What’s Walrus Building?

Hi gang. Sorry about no post last week but I had a busy day househunting up in New Hampshire so couldn’t get around to it. Right now I am very close to getting a deal done for a place in Nashua. Just some minor points to clear up and get the seller to commit. Wish me luck.

Another reason there was no post last week was that I had nothing new to report. Wasn’t working on anything. Since then I have completed two. One is the Elephant which I previewed two weeks ago. It was basically the same build as the Ferdinand so nothing much to say about it.

Different color scheme and turrent slightly different but other than that, the same vehicle. Since I had nothing to do I revisited one I had put aside for missing parts and decided to just move ahead with it to finish it off. The build was another tough one with getting the connects to stay in place when adding on something else later in the build. Quite frustrating but I finished it off. Not one of my usual vehicles but still of WWII vintage.

Choo-Choo! This is the DR BR 52 Steam Locomotive used during the war by the Germans. I didn’t put it on the tracks because they are elsewhere with some flatcars on them which will show up in previous builds in the future. Speaking of previous builds…

Previous Builds.

U-Boot U-96 (TYP VIIC)

The Type VIIC was the workhorse of the German U-boat force, with 568 commissioned from 1940 to 1945. The first VIIC boat commissioned was the U-93 in 1940. The Type VIIC was an effective fighting machine and was seen almost everywhere U-boats operated, although its range of only 8,500 nautical miles was not as great as that of the larger Type IX (11,000 nautical miles), severely limiting the time it could spend in the far reaches of the western and southern Atlantic without refueling from a tender or U-boat tanker. The VIIC came into service toward the end of the “First Happy Time” near the beginning of the war and was still the most numerous type in service when Allied anti-submarine efforts finally defeated the U-boat campaign in late 1943 and 1944.

Type VIIC differed from the VIIB only in the addition of an active sonar and a few minor mechanical improvements, making them 2 feet longer and 8 tons heavier. Speed and range were essentially the same. Many of these boats were fitted with snorkels in 1944 and 1945.

They had the same torpedo tube arrangement as their predecessors, except for U-72U-78U-80U-554, and U-555, which had only two bow tubes, and for U-203U-331U-351U-401U-431, and U-651, which had no stern tube.

On the surface the boats (except for U-88U-90 and U-132 to U-136 which used MAN M6V40/46s) were propelled by two supercharged Germaniawerft, 6 cylinder, 4-stroke M6V 40/46 diesels totaling 2,800 to 3,200 PS (2,100 to 2,400 kW; 2,800 to 3,200 shp) at 470 to 490 rpm.

For submerged propulsion, several different electric motors were used. Early models used the VIIB configuration of two AEG GU 460/8-276 electric motors, totaling 750 PS (550 kW; 740 shp) with a max rpm of 296, while newer boats used two BBC GG UB 720/8, Garbe, Lahmeyer & Co. RP 137/c or Siemens-Schuckert-Werke (SSW) GU 343/38-8 electric motors with the same power output as the AEG motors.

Perhaps the most famous VIIC boat was U-96, featured in the movie Das Boot.

Who’s Going To Break the News to the Emotional Car?

I’ve had a bad-temperpedic mattress, but not really an emotional car.

EV Startup Fisker Halts Production To Raise Emergency Funds Amid Cash Crunch From Low Demand
Daily Wire | Mar 20, 2024 | Ryan Saavedra

The startup electric car company Fisker said this week that it is halting the production of its vehicles to raise $150 million in emergency funds as it grapples with a cash crunch spurred by a low demand for electric vehicles.

The California-based company, which says its mission is to “create the world’s most emotional and sustainable electric vehicles,” has barely produced over a thousand electric vehicles worldwide for the year.

People who buy cars are just looking for a good time, not an attachment.

“The company has approximately 4,700 vehicles in its currently inventory, carried over from 2023 and including 2024 production,” the company said. “While it has not completed an NRV analysis for 2024, Fisker believes the completed vehicle value for its inventory as of March 15, 2024, is in excess of $200 million.”

Not if no one buys them.

“Fisker will pause production for six weeks starting the week of March 18, 2024, to align inventory levels and progress strategic and financing initiatives,” it added.

And to, you know, stop creating inventory backlog and stuff. Or is that bean-counter thinking?

Reuters reported last month that signals from the car company indicated that there was “substantial doubt about its ability to continue” due to the financial health of the company.

The financial health of the company is causing doubts about the financial health of the company? Genius analysis.