no that's the newer model and i acually hav 1
aim down the stinger sight at the helicopter you want to shoot down and wait until it beeps 3 times. Then shoot. This might have to be done more that once.
Because, rather than being captured and tortured, it was considered a more pleasant death to shoot yourself and commit suicide. The idea was that once you were down to a single bullet it would be better if you were outnumbered not to shoot and take your own life if you were in danger of being captured.
beacaus it only has one stinger attached to its guts n wen it stings u it pulls it out with it
No. After a bee has stung its victim, when it pulls away the barbed stinger pulls out of the bee's body together with with the venom sac and the associated structures. The bee dies from its injuries.
Queen and worker bumblebees can sting. Unlike a honey bee's stinger, a bumblebee's stinger doesn't have barbs, so they can sting more than once. Bumblebees are not normally aggressive, but they will sting in defence of their nest, or if they are harmed.
once you got the stinger go all the way to the beginning of pump works go in front of the hole
their stinger to opposing threats, note that once a bee has stung its victim the bee shall either lose it's stinger or suffer a quick death.
Bullet trajectory is the path the bullet travels once it leaves the barrel. Bullets travel on a long arch and cross the line of sight twice. Once shortly after leaving the barrel and once again on target assuming the sights are properly zeroed. This is the trajectory of the bullet. Bullet velocity is the speed at which the bullet is traveling along it's trajectory.
If a bee stings a mammal or bird, no; the stinger becomes trapped and tears out of the bee's body. If fighting other bees or insects, yes.
yes if you touch the stinger and the yellow jacket hasn't stung anyone else becasue once they sting someone or something their stinger wont grow back
once. the sting the bee gives causes the stinger to release into the person and tear from the bee itself. The bee thus soon reportedly dies as a result of the removal of its stinger.
No, a bee's stinger does not fall off while it is flying. The stinger is designed to pierce the skin of its target and inject venom, and it remains intact during flight. However, when a bee stings a human or animal, the stinger can get lodged in the skin, leading to the bee's death when it tries to fly away.