Yes and no. Remington Rand merged with Sperry Gyroscope, then split into Remington and Sperry Rand. The computer division Univac was transfered in the split from Remington Rand to Sperry Rand.
in the UK, Lyons Biscuit & Tea: LEO (Lyons Electronic Office)in the US, Remington Rand: UNIVAC (UNIVersal Automatic Computer); Note that this machine was designed and announced for sale by EMCC but they were about to go bankrupt and default on all their contracts when they sold the company to Remington.in Germany, Zuse: Z-4All three of these companies are possible candidates as they designed computers and announced them for sale in the same timeframe. Other companies all entered the market after these three.I suggest you take it from here and determine which of these was actually the first yourself.
In 2007, Remington was acquired by private investment firm Cerebus Capital Management. It does not have a ticker symbol because it is not publicly traded. Cerberus Capitol Management is the same company that owns Chrysler, Marlin, and DPMS.
The first UNIVAC (UNIVersal Automatic Computer) built was sold at a dramatic loss for the Remington Rand company to the US Census Bureau for the agreed contract price of $159,000. The second and third UNIVACs built were sold at the same dramatic loss for the Remington Rand company to the US Air Force and the US Army Map Service respectively for the same agreed contract price.I cannot find figures, but a reasonable guess might be that the cost to build each UNIVAC system was between $250,000 and $500,000 for Remington Rand.To recover these losses and make a profit on later UNIVACs built Remington Rand raised the price on each subsequent system, until the price stabilized at just below $2,000,000 which paid for both building the machine and a reasonable profit (which shows how badly wrong Eckert and Mauchly were at cost estimates when they negotiated the original sales contracts for UNIVAC, they made a similar error on ENIAC's costs back in WW2 estimating $50,000 when the finished ENIAC cost $500,000 the only thing that saved the project was the ENIAC contract was written as a "cost plus fixed fee" contract instead of a "fixed price" contract as UNIVAC's contracts were written).
There is no watermark on the current South African Rand, as 1 Rand is a coin. About 20 years ago there was a brown 1 Rand note, no longer in circulation. If memory serves me correctly it had a picture of Jan van Riebeek on, and the watermark was the same image
You can assemable same as a Remington 870. Several videos are on Youtube.com that show how to do this.
Dimensionally similar, but they are not exactly the same. A firearm with a 5.56x45 chamber can accommodate the .223 Remington cartridge, but a firearm with a .223 Remington chamber cannot accommodate the 5.56x45 cartridge.
No, a Remington 244 (often referred to as .244 Remington) is not the same as a 6mm cartridge. The .244 Remington is essentially a .243 Winchester, which has a bullet diameter of .243 inches, while the 6mm cartridges (such as 6mm Remington) typically have a bullet diameter of .244 inches. Although they are similar in terms of performance and application, they are distinct cartridges and are not interchangeable.
Limited interchangeability.
Same question same answer 1924 - Will have date code stamped on the barrel. See Manufactured Date on the Remington Society of America for details.
Rand and Galad are half-brothers through their mother Tigraine of house Mantear. Galad and Elaine are half-siblings through their father, Taringail Damondred, so don't worry, Rand and Elayne are not related.
No, 12 gauge receivers have a larger diameter, the higher the number, the smaller the diameter
Remington now imports the Baikal shotguns under their 'Spartan' brand. Barrels for the "Remington" Spartan SPR-453 are the same as your Baikal.