Month: September 2009

Neat Tech: Nutating Engine

Nutation is what a coin does toward the end of its motion when you spin it, when it wobbles around the edge, and rotates at the same time.

The Nutating engine is similar to a Wankel rotary, only instead of having a triangular rotor that orbits and spins around the crankshaft, it has a disk that wobbles as it rotates (bottom pic for animation).

The military is funding the development of an aluminum prototype, which promises to double (or more)the power to weight ratio for small engines, where turbines lose much of their advantage.

Right now, they are looking at a power to weight ratio of 1.6:1 or so, which is a pretty remarkable number.

A NASA study (PDF) is also available.

Galrahn Observes

That, “US Navy has 46% of our sub force on deployment,” not just at sea, but on deployment, and it is a high number.

Could be one of those year end things where they are trying to meet deployment rates, or maybe, as Galhran wonders, something is about to happen.

If it is prepositioning for some sort of action, the two most likely reasons to have subs out there loaded for bear would be to make some surprise cruise missile strikes, or SEAL insertions to go after some some nasty on a personal level.

In either case, it’s odd, even if it’s just a statistical glitch.

FMTV Production Contract Award Protested

Remember when I said that Oshkosh had won the FMTV military truck production competition, and so would be replacing BAE subsidiary Stewart and Stevenson?*

Well, BAE has filed a protest on the FMTV award, which means that there stop work order in effect.

Thankfully, production does not start for about year, so it should not have much of an effect, unless, of course, Oshkosh is using the time to redo the drawing package, which is likely.

*Full disclosure I worked at Stewart & Stevenson, Tactical Vehicle Systems, in Sealy, TX on the FMTV in 1992 and 1993.
Yes, I have worked everywhere. Maybe I can’t hold down a job, but more likely this has been my role as “technical hit man”, where you are parachuted in to take care of a specific need.

NASA Looking at Inflatable Module for ISS

It looks like NASA is looking again at using the inflatable module technology that it first proposed as “TransHab” in the 1990s. on the International Space Station. (top pic)

Bigelo Aerospace has been working with the concept, and NASA’s basic technology, to develop a tourist destination in orbit (bottom Pic), and it has successfully launched two prototypes populated with insects, and with this success, NASA is again considering adding an inflatable module to the ISS.

The concept was originally developed to provide for living quarters for a manned Mars Mission.

Best Snark of the Day

Actually, it was about 2 weeks ago, and I just stumbled across it.

Jack McHugh, upon discovering that Ben Bernanke was the victim of identity theft, (his wife’s purse was stolen, and the contents were used to forge his identity) had this thought:

To the criminal who actually stole Ms. Bernanke’s purse and is still at large, I offer this piece of advice. Before turning yourself in, do yourself and your country a favor by handing Mr. Bernanke’s identity information to someone like Paul Volcker. You’ll get a shorter sentence and your country will benefit. Speculation would be tamed, and long term inflation expectations would probably fall far enough to shrink the budget deficit by obviating the need for more bond purchases. If someone else must possess the Chairman’s identity, who other than Mr. Volcker would be more responsible in assuming it? We’ll need Volcker’s tough-mindedness to stare down Congress if we are to ever exit all these stimulus programs. It’s a shame that the Mr. Bernanke had his identity stolen last fall, but the tragedy is that someone didn’t steal Mr. Greenspan’s in the 1990’s.

Word!!!!

Why Is The Fed Freaking Out About Disclosure?

Between the Bloomberg court case demanding FOIA Releases and Congressman Ron Paul’s increasingly popular legislative proposal to audit Federal Reserve programs, it is pretty clear that the Federal Reserve is in full panic mode.

Here are what I think are the likely motivations, in order of increasing plausibility:

Henry Blodget suggests that the Fed, and the banks are concerned that the release of this data will lead to a bank run, as it did with Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) in early 1933.

They are not suggesting that any new problems will be revealed, but that the mere fact that banks have used Fed lending facilities will trigger a panic.

I find this unlikely, simply because there is deposit insurance now, and as such small depositors will no longer freak, as a result now, and the large players already know who is in bad shape, and everyone knows that everyone has availed themselves of these facilities.

It is clear that this is what the banks suggested in their filing on the Bloomberg case, that added transparency will lead to excessive rumors, which is, of course laughable. It is lack of transparency that fosters rumors, so find this argument unpersuasive.

Karl Denninger suggests a scenario, that I consider to be more likely, that the banks and the Federal Reserve have been lying through their teeth, and that the real state of affairs is truly awful, and upon discovery of a program of systemic lies and accounting tricks with the Federal Reserve at its core will cause institutions to implode, much as the discovery that Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were lying caused them to implode:

The problem The Fed has is that as the supposed “risk regulator” for the American Banking System it has absolutely refused to do its job of prudential regulation and still is. Instead of demanding that its member banks hold capital against all unsecured lending it has “blessed” models rather than markets. But at the same time it has declared “haircuts” against collateral that make clear that so-called “face value”, or “par”, is a farce.

The Fed is supporting institutionalized lying – that is, the intentional mis-marking of assets. If The Fed was an honest regulator and monitor of market risk it would insist that no bank carry an asset at a value materially higher than its “haircut” off par at the window. After all, the penalty rate for discount window use already discourages banks from coming there; the “haircuts” must (and I argue do) reflect what The Fed actually believes about the quality of these alleged “baskets” of asset classifications.

If The Fed believes that these asset classes have this sort of haircut from face value in the market how does it justify allowing any bank under its jurisdiction holding such “assets” at a higher value on their balance sheet?

(emphasis original))

Mr. Denninger calls this “Racketeering,” and an , “attempt to cover up outrageous and repeated failures to comply with US Securities laws,” I think that he is not far from the truth.

Another possibility that no one has mentioned, is that likelihood that in revealing this information, the Federal Reserve will be revealed to have lied to Congress, and possibly to the US Treasury, in some cases under oath, and that Bernanke does not want to be the target of a grand jury investigation.

Finally, Occam’s razor says that the most likely explanation is usually the simplest, and the fact is that transparency does not serve either the banks or the Federal Reserve.

For the banks, this money would be cast as more bailout, and there would be more pressure on restricting executive pay.

For the Fed, knowledge is power, and by becoming more transparent, the Fed will inevitably become less powerful, and any bureaucracy will fight this tooth and nail.

FWIW, my guess is that the last 3 likely all figure into this, that is the discovery of massive concealed losses, the worry about perjury charges, and simple bureaucratic imperative.

I Bet They Didn’t Expect the Spanish Inquisition

Two investigating judges in Spain who are investigating the torture of Spanish citizens by the United States are demanding more details regarding the Department of Justice investigation.

What is going on here is that the Spanish Judges would be obligated to drop their criminal investigation of if the DoJ was engaging in a credible investigation of Gonzales, Bybee, John, Addington, Feith, and Haynes:

Under Spanish law, the opening of a criminal investigation covering the same matters by the United States would probably lead to the termination or suspension of a case in Spain grounded on universal jurisdiction. However, the Spanish authorities tentatively concluded that suspension of their cases was not warranted at this point because Holder had placed so many limitations on Durham’s work and because it does not appear that Durham is being asked to examine the cases involving the Spanish subjects who were held at Guantanamo.

(emphasis mine)

You see, the problem here is that the Obama administration is just too busy kowtowing to Glenn Beck’s smallest and most delusional whim.

Here is a hint for Barack Obama and His Stupid Minions: Americans are not that into ideology, but they hate wimps.

Marine Generals Call Cheney a Fearful Bitch

Retired Marine Corps Generals Charles Krulak and Joseph Hoar have penned an OP/ED titled, “Fear was no excuse to condone torture

In the fear that followed the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Americans were told that defeating Al Qaeda would require us to “take off the gloves.” As a former commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps and a retired commander-in-chief of U.S. Central Command, we knew that was a recipe for disaster.

But we never imagined that we would feel duty-bound to publicly denounce a vice president of the United States, a man who has served our country for many years. In light of the irresponsible statements recently made by former Vice President Dick Cheney, however, we feel we must repudiate his dangerous ideas — and his scare tactics.

….

Let’s be clear here. These are retired Generals, criticizing not only a former Vice President of the United States, but the entire administration he was in, and they have chosen their words carefully.

When they choose to describe the decisions made by Bush and His Evil Minionsas having been made out of fear, they are saying that these are evil acts made by cowards who are out of their mind with fear.

Affirmative Action for White Folks

Of course, for white people, you don’t call it affirmative action, you call it nepotism, and the poster child for nepotism, at least this week is Luke Russert, who upon having the opportunity to question Congressional heckler Joe Wilson in his first press statements following his heckling Barack Obama’s speech, chose to asks him about the Clemson/Georgia Tech game.

You know, it’s genetics. Tim Russert did this kind of sh&% all the time…If you were a republican on his show.

Law Change on F-22 Exports Proposed

You know, 10 years ago, this might have meant somehing:

The Senate Appropriations Committee voted unanimously Thursday to approve an fiscal 2010 Defense spending bill that would allow the Defense Department to develop an export version of the radar-evading F-22 Raptor fighter jet.

Now, not so much.

If the line gets restarted, here is what you have to do:

  • Replace almost every chip on the plane with one that whose line wasn’t shut down in the past 5 years (the US fleet has spent large amounts on building up inventories of these chips prior to shutdown of their lines).
    • Rewrite the software for the new chips.
    • Rewrite the software so that potential opponents will not be able to get critical information on the functioning of the US F-22 fleet.
  • Improve the reliability of the coatings.
  • Develop a new sensor suite so that potential opponents will not be able to get critical information on the functioning of the US F-22 fleet.
  • Integrate non-US weapons (France & UK mostly) into the airframe.
  • Keep the cost per plane at current levels.
  • Be able to deliver the plane in less than 5 years.

If we are asking for all that, how about a pony too?

Time for a Blogger Ethics Panel

There are two questions raised by the kidnapping, and rescue of, New York Times reporter Stephen Farrell in Afghanistan.

The first, and the one I don’t know enough about to come to a decision is whether it was worth the lives lost to rescue him, particularly since it appears to have been a series of spectacularly ill-advised decisions by Mr. Farrell precipitated this.

However, I am disgusted at the people who say something to the effect of, “It’s the New York Times, and they hurt the military, and so should be given no security consideration whatsoever.”

Here’s a thing, if you sound like Ann Coulter, it means that you are an asshole.

By the same token, if people routinely do amazingly stupid things, and expect to be rescued because they work for the New York Times, making it clear that neither the public purse, nor the blood of our military will be spent in such an endeavor makes sense.

The second question, is one that I do feel qualified to discuss, is whether news of kidnappings of journalists should be suppressed.

Bill Roggio reported the kidnapping on the Threat Matrix blog, and has been widely criticized by many in the media (here, and a few of the comments in response to his story) for reporting on this despite the request by the New York Times that he sit on the story.

I think that Mr. Roggio nailed the issue in a response in the comments on this post:

I speak as someone who has reported from both Iraq and Afghanistan since 2005. To me, this is simple. Either a kidnapping is news, or it isn’t. When soldiers, contractors, etc. are kidnapped, it is news. When a reporter is kidnapped, it is also news.

(emphasis mine)

Bill Ardolino, also of Threat Matrix, adds a useful data point:

A partial list of reports by the The New York Times on kidnappings:

November 15, 2002: NYT: Red Cross workers kidnapped in Chechnya

September 17, 2004, NYT: Insurgents kidnap American and British civilians in Iraq

January 18, 2005: NYT: Catholic Archbishop of Mosul kidnapped in Iraq

May 17, 2005: NYT: CARE worker kidnapped in Kabul

December 29, 2005: NYT: German Family Kidnapped by Yemeni Tribe

January 27, 2008: NYT: NGO worker kidnapped in Afghanistan

August 29, 2009, Reuters in the NYT: Foreign Aid Workers kidnapped in Darfur

20 hours ago: NYT: Greek national kidnapped in Pakistan

It is clear that the demands for news suppression are self serving and dishonest.

Economics Update (a Day Late)

The University of Michigan survey showed an improvement in consumer sentiment, hitting 70.2, exceeding forecasts of 68.0.

In wholesale, inventories have fallen to a 3 year low, indicating that there is little push to restock, though wholesale sales actually rose.

In retail, the fact that video game sales fell for the 6th straight month is worrying: When consumers, specifically hard core video gamers, do not feel comfortable purchasing video games, they don’t feel comfortable purchasing anything.

Meanwhile across the pond(s), we have

Japan’s growth in Q2 being revised down to 2.3% from a 3.7% annualized rate, though domestic cargo volumes in Russian indicate a recovery is imminent there.

Meanwhile, in the folks with more petro-dollars than brains department, Dubai’s sovereign wealth fund, Istithmar World, has stopped making investments, probably because they are having problems covering their losses.

In real estate, repossessions dropped 12.7% in August, but foreclosure filings fell only 0.5% and the number of people defaulting.

My guess is that this is some of the banks out there are already overwhelmed with REOs and don’t want to acknowledge the bottom line hit, so they are letting things slide right now.

Oil falls below $70 on demand recovery doubts – Sep. 11, 2009:

Meanwhile crude oil finished the week below $70/bbl.

In currency, the dollar index, a basked of currencies against which the USD is measured, fell to a 1-year low, in the longest sting of losses in the index, 6 days, since March.

Finally, gold ended the day above $1000/ox (Troy), which might make for happy gold bugs, but I’m inclined to say that it is time to cash in and get Yen or Euro.

U.S. Navy: No Risk From Bad Welds – Defense News

It appears that the construction defects in some of the Virginia class submarines may not be as worrying as previously thought:

Both Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding and General Dynamics Electric Boat have conducted exhaustive analysis and testing that demonstrates: the low probability of improper welds occurring aboard submarines; that improper welds are unlikely to fail during the ship’s operational life; and that should a weld fail it would leak but not break, thereby alerting the crew in time to address the issue before the weld degraded further.

That sounds reassuring.

Note that this is separate from the issues involving bolts for the weapons handling system.