A list of puns related to "Tip drill"
I've decided that I've probably always been rounding to some degree. Probably most amateurs do. I resolved to undo this muscle memory problem this week even though I have a tourney this weekend and it has required a ground up reformatting of all my mechanics. stance, etc. I've watched the Danny Lindahl, Scott Stokely, and Drew Nguyen videos. I've tried the wall drill. What are other good videos and drills for breaking the habit of rounding? I'm thinking in the near term (practice today and tomorrow pre-tournament) I might shorten my reach back just to tighten everything and simplify things to ease the transition.
As a lot of new miners are coming into deep rock galactic, I think it would be a good idea to share a few tips for the mobility tools of each dwarf
first up is my main class' namesake: the Reinforced power drills
these lovely rock removal tools can be used to get rid of any terrain (barring DRG equipment, rival tech installations, and the heartstone) and leave a path for you to utilize in any way you see fit. Just activate them and walk as they break apart any solid (or slightly gooey) material in front of you.
Supporting tools to the drill
Terrain scanner: above all else this tool will help you the most in you digging, bring it up for a full 3d view centered on your location, zoom in and out as well for better detail and use it to position yourself and locate where you are when digging.
Laser pointer: if you are currently holding the pointer, press the USE button (defaults to Lb on controller, or E on keyboard) to create a waypoint, this waypoint will be visible at any time you bring out the pointer or terrain scanner, and can be handy when making a target you want to drill toward even if you can't see it while burrowing. You may only have one out at a time, and making a new one gets rid of the old one.
Elevation Display: Additionally, when the drills are equipped you will have a scale on your Hud, this indicates what angle you are drilling at, the break from white to yellow indicates that the angle has become so steep you may need to repeatedly jump or drop to keep up with your drills and/or travel through said tunnel again after you are done, also useful for keeping your drilling level with the ground
The satchel: this large explosive can be used to quickly remove a sizable radius and save on drilling fuel, just remember to get everyone clear from the blast, while drillers might be referred to "collateral hazards" we don't actually want to hurt our fellow dwarves... usually.
Notable upgrades:
Barbed drills: unlocked at start. These increases the base damage of your power drills, making them more useful for killing bugs, more on this in the combat drilling section
Hardened drill tips/supercharged motor: Unlocked at start/level 10 respectively. They increase drill speed based on how frequently the power drills "tick" which then breaks whatever rock is in front of them, faster ticks = more frequent rock breaking
Bloody cold drills: Unlocked at level 15. this upg
So my season is starting, I am a junior but we have no seniors, so it appears that I will be the team captain this year. We also have a new coach and he graduated the year 2020, and doesnβt have much experience coaching. I was hoping for some tips from yβall for drills and possibly defense plays, because I really want to help out the new coach. Also, this is only our first full year of being CIF. Thank you
So Iβve kinda plateaued at diamond and I feel like Iβve started dragging teammates down because of missed shots and blocks. Iβve turned to free play training to work on skills (purple and gold shots, air dribbling, flip resets, and routine shots). However, despite spending roughly 10 min in training before each game I join, I seem to be getting worse (specifically In duels). Is this just a learning curve or are there certain training drills I should consider to maximize my practice time?
I've been playing guitar for about 1.5 years now with no lessons or any studying of music theory. I've just played along with tracks and watched YouTube how to play videos. With that I feel I could really work on my improvisation and general phrasing along pretty much anything. I've been playing a lot of blues the past 4 months and it's where I feel I'm going as of right now. If anyone has any suggestions on how to improve my playing please let me know because I feel I've been in a rut the past 6 months. (Also tone tips are welcome but I feel my tone is good enough and pretty SRV like considering my low budget) Thanks!
Heres a link of a very poorly recorded clip of me playing Dirty pool:
I would love to grow more confidence & balance as I get into rollerblading. Please put down some drills & exercises for essentially a beginner, a beginner working their way up to βintermediateβ. thanks!
Anyone with any sort of suggestions on how to improve my playing (any drills or methods are very much welcomed) would be great because after a year and a half of playing I've never played for anyone. None of my friends play and I just feel some feedback from real players would be fantastic and help me get out of what I feel is a never ending plateau. It's also funny because I always think I killed it when I finish playing something then playing it back I realize how many mistakes I make in the span of about 5 seconds. Also sorry that the audio quality isn't the best I couldn't find an audio recording software that works with BIAS FX 2 that isn't like 100$ so if you have any to recommend me as well that would be great. Thanks!
i heard the j2b D6 j2b is a 2-frame window link
Hey all! So I have been cleaning this old drill press and this one piece is giving me some trouble. It was rusted, so I left it in vinegar for a while and then started scrubbing it with 60 grit sandpaper. Unfortunately, I can't seem to get it any better than this:
picture after soaking it in vinegar and using 60 grit sandpaper on it
If anyone has any tips for how to get a better, cleaner metal look, I'd appreciate the help!
My last few rounds have been decent, but I am definitely losing strokes around the greens with my chips and pitches. I believe my issue is feel/touch.
What I noticed on my last couple rounds was that I would get some short shots that wouldnβt quite reach the green and then some chips that would roll way to much after landing on the green. Iβm talking my shots that are like 20 and in. I usually utilize my 56, but will put the 60 into play depending on distance/things in my way.
Does anyone have any tips or drills that helped them get a better feel for their chip shots?
Catching on fire and having an active shooter are both really really dramatic but really rare dangers. (Active shooters in schools are nowhere near as rare in America as they ought to be, but still very rare). By contrast, almost everyone will have at least one person they know be affected by a heart attack at some point in their life.
What if there was some publicly-funded research project to determine (e.g.) the top 20 threats a person is likely to face over the course of their life, and the best advice for how to minimize and deal with them?
Iβm a lifelong slicer/chunker/duffer but finally decided to start working on my game. Iβm making a lot of progress but one thing Iβm having trouble with is getting my hands ahead of the ball at impact. Does anyone have any good tips or drills for making this one click?
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