Ch 53e Common And Peculiar Items Parts

(Page 6) End item NSN parts page 6 of 8
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
65216-05003-041 Aircraft Window Panel
011529735
65217-09058-051 Platform Assembly
011396865
65219-07001-101 Pylon Fitting
011396857
65227-09003-041 Panel Assembly
011310540
65251-08219-041 Landing Gear Torque Arm Assembly
011266160
65255-02165-101 Landing Gear Strut Piston
008382107
65256-05036-102 Hydraulic Brak Cylinder Assembly
009289124
65261-08015-041 Landing Gear Torque Arm Assembly
011266160
65265-02026-101 Landing Gear Axle
011507064
65302-12022-041 Strut Assemblyxpanel
009156648
65307-08013-101 Fuel System Sponson Level Sensor
009416389
65313-09021-101 Air Bleed Reservoir
011396916
65313-09028-047 Exhaust Pipe
011476259
65317-08010-046 Scupper Assembly
011302820
65317-08064-101 A Fuel-air Mixture Control Valve
011293688
65317-08064-102 A Fuel-air Mixture Control Valve
011293688
65317-08074-042 Tee Assembly
011302823
65317-08506-108 Liquid Quantity Indicator
011303141
65355-12002-043 Liner And S Housing
001498521
65355-12003-103 Liner And S Housing
001498521
Page: 6

Ch 53e Common And Peculiar Items

Picture of Ch 53e Common And Peculiar Items

The mIRC scripting language, often unofficially abbreviated to "mSL", is the scripting language embedded in mIRC, an IRC client for Windows.

Scripts are stored as either plain text files, usually with a .mrc file extension, or as INI files. They however can be stored with any extension. It can be: .exe, .script, etc. Multiple script files can be loaded at one time, although in some cases, one script will conflict with another and cause one or both of them to no longer work properly.

mIRC scripting involves a peculiar nomenclature that is not entirely consistent with most of the rest of the programming world. (Most notably, the term identifier—which in most languages refers to the name of a variable or function (whether it returns a value or not)—in mIRC refers specifically to a value returning function.)

The above is intended for singular access to the file. Because each time you issue $read or /write you open and close the file for access. Multiple accesses, during a loop for instance, is best handled through /fopen, /fwrite and /fclose. Since this opens the file only once. In some cases /filter and /savebuf is an even more efficient (non scripted loop) method.

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