the product.Hutchens was a driver on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, and was a racing engineer and the general manager of Richard Childress Racing at the time of the device's creation.
Isofix anchor points under a removable cover. Isofix (styled ISOFIX) is the international standard for attachment points for child safety seats in passenger cars. The system has other regional names including LATCH ("Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children") in the United States, and LUAS ("Lower Universal Anchorage System") or Canfix in Canada. [1]