A type of articulated locomotive, in which there are two powered trucks, with the rear truck being rigidly attached to the main body and boiler of the locomotive, while the front powered truck is attached to the rear by a hinge, so that it may swing from side to side, and with the front end of the boiler resting upon a sliding bearing on the swinging front truck
The instrument used to move the ball Although fibreglass has been used in its construction, the shaft is most often still made of bamboo A hardwood head is used and the ball hit with the side of the head
Our exemplar active attacker His objective might either be stealing something of value involved in the performance of a smart contract, or denying it to the parties to the contract He might either be an economically rational agent, out for pure personal gain, or Byzantine, a worst-case attacker who inflicts the greatest possible damage on one or more of the parties regardless of personal loss
Also known as a "stick" The shaft is made from a bamboo root or a hard wood, such as maple They vary in length from 49 to 53 inches Compared to a golf or hockey club, they are very flexible During play, a mallet can only be held in the player's right hand
Designed by the locomotive engineer and inventor Anatole Mallet (1837-1919), a Mallet type locomotive is a four cylinder compound articulated locomotive Mallet locomotives have essentially two steam engines mounted under the same boiler The rear engine is rigidly attached to the boiler, while the front engine is able to swing laterally around a pivot point located near the rear, high-pressure cylinders This articulation allows the locomotives to negotiate curves that would not accommodate a large rigid-frame locomotive (click here to a photo of a Reading class N-1sb Mallet)
a tool resembling a hammer but with a large head (usually wooden); used to drive wedges or ram down paving stones or for crushing or beating or flattening or smoothing
A type of putter head identified by its broad appearance from front to back when positioned at address The Ram Zebraâ„¢ was one of the first popular mallet style putters
Also known as a "stick" The shaft is made from a bamboo shoot and the head from either the bamboo root or a hard wood such as maple or tipa These vary in length and are very flexible