Jump to content
Sign in to follow this  
gav_hill_2009@hotmail.co.uk

SCOTISH CLAN RECRUITING!

Recommended Posts

I didn't realise you had the internet in Scatland?

Edited by z-layrex
  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Lmao ur a weegie natno! How can u afford to buy a pc and keep yer kit habbit goin?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I didn't realise you had the internet is Scatland?

didn't know the world had this as they wouldn't without SCATLAND (Scotland)

Road transport innovations

Macadamised roads (the basis for, but not specifically, tarmac): John Loudon McAdam (1756–1836)[3]

The pedal bicycle: Attributed to both Kirkpatrick Macmillan (1813–1878)[2] and Thomas McCall (1834–1904)

The pneumatic tyre: Robert William Thomson and John Boyd Dunlop (1822–1873) [10]

The overhead valve engine: David Dunbar Buick (1854–1929) [11]

[edit]

Civil engineering innovations

Tubular steel: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874)[12]

The Falkirk wheel: Initial designs by Nicoll Russell Studios, Architects and engineers Binnie Black and Veatch (Opened 2002) [13]

The patent slip for docking vessels: Thomas Morton (1781–1832) [14][15]

The Drummond Light: Thomas Drummond (1797–1840) [16]

Canal design: Thomas Telford (1757–1834) [17]

Dock design improvements: John Rennie (1761–1821) [18]

Crane design improvements: James Bremner (1784–1856) [19]

[edit]

Aviation innovations

Aircraft design: Frank Barnwell (1910) Establishing the fundamentals of aircraft design at the University of Glasgow.[20]

[edit]

Power innovations

Condensing steam engine improvements: James Watt (1736–1819)[1]

Coal-gas lighting: William Murdoch (1754–1839) [21]

The Stirling heat engine: Rev. Robert Stirling (1790–1878) [22]

Carbon brushes for dynamos: George Forbes (1849–1936) [23]

The Clerk cycle gas engine: Sir Dugald Clerk (1854–1932) [24]

The wave-powered electricity generator: by South African Engineer Stephen Salter in 1977 [25]

The Pelamis Wave Energy Converter ("red sea snake" wave energy device): Richard Yemm, 1998 [26]

[edit]

Shipbuilding innovations

Europe's first passenger steamboat: Henry Bell (1767–1830) [27]

The first iron-hulled steamship: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874) [28]

The first practical screw propeller: Robert Wilson (1803–1882)[citation needed]

Marine engine innovations: James Howden (1832–1913)[29]

John Elder & Charles Randolph (Marine Compound expansion engine)[29]

[edit]

Military innovations

Lieutenant-General Sir David Henderson two areas:

Field intelligence. Argued for the establishment of the Intelligence Corps. Wrote Field Intelligence: Its Principles and Practice (1904) and Reconnaissance (1907) on the tactical intelligence of modern warfare during World War I.[30]

Royal Air Force. Considered instrumental in the foundation of the British Royal Air Force.[31]

United States Navy. Created largely in by John Paul Jones, who was born in Kirkcudbrightshire.

[edit]

Heavy industry innovations

Coal mining extraction in the sea on an artificial island by Sir George Bruce of Carnock (1575). Regarded as one of the industrial wonders of the late medieval period.[32]

Making cast steel from wrought iron: David Mushet (1772–1847) [33]

Wrought iron sash bars for glass houses: John C. Loudon (1783–1865) [34]

The hot blast oven: James Beaumont Neilson (1792–1865) [35]

The steam hammer: James Nasmyth (1808–1890) [36]

Wire rope: Robert Stirling Newall (1812–1889) [37]

Steam engine improvements: William Mcnaught (1831–1881) [38]

The Fairlie, a narrow gauge, double-bogie railway engine: Robert Francis Fairlie (1831–1885)[39]

Cordite - Sir James Dewar, Sir Frederick Abel (1889) [40]

[edit]

Agricultural innovations

Threshing machine improvements: James Meikle (c.1690-c.1780) & Andrew Meikle (1719–1811) [41]

Hollow pipe drainage: Sir Hew Dalrymple, Lord Drummore (1700–1753) [42]

The Scotch plough: James Anderson of Hermiston (1739–1808) [43]

Deanstonisation soil-drainage system: James Smith (1789–1850) [44]

The mechanical reaping machine: Rev. Patrick Bell (1799–1869) [45]

The Fresno scraper: James Porteous (1848–1922) [46]

The Tuley tree shelter: Graham Tuley in 1979 [47]

[edit]

Communication innovations

Print stereotyping: William Ged (1690–1749) [48]

Roller printing: Thomas Bell (patented 1783) [49]

The adhesive postage stamp and the postmark: James Chalmers (1782–1853) [50]

Universal Standard Time: Sir Sandford Fleming (1827–1915) [51]

Light signalling between ships: Admiral Philip H. Colomb (1831–1899) [52]

The telephone: Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922)[4]

The teleprinter: Frederick G. Creed (1871–1957) [53]

The first working television, and colour television; John Logie Baird (1888–1946)[5][6]

Radar: Robert Watson-Watt (1892–1973)[8]

The underlying principles of Radio - James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [54]

The automated teller machine and Personal Identification Number system - James Goodfellow (born 1937) [55]

[edit]

Publishing firsts

The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1768–81) [56]

The first English textbook on surgery(1597) [57]

The first modern pharmacopaedia, William Cullen (1776). The book became 'Europe’s principal text on the classification and treatment of disease'. His ideas survive in the terms nervous energy and neuroses (a word that Cullen coined).[58]

The first postcards and picture postcards in the UK [59]

The first eBook from a UK administration (March 2012). Scottish Government publishes 'Your Scotland, Your Referendum'. [60]

[edit]

Scientific innovations

Logarithms: John Napier (1550–1617)[61]

The theory of electromagnetism: James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [62]

The first theory of the Higgs boson or "God Particle" by Peter Higgs particle-physics theorist at the University of Edinburgh (1964) [63]

Popularising the decimal point: John Napier (1550–1617)[64]

The world's first oil refinery and a process of extracting paraffin from coal laying the foundations for the modern oil industry: James Young (1811–1883)[65]

The Gregorian telescope: James Gregory (1638–1675) [66]

The concept of latent heat: Joseph Black (1728–1799) [67]

The pyroscope, atmometer and aethrioscope scientific instruments: Sir John Leslie (1766–1832) [68]

Identifying the nucleus in living cells: Robert Brown (1773–1858) [69]

Hypnotism: James Braid (1795–1860) [70]

Transplant rejection: Professor Thomas Gibson (1940s) the first medical doctor to understand the relationship between donor graft tissue and host tissue rejection and tissue transplantation by his work on aviation burns victims during World War II.[71]

Colloid chemistry: Thomas Graham (1805–1869) [72]

The kelvin SI unit of temperature: William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824–1907) [73]

Devising the diagramatic system of representing chemical bonds: Alexander Crum Brown (1838–1922) [74]

Criminal fingerprinting: Henry Faulds (1843–1930) [75]

The noble gases: Sir William Ramsay (1852–1916) [76]

The cloud chamber recording of atoms: Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869–1959) [77][78]

Pioneering work on nutrition and poverty: John Boyd Orr (1880–1971) [79]

The ultrasound scanner: Ian Donald (1910–1987) [80]

Ferrocene synthetic substances: Peter Ludwig Pauson in 1955 [81]

The MRI body scanner: John Mallard and James Huchinson from (1974–1980) [82]

The first cloned mammal (Dolly the Sheep): Was conducted in The Roslin Institute research centre in 1996 [83]

The seismometer innovations thereof: James David Forbes [84]

Metaflex fabric innovations thereof: University of St. Andrews (2010) application of the first manufacturing fabrics that manipulate light in bending it around a subject. Before this such light manipulating atoms were fixed on flat hard surfaces. The team at St Andrews are the first to develop the concept to fabric.[85]

Macaulayite: Dr. Jeff Wilson of the Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen.[86]

[edit]

Sports innovations

Main article: Sport in Scotland

Scots have been instrumental in the invention and early development of several sports:

Football (Soccer)

several modern athletics events, i.e. shot put[87] and the hammer throw,[87] derive from Highland Games and earlier 12th century Scotland [87]

Curling [88]

Gaelic handball The modern game of handball is first recorded in Scotland in 1427, when King James I an ardent handball player had his men block up a cellar window in his palace courtyard that was interfering with his game.[89]

Cycling, invention of the pedal-cycle [90]

Golf (see Golf in Scotland)

Shinty The history of Shinty as a non-standardised sport pre-dates Scotland the Nation. The rules were standardised in the 19th century by Archibald Chisholm [91]

Rugby sevens: Ned Haig and David Sanderson (1883) [92]

[edit]

Medical innovations

Pioneering the use of surgical anaesthesia with Chloroform: Sir James Young Simpson (1811–1870) [93]

The hypodermic syringe: Alexander Wood (1817–1884) [94]

Discovery of hypnotism (November 1841): James Braid (1795–1860) [95]

Identifying the mosquito as the carrier of malaria: Sir Ronald Ross (1857–1932) [96]

Identifying the cause of brucellosis: Sir David Bruce (1855–1931) [97]

Discovering the vaccine for typhoid fever: Sir William B. Leishman (1865–1926) [98]

Discovering insulin: John J R Macleod (1876–1935) with others [9]

Penicillin: Sir Alexander Fleming (1881–1955) [7]

General anaesthetic - Pionered by Scotsman James Young Simpson and Englishman John Snow[99]

Ambulight PDT: light-emitting sticking plaster used in photodynamic therapy (PDT) for treating non-melanoma skin cancer. Developed by Ambicare Dundee's Ninewells Hospital and St Andrews University. (2010)[100]

Discovering an effective tuberculosis treatment: Sir John Crofton in the 1950s [101]

Primary creator of the artificial kidney (Professor Kenneth Lowe - Later Queen's physician in Scotland) [102]

Developing the first beta-blocker drugs: Sir James W. Black in 1964 [103]

Developing modern asthma therapy based both on bronchodilation (salbutamol) and anti-inflammatory steroids (beclomethasone dipropionate) : Sir David Jack in 1972

Glasgow coma scale: Graham Teasdale and Bryan J. Jennett (1974) [104]

EKG [Electrocardiography]: Alexander Muirhead (1911) [105]

[edit]

Household innovations

The television John Logie Baird (1923)

The refrigerator: William Cullen (1748) [106]

The flush toilet: Alexander Cummings (1775) [107]

The Dewar flask: Sir James Dewar (1847–1932) [108]

The first distiller to triple distill Irish whiskey[109]:John Jameson (Whisky distiller)

The piano footpedal: John Broadwood (1732–1812) [110]

The first automated can-filing machine John West (1809–1888) [111]

The waterproof macintosh: Charles Macintosh (1766–1843) [112]

The kaleidoscope: Sir David Brewster (1781–1868) [113]

Keiller's marmalade Janet Keiller (1797) - The first recipe of rind suspended marmalade or Dundee marmalade produced in Dundee.

The modern lawnmower: Alexander Shanks (1801–1845) [114]

The Lucifer friction match: Sir Isaac Holden (1807–1897) [115]

The self filling pen: Robert Thomson (1822–1873) [116]

Cotton-reel thread: J & J Clark of Paisley [117]

Lime cordial: Peter Burnett in 1867 [118]

Bovril beef extract: John Lawson Johnston in 1874 [119]

The electric clock: Alexander Bain (1840) [120]

Chemical Telegraph (Automatic Telegraphy) Alexander Bain (1846) In England Bain's telegraph was used on the wires of the Electric Telegraph Company to a limited extent, and in 1850 it was used in America.[121]

[edit]

Weapons innovations

The carronade cannon: Robert Melville (1723–1809) [122]

The Ferguson rifle: Patrick Ferguson in 1770 or 1776 [123]

The Lee bolt system as used in the Lee-Metford and Lee-Enfield series rifles: James Paris Lee [124]

The Ghillie suit [125]

The percussion cap: invented by Scottish Presbyterian clergyman Alexander Forsyth [126]

[edit]

Miscellaneous innovations

Boys' Brigade[127]

Bank of England devised by William Paterson

Bank of France devised by John Law

The industrialisation and modernisation of Japan by Thomas Blake Glover[128]

Kirin Brewing Company founded by Thomas Blake Glover[128]

Colour photography: the first known permanent colour photograph was taken by James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879)[129]

Safetray invented by Alison Grieve

Edited by Liquidator
  • Like 1

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

didn't know the world had this as they wouldn't without SCATLAND (Scotland)

Road transport innovations

Macadamised roads (the basis for, but not specifically, tarmac): John Loudon McAdam (1756–1836)[3]

The pedal bicycle: Attributed to both Kirkpatrick Macmillan (1813–1878)[2] and Thomas McCall (1834–1904)

The pneumatic tyre: Robert William Thomson and John Boyd Dunlop (1822–1873) [10]

The overhead valve engine: David Dunbar Buick (1854–1929) [11]

[edit]

Civil engineering innovations

Tubular steel: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874)[12]

The Falkirk wheel: Initial designs by Nicoll Russell Studios, Architects and engineers Binnie Black and Veatch (Opened 2002) [13]

The patent slip for docking vessels: Thomas Morton (1781–1832) [14][15]

The Drummond Light: Thomas Drummond (1797–1840) [16]

Canal design: Thomas Telford (1757–1834) [17]

Dock design improvements: John Rennie (1761–1821) [18]

Crane design improvements: James Bremner (1784–1856) [19]

[edit]

Aviation innovations

Aircraft design: Frank Barnwell (1910) Establishing the fundamentals of aircraft design at the University of Glasgow.[20]

[edit]

Power innovations

Condensing steam engine improvements: James Watt (1736–1819)[1]

Coal-gas lighting: William Murdoch (1754–1839) [21]

The Stirling heat engine: Rev. Robert Stirling (1790–1878) [22]

Carbon brushes for dynamos: George Forbes (1849–1936) [23]

The Clerk cycle gas engine: Sir Dugald Clerk (1854–1932) [24]

The wave-powered electricity generator: by South African Engineer Stephen Salter in 1977 [25]

The Pelamis Wave Energy Converter ("red sea snake" wave energy device): Richard Yemm, 1998 [26]

[edit]

Shipbuilding innovations

Europe's first passenger steamboat: Henry Bell (1767–1830) [27]

The first iron-hulled steamship: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874) [28]

The first practical screw propeller: Robert Wilson (1803–1882)[citation needed]

Marine engine innovations: James Howden (1832–1913)[29]

John Elder & Charles Randolph (Marine Compound expansion engine)[29]

[edit]

Military innovations

Lieutenant-General Sir David Henderson two areas:

Field intelligence. Argued for the establishment of the Intelligence Corps. Wrote Field Intelligence: Its Principles and Practice (1904) and Reconnaissance (1907) on the tactical intelligence of modern warfare during World War I.[30]

Royal Air Force. Considered instrumental in the foundation of the British Royal Air Force.[31]

United States Navy. Created largely in by John Paul Jones, who was born in Kirkcudbrightshire.

[edit]

Heavy industry innovations

Coal mining extraction in the sea on an artificial island by Sir George Bruce of Carnock (1575). Regarded as one of the industrial wonders of the late medieval period.[32]

Making cast steel from wrought iron: David Mushet (1772–1847) [33]

Wrought iron sash bars for glass houses: John C. Loudon (1783–1865) [34]

The hot blast oven: James Beaumont Neilson (1792–1865) [35]

The steam hammer: James Nasmyth (1808–1890) [36]

Wire rope: Robert Stirling Newall (1812–1889) [37]

Steam engine improvements: William Mcnaught (1831–1881) [38]

The Fairlie, a narrow gauge, double-bogie railway engine: Robert Francis Fairlie (1831–1885)[39]

Cordite - Sir James Dewar, Sir Frederick Abel (1889) [40]

[edit]

Agricultural innovations

Threshing machine improvements: James Meikle (c.1690-c.1780) & Andrew Meikle (1719–1811) [41]

Hollow pipe drainage: Sir Hew Dalrymple, Lord Drummore (1700–1753) [42]

The Scotch plough: James Anderson of Hermiston (1739–1808) [43]

Deanstonisation soil-drainage system: James Smith (1789–1850) [44]

The mechanical reaping machine: Rev. Patrick Bell (1799–1869) [45]

The Fresno scraper: James Porteous (1848–1922) [46]

The Tuley tree shelter: Graham Tuley in 1979 [47]

[edit]

Communication innovations

Print stereotyping: William Ged (1690–1749) [48]

Roller printing: Thomas Bell (patented 1783) [49]

The adhesive postage stamp and the postmark: James Chalmers (1782–1853) [50]

Universal Standard Time: Sir Sandford Fleming (1827–1915) [51]

Light signalling between ships: Admiral Philip H. Colomb (1831–1899) [52]

The telephone: Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922)[4]

The teleprinter: Frederick G. Creed (1871–1957) [53]

The first working television, and colour television; John Logie Baird (1888–1946)[5][6]

Radar: Robert Watson-Watt (1892–1973)[8]

The underlying principles of Radio - James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [54]

The automated teller machine and Personal Identification Number system - James Goodfellow (born 1937) [55]

[edit]

Publishing firsts

The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1768–81) [56]

The first English textbook on surgery(1597) [57]

The first modern pharmacopaedia, William Cullen (1776). The book became 'Europe’s principal text on the classification and treatment of disease'. His ideas survive in the terms nervous energy and neuroses (a word that Cullen coined).[58]

The first postcards and picture postcards in the UK [59]

The first eBook from a UK administration (March 2012). Scottish Government publishes 'Your Scotland, Your Referendum'. [60]

[edit]

Scientific innovations

Logarithms: John Napier (1550–1617)[61]

The theory of electromagnetism: James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [62]

The first theory of the Higgs boson or "God Particle" by Peter Higgs particle-physics theorist at the University of Edinburgh (1964) [63]

Popularising the decimal point: John Napier (1550–1617)[64]

The world's first oil refinery and a process of extracting paraffin from coal laying the foundations for the modern oil industry: James Young (1811–1883)[65]

The Gregorian telescope: James Gregory (1638–1675) [66]

The concept of latent heat: Joseph Black (1728–1799) [67]

The pyroscope, atmometer and aethrioscope scientific instruments: Sir John Leslie (1766–1832) [68]

Identifying the nucleus in living cells: Robert Brown (1773–1858) [69]

Hypnotism: James Braid (1795–1860) [70]

Transplant rejection: Professor Thomas Gibson (1940s) the first medical doctor to understand the relationship between donor graft tissue and host tissue rejection and tissue transplantation by his work on aviation burns victims during World War II.[71]

Colloid chemistry: Thomas Graham (1805–1869) [72]

The kelvin SI unit of temperature: William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824–1907) [73]

Devising the diagramatic system of representing chemical bonds: Alexander Crum Brown (1838–1922) [74]

Criminal fingerprinting: Henry Faulds (1843–1930) [75]

The noble gases: Sir William Ramsay (1852–1916) [76]

The cloud chamber recording of atoms: Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869–1959) [77][78]

Pioneering work on nutrition and poverty: John Boyd Orr (1880–1971) [79]

The ultrasound scanner: Ian Donald (1910–1987) [80]

Ferrocene synthetic substances: Peter Ludwig Pauson in 1955 [81]

The MRI body scanner: John Mallard and James Huchinson from (1974–1980) [82]

The first cloned mammal (Dolly the Sheep): Was conducted in The Roslin Institute research centre in 1996 [83]

The seismometer innovations thereof: James David Forbes [84]

Metaflex fabric innovations thereof: University of St. Andrews (2010) application of the first manufacturing fabrics that manipulate light in bending it around a subject. Before this such light manipulating atoms were fixed on flat hard surfaces. The team at St Andrews are the first to develop the concept to fabric.[85]

Macaulayite: Dr. Jeff Wilson of the Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen.[86]

[edit]

Sports innovations

Main article: Sport in Scotland

Scots have been instrumental in the invention and early development of several sports:

Football (Soccer)

several modern athletics events, i.e. shot put[87] and the hammer throw,[87] derive from Highland Games and earlier 12th century Scotland [87]

Curling [88]

Gaelic handball The modern game of handball is first recorded in Scotland in 1427, when King James I an ardent handball player had his men block up a cellar window in his palace courtyard that was interfering with his game.[89]

Cycling, invention of the pedal-cycle [90]

Golf (see Golf in Scotland)

Shinty The history of Shinty as a non-standardised sport pre-dates Scotland the Nation. The rules were standardised in the 19th century by Archibald Chisholm [91]

Rugby sevens: Ned Haig and David Sanderson (1883) [92]

[edit]

Medical innovations

Pioneering the use of surgical anaesthesia with Chloroform: Sir James Young Simpson (1811–1870) [93]

The hypodermic syringe: Alexander Wood (1817–1884) [94]

Discovery of hypnotism (November 1841): James Braid (1795–1860) [95]

Identifying the mosquito as the carrier of malaria: Sir Ronald Ross (1857–1932) [96]

Identifying the cause of brucellosis: Sir David Bruce (1855–1931) [97]

Discovering the vaccine for typhoid fever: Sir William B. Leishman (1865–1926) [98]

Discovering insulin: John J R Macleod (1876–1935) with others [9]

Penicillin: Sir Alexander Fleming (1881–1955) [7]

General anaesthetic - Pionered by Scotsman James Young Simpson and Englishman John Snow[99]

Ambulight PDT: light-emitting sticking plaster used in photodynamic therapy (PDT) for treating non-melanoma skin cancer. Developed by Ambicare Dundee's Ninewells Hospital and St Andrews University. (2010)[100]

Discovering an effective tuberculosis treatment: Sir John Crofton in the 1950s [101]

Primary creator of the artificial kidney (Professor Kenneth Lowe - Later Queen's physician in Scotland) [102]

Developing the first beta-blocker drugs: Sir James W. Black in 1964 [103]

Developing modern asthma therapy based both on bronchodilation (salbutamol) and anti-inflammatory steroids (beclomethasone dipropionate) : Sir David Jack in 1972

Glasgow coma scale: Graham Teasdale and Bryan J. Jennett (1974) [104]

EKG [Electrocardiography]: Alexander Muirhead (1911) [105]

[edit]

Household innovations

The television John Logie Baird (1923)

The refrigerator: William Cullen (1748) [106]

The flush toilet: Alexander Cummings (1775) [107]

The Dewar flask: Sir James Dewar (1847–1932) [108]

The first distiller to triple distill Irish whiskey[109]:John Jameson (Whisky distiller)

The piano footpedal: John Broadwood (1732–1812) [110]

The first automated can-filing machine John West (1809–1888) [111]

The waterproof macintosh: Charles Macintosh (1766–1843) [112]

The kaleidoscope: Sir David Brewster (1781–1868) [113]

Keiller's marmalade Janet Keiller (1797) - The first recipe of rind suspended marmalade or Dundee marmalade produced in Dundee.

The modern lawnmower: Alexander Shanks (1801–1845) [114]

The Lucifer friction match: Sir Isaac Holden (1807–1897) [115]

The self filling pen: Robert Thomson (1822–1873) [116]

Cotton-reel thread: J & J Clark of Paisley [117]

Lime cordial: Peter Burnett in 1867 [118]

Bovril beef extract: John Lawson Johnston in 1874 [119]

The electric clock: Alexander Bain (1840) [120]

Chemical Telegraph (Automatic Telegraphy) Alexander Bain (1846) In England Bain's telegraph was used on the wires of the Electric Telegraph Company to a limited extent, and in 1850 it was used in America.[121]

[edit]

Weapons innovations

The carronade cannon: Robert Melville (1723–1809) [122]

The Ferguson rifle: Patrick Ferguson in 1770 or 1776 [123]

The Lee bolt system as used in the Lee-Metford and Lee-Enfield series rifles: James Paris Lee [124]

The Ghillie suit [125]

The percussion cap: invented by Scottish Presbyterian clergyman Alexander Forsyth [126]

[edit]

Miscellaneous innovations

Boys' Brigade[127]

Bank of England devised by William Paterson

Bank of France devised by John Law

The industrialisation and modernisation of Japan by Thomas Blake Glover[128]

Kirin Brewing Company founded by Thomas Blake Glover[128]

Colour photography: the first known permanent colour photograph was taken by James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879)[129]

Safetray invented by Alison Grieve

Chill out, it's just banter. I even went out with a Glasgow girl for a few years. Ruined her for any Scottish tho...

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I am fully Scottish and wish to join your Clan/Squad. I do have Teamspeak. If skills are required I will be happy to explain a few down below.

>I know good Military codes and Slangs.

>Good at taking orders and listening.

>Know good field tactics such as Flanking or Grazing Fire.

Many more skills you will see if we become friends. I can get you two more people soon as well.

~Puff

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hello i m Greek player wishes to team up with experienced ppl.

  • Good pvp experience.Never give up or ALT F4 (if u follow that kind of gameplay skip my post)
  • Shoot on sight, ask questions later behavior (only spare unarmed survivors)
  • Good knowledge of the map.Can navigate easily to any spot
  • Familiar and practiced with almost all in game weapons
  • Can use end game Sniper rifles.When i say use i mean find the distance of the target and effectively zero it without range finder gadget.
  • Have skype/TS3/Vent.
  • Can speak English/Greek/Little German.
  • Hate the Queen

In game name: I sToLe youR Beans

Skype name: PorniTouDasouS

Steam name: GangreeLz

Reposted from other thread

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

BEAM ME UP SCOTTY! i request that u add me to clan, im from north ayrshire. but also request that my english accented freind be added also. he haz scottish blood :D.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Nice to see some other scotsman on DayZ!

I happen to be Scottish and own a DayZ clan. Omega-6. We have our very own DayZ server, SCO 60, and our own forums, TS3 and Killing Floor server.

We are currently recruiting and looking for more experienced members, so I can refer you and your group to our forums if you like on:

Happy fae glasgae!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hey liquidator,

My group killed you today, after you got me and William haha.

was that your clan in the barn? 2 in a red barn, and one outside who came looking? then we picked you off with a .50cal...happened this afternoon? (19/7/12)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i was with my mate i picked one or 2 people in that barn i think it was your mates and an other group me and my mate went up and then fuck loads of shooting happened we hid in the bushes and i shot a guy in the barn and a guy outside i shat my self when the smoke you through happened i was playing stupid and should have retreated when my mate died but i was greedy and went for the kill i was on 11 murders at that point and wanted to beat my record did you take my barrat i went back up to get it but broke my leg on the way and was like fuck it lol

you 2 groups where fighting first we just casually came across the battle lol

Edited by Liquidator

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Aye thats wht we thought, there were two bandits inside. I got the first with my M16 and when the other one turned round my squad opened fire on the barn, we all ran inside and then you got two of us haha! We killed your buddy when he came looking for loot, and then decided to use a decoy and smoke tactic to draw your fire while our 50 cal looked for you haha! It worked atleast.

If its any consolation - we all died an hour later after getting ambushed haha. Might see you again today anyway lads if your on UK80!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×