Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pennant number G18/D118: Fate: Arrived at Blyth for scrapping on 20 October 1964: General characteristics; Class and type: Weapon-class destroyer: Displacement: 1,980 tons standard: Length: 365 ft (111 m) Beam: 38 ft (12 m) Armament: 6 x 4-inch DP guns; 6 x 40 mm Bofors AA Guns; 10 x 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes; 2 x Squid ASW mortars
Galaxy 18 is the home of a number of minor television networks, and in the past hosted the stations of Equity Media Holdings before its 2009 bankruptcy, where it used the satellite to beam several major network affiliates to their appropriate local transmitters, along with the local cable providers carrying them as Equity hubbed their master control from a hub in Little Rock, Arkansas.
This is a list of satellites in geosynchronous orbit (GSO).These satellites are commonly used for communication purposes, such as radio and television networks, back-haul, and direct broadcast.
The EMD G18 is an export locomotive introduced by GM-EMD in the late 1960s. The standard EMD suffixes applied after the G18 designation to indicate if the customer purchased locomotives with specific traction motors to fit narrow gauge ( U ) or broad gauge ( W ) rails.
G15, G18, G53, G83 John Brown & Company, Clydebank: 25 August 1915: 14 May 1916: 17 August 1916: 13 March 1930: Scrapped [citation needed] Rowena: D84, F45, H85, G81, G90 John Brown & Company, Clydebank: 25 August 1915: 1 July 1916: 29 September 1916: 27 January 1937: Scrapped [citation needed] Restless: G85, G88 John Brown & Company, Clydebank ...
HMS Battleaxe (G18), a Weapon-class destroyer of the Royal Navy; Other uses. Glock 18, an automatic handgun; Prince G-18, a car engine; Xplore G18, a cellular phone
The EMD GA18 was an export locomotive built by GM-EMD in 1969. The GA18 was a derivative of the EMD G18 and was designed as an extremely light locomotive with low axle loading which used freight car trucks driven by cardan shafts and two traction motors attached to the underframe.
The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM) is an experimental expandable space station module developed by Bigelow Aerospace, under contract to NASA, for testing as a temporary module on the International Space Station (ISS) from 2016 to at most 2028, when the contract can not be further extended.