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  2. It looks like goat willow to me
  3. OK you first then, on your overseas tours, what camps were you in, when did you serve there? (Please DO NOT answer question, your usual BS is sufficient - however I am sure in many of the countries you visited will have people interested to know that JohnsonD, living in Scotland (probs not hard to work out where exactly from your previous obsessions either) was there shooting at them... perhaps make it relevant to your situation is the only way to make you understand online security?)
  4. I asked for nothing more than what ships he sailed on. i answered his question when he asked why nothing more or less, I never said my mate might have been on the same boat at all. . At no point did I ever ask for any personal information. Unless you can provide evidence to the contrary. So as I said either one of you show me where I asked for any personal information, I’ll leave the useful to terrorist bit out as it’s just laughable. Never mind SP and his reluctance to disclose his employment status I’m talking about right here and now.
  5. As Steven said, look back at your posts and his responses. It was blatantly obvious from an outside perspective that he didn't want to give you information that would identify himself to you, but if your colleague was in the same crew he could have done, so he was trying to appease your apparent need for proof that he was in the services without going further. Maybe your level of persistence and inability to read between the lines is the problem.
  6. I recall racing one belonging to a mate, his was the "super sports" version, as I had a Tribsa with a tiger 110 motor I thought it would be a walkover, I got quite the surprise when he took off from the line, and seemed quicker than I anticipated, he kept with me to just over 80 and then I left him behind in the distance. the ariel was bog standard, they did have a bit of a following back then, but most had c15,s ss80,s, tiger cubs,royal enfields, ajs/matchless, even a few francis barnets. I saw a few tuned versions later and they were even quicker. IIRC they were good in the twisties, the low center of gravity helped no doubt.
  7. I’ll ask again show me where I asked BQ for any personal information. Here we go again down the well worn diversion won’t answer a question road. Keep it on topic in relation to the post you quoted. Either you or the other individual back up what you posted 🤷‍♂️it’s very very simple.
  8. Today
  9. My first proper road going British bike was a 250 Ariel Arrow 2 stroke twin . If riding into a head wind it would do 60mph in forth but 65mph in third 🙂 My last British bike was a Royal Enfield 700cc Constellation with twin leading shoe front brake . I had Triumphs and BSA bikes and others in between . .
  10. Good morning, new to the forum. Hopefully it's OK to post this here? I wonder if you're able to help me identify this tree. I don't know if I planted it or if it's grown of it's own accord. A single trunk around 4-5" diameter, grown to around 15'. Only one branch coming off the plant at around 4' from the ground. No other branches, which might suggest it's not a tree at all? Perhaps an overgrown shrub?? The bark is fairly smooth with a vertical pattern. I've tried apps to identify it, but none seem to be correct. Your help would be very much appreciated. I have attached photos of the trunk and the leaves.
  11. I do remember back in 1806 when I was doing my CSwhatever it was that the assessor commented that it was obvious to him I had used a saw for some time but that I had a couple of bad habits . I was undercutting a limb about a foot DIA and pushing the saw with my right thigh like you do ( or maybe you guys don't ) . He said I should keep my leg out of alignment with the bar . So I had to bend a bit more and pull it up with my arms loosing a bout 80% efficiency I thought . However I finished it his way of course . He then asked if we had been tought undercutting as he had not seen any of the other candidates doing it . I said no we hadn't . It was getting on a bit and there was a girl on the course who was struggling a bit and he asked me if I would go and help her out . So I finished some of her cutting and stacking and rasherd up the brash . As far as I can remember he passed us all .
  12. ... errrr... have you ever read your posts? Are you just drunk when you write them or high on your scuba gasses? Do you want a list of postings where you ask for personal information or the thread made up just for you so you stop spamming every other thread demanding personal information, the introduce yourself thread - made just for this reason off the back of your incessant postings.
  13. love thy neighbour, but don't get caught
  14. Bit harsh: "Love thy neighbour". We live in a christian country, after all...
  15. Plus gang raped for good measure
  16. And ripped apart by giant octopuses.
  17. @Steven P@Youngstu Either one of you can explain where I asked for personal information. You can snipe away jumping in on posts all day based upon personal animosity or political ideology if it makes you feel better no problem but resorting to plain old fashioned lies🤷‍♂️.
  18. 42 to the rescue. Someone has the time to read and like a BS post this morning, Where did I ask for personal information you lying pos.
  19. Thought others might be interested to hear about quarter sawing an oak log last week using two Alaskan mills and a bandsaw mill. The milled timber will be for my own and a friend's use for furniture making once seasoned and my aim was to maximise the yield of book matched ray flecked heartwood boards. Didn’t realise until recently that although quarter sawn boards can have the growth rings between 90 degrees down to 45 degrees. Ray flecked boards, a feature of arts and crafts style furniture, need growth rings between 90 degrees down to 75 degrees. For the past couple of years I’d been looking for an oak log nearby, at least 30 inches diameter, about 10 feet long and straight, suitable for quarter sawing. Recently I heard of one being felled a few minutes walk from home! Tree was still living, but at the top of a steep bank and leaning over a drive way and adjacent house. So it needed to be felled. Concerned about nails in a garden tree. Also, unsure if it grew at an angle, i.e. might be reaction wood, or if the top of the bank had started to give way in recent years and it was vertical for most of it’s life, so no reaction wood? Also, a visible scar 18 feet up where a large branch had snapped off raised the risk of heart rot? Lots of reasons to dismiss it as a firewood log, but decided to mill it. The bottom 18 feet from ground level to the scar was felled in one length, at my request, It tapered from 40 inches to just over 2 feet diameter, DBH about 34 inches. Cut it into two 9 foot lengths as too heavy to move in one piece and it was lying at a step angle on the bank so not suitable for chainsaw milling where it landed after felling. Bottom section tapered from 40 inches to 30 inches, and once felled and cut to length I could see the pith was reasonably centred and no obvious defects from old branches or rot. Looked ideal! The local sawmill (only 2 miles from home) were happy for me to do some chainsaw milling at their yard, a few preparatory cuts, before final milling on their bandsaw. The bottom, largest section will be quarter sawn. Took a while to work out the best sequence of milling and after several options, the attached sketch is working so far. The chainsaw milled cuts, now completed, are bold lines, and the bandsaw cuts, still to be done, are the thin lines. TH quarter saw milling.pdf Started by rolling the log using a farm jack, so a large shake was vertical, more or less aligned with one of the proposed chainsaw cuts Then freehand trimmed the flare on both sides using a chainsaw so my Alaskan mill would fit. Then trimmed the bottom end flat and square, followed by drawing vertical, horizontal and diagonal guidelines on both ends, all meeting at the pith. Then painted both ends with 2 coats PVA. Top slab, mostly sapwood, was removed with my Alaskan mill to create a flat straight face, parallel to the pith. Then the log was milled full width through the pith. My Alaskan mill started as a small log mill with an MS171 (14 inch bar) bought years ago. Then upgraded it to an MS391 with 20 inch bar for milling, and about 10 years ago changed it into a 24inch mill using additional parts plus an MS661. This log was a good excuse to buy longer 48 inch rails, a 42 inch bar and two full skip rip chains, all from Chainsawbars. So I can now mill up to 36 inches width. Amazed how quickly the MS661 cut this average 32inch width of oak with the new set up. The top slab was raised onto wood blocks, then cut in half along the vertical guideline, again following the pith, using my Alaskan mini mill with the depth set so that it didn’t cut into the bottom section. Some lovely ray flecked figure on this cut! After rolling off the two halves of the top slab, the bottom slab was halved using the mini mill. One edge of each quarter was then freehand trimmed the full length with a chainsaw, parallel to the diagonal guidelines, so they will sit flat on the bandsaw bed with the pith parallel to the bed. So, that’s the log quartered and ready for bandsaw milling into 30mm and 40mm planks. Based on the 90 to 75 degree limits, might get as many as 16 ray flecked boards, i.e. four matched boards from each quarter. I’ll keep my fingers crossed. Quite time consuming and all done alone without lifting gear which was hard going for an ‘old age pensioner’. The quarters have been pressure washed to remove moss, soil and maybe stones. Planning the band sawing in a week or so. Just need to make a ply board with 45 degree blocks to support the quarters for horizontal cuts. In the meantime the quarters are covered to keep the sun off and minimize the risk of surface checking. Will post more pictures in due course. Andrew
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  20. just a photo of a straight piped t cab lorry like nothing
  21. Wordle 1,556 5/6 ⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬜🟩⬜⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟨⬜⬜ 🟨🟩⬜🟨⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
  22. what make them famous so they can be headbutted and then stabbed to death?
  23. good point about the TV shows - see below, this SP fellow, never worked as a tree cutter, always offering pay related advice to those who do - personally I think SP needs need to be pulled apart by giant octopuses ( but I know it's wrong of me to think that) and the 42, always rushes to help SP, not quite as bad as collaborating with the Nazis
  24. Wordle 1,556 3/6* ⬜⬜🟨⬜⬜ 🟩🟩⬜⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
  25. Wordle 1,556 3/6 ⬜⬜🟩⬜🟨 🟨⬜🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
  26. I thought jobs like this get advertised for around £35k particularly down south
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