Somebody asked me to make a AZ Controller Preset for the Novation LaunchControl, so here it is, the very first try!įirst of all download and install AZController and send his wife some flowers please!ġ. LAUNCHCONTROL GUITAR CENTER PORTABLEįeaturing 1,000 watts of continuous (2,000W peak) Class D amplification, the TS315 is a 2-way full-range active speaker with a redesigned transducer in a lightweight, portable enclosure.Please do not use this preset anymore, I've made a complete new and better one: The TS315 delivers uncompromising professional audio for a variety of applications, including mobile performances and permanent installations. This active speaker’s compact low-frequency reproduction is handled by a 15″ driver and 3″ high-temperature voice coil. The 1.4″ tweeter with neodymium magnets and precision waveguide provides crystal clear high frequency reproduction. Thanks to its large LF driver and efficient Class D bi-amplification, the TS315 delivers plenty of low-end punch, making it ideal for DJs, live bands and other performers on the go. The integrated M6 suspension points, built-in pole sockets and wedge cabinet design give you the flexibility to mount the TS315 in a variety of ways. Tune in your sound perfectly with the onboard 2-channel mixer and contour EQ switch.First Lt.ĭual XLR combo mic/line inputs, independent level controls and XLR link outputs provide I/O and setup versatility. Kyle Todd are shown manning a Minuteman III launch control center at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming in this Air Force photo taken in August 2012. (Airman 1st Class Jason Wiese/ warren.af.mil) The name of the launch officer at Warren who allegedly received drug-related emails in 2013 has not been disclosed. They spend some of their 24-hour alerts seated in front of steel Minuteman III missile launch control panels mounted on shock-absorbers, with toggle switches capable of hurling ten to fifty nuclear warheads - each with twenty times the explosive force of the Hiroshima bomb - to the other side of the globe, at speeds of 15,000 mph.īut their day-to-day enemy, for decades, has not so much been another superpower, but the unremitting boredom of an isolated posting that demands extreme vigilance, while also requiring virtually no activity, according to accounts by missileers and a new internal review of their work. That understandable boredom, when paired with the military’s sky-high expectations for their workplace performance, has pushed some of them to use drugs, others to break the rules - even deliberately, and still more to look for any way out. The millennials who populate this force can watch television, read, study, or sleep in their cramped, often damp quarters. Robert Vercher, the commander of a missile wing in Minot, North Dakota, told the Air Force’s news service in February that “there is no other Air Force unit, other than our sister ICBM wings, where we put this much responsibility on very junior Airmen.” Referring implicitly to the officers’ ability to wreak almost unimaginable destruction on foreign populations, Col.īut their checklist routines are typically unvarying, their moment-to-moment responsibilities are few, and the temperature underground - like the policy requiring their presence - is unnervingly stuck in the mid-60’s. Their official job criteria require that they have “a positive attitude toward nuclear weapons duty.” Those who don’t feel up to detonating such warheads are generally referred either to chaplains, legal counsels, or “mental health clinicians,” the Air Force says, to try and set them straight. Moreover, until recently, the Air Force’s policy dogma for the force - dating at least from a 2007 episode in which the service for a day lost track of six nuclear warheads fitted atop cruise missiles - is that mistakes cannot be made.
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