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difflock

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Everything posted by difflock

  1. Indeed, as I understand the simple difference, "G" Wagens kept the oil in and the rain out.
  2. I pulled my wee red SWB 1984 300D "G" Wagen out today, (she had been sitting for about 15 years parked up in a shed), slackened off the Banjo at the fuel filter, about 5 pumps of the hand primer pump and diesel was pishing everywhere, so tweeked the banjo tight again. Slackened off the nuts at the injectors, churned her a few times, diesel showing, so tightened them up again. Then about 5 churns after using the glowplugs(and I deliberately had churned her a few times without heating the glowplugs, to get some lubrication about the engine before allowing her to start) She started and ran perfectly! Happy days! P.S. This one is another keeper(i.e. forby the Steyr Puch Van) GIW405 was the Coleraine showroom demonstrator, bought by Oliver Murphy, a local mechanic, who maintained her to the highest standards, then sold her to me about 18/20 years ago, so I am effectively only the 2nd owner. Marcus
  3. Tightly Strap, or clamp, a vibrating poker, or two(i.e. normally used for concrete) to the subsurface portion, just above the bottom? And if 12 m of water depth( depending on the tidal range) keep the vibration deeper than the slinging point. Kinda presumably in mud silt otherwise piles should not be needed, hence my thoughts as to how to "seaugh" them outta the mud, and thinking a slow steady pull over time with vibration. I know absolutely nothing about the subject, I am simply thinking out loud. And actually the time element may be more important than the pulling force, purely based on my experience of extracting posts from mud using my manual(but limited) brute force. Slow and steady wins out over fast and brutal. Edit: Bound to be water-proof hydraulic powered vibration rigs out there for setting sheet steel piling? Or thinking a standard petrol or diesel powered vibrating plate re-powered with a suitable hydraulic motor? Actually actually double drum vibrating rollers already got hydraulic powered eccentrics to provide the vibratory force, judging by the location of various hydraulic pipes? Marcus
  4. Is it not possible to pull them out, if a crane is to be involved anyway, thinking something involving vibration if a straight pull will not work, since are they not seriously valuable timbers?, especially the sound stuff from below the waterline. marcus
  5. Thats what you get for pissing into the wind, innit . . .
  6. That OSM, is so deeply profound, without this sage advice I would not have known how to fill these bags.?
  7. Oddly enough, ever since observing a rough agricultural tractor pulling into a filling station in Turkey, and filling up on diesel, which led me to conclude they did not have rebated diesel. Which led me to wonder why the UK persisted with this stupid abuse prone rebated diesel system.(and this was 30 years ago) One diesel fuel only, simples, so some agricultural produce will cost a bit more, ditto for construction work, but most users will figure more economic ways of working, and life will go on. The extra revenue should allow the Government to reduce the tax on diesel too, therefore lessening the impact, and indeed levelling the playing field in respect of agricultural tractors illegally competing for haulage work. So a win-win-win And that is from a farmers son.
  8. Go On, Explain please?
  9. I would rather see one flat rate income tax, with say a 25k income before contributing, and a higher VAT rate (which will be equally paid by benefit claimants and by those working in the black and criminal economies), with no exemptions for childrens clothing, carry out food and other potential loopholes. Plus a return to the Property Vote, if rates, particularily commercial rates are going to remain to be so high. The obverse of the "no taxation without representation" if you like. Also anonomised & published true costs for the costs of keeping the most expensive in benefits problem families. Or a benefit cap, regardless of the number of brats fathered by multiple temporary fathers. It would be truely eye-opening. mth
  10. Bloody ell add a remote an it ud be worth a fortune on Robot Wars surely?
  11. Mick I musta missed that somehow . . . could you ever post a link . . .
  12. And yet those communities cannot afford to heat their homes, if their community leaders are to be believed! Anyway! That's not a bonfire, and see att. link;
  13. Ah Ha! I just remembered an interesting corollary, after the USSR collapsed, and Germany was reunited, a West German medical researcher decided to look at the incidences of asthma in East Germany, with its terrific levels of air pollution from power stations burning lignite, their poorer diet and poorer access to modern antibiotics compared to the ever so modern wealthy and clean West Germany. He was staggered to find that the East Germans were significently healthier. I cannot remember the "why", but undoubtedly the East Germans were healthier, particularily in respect of asthma. Hmmmm?
  14. And yet nature is absolutely thriving in the cordoned off nuclear-hot Chernobyl zone, it appears not only is mankind susceptible to pollution(incl totally natural kinds), but mankind is of itself the biggest pollution on Earth.
  15. Us woodburners had better watch out; https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-46823309 First find somebody to blame . . . Or, like if air pollution caused this girls death, why is everbody else not dead, or at least seriously ill/somewhat ill at least? I hasten to add, that I can only imagine what it would be like to lose a child, but illness and death are an unfortunate part of life, and finding someone to blame is not helpful. Are "they" going to attempt to prevent pollen and natural air borne dust particles, etc etc. Marcus
  16. I am looking for another smooth haired Bastard Mastiff Dog, the last one Max, had had a Neopolitan sire and a Banddog mother, as healthy as a trout, and with a wonderful calm demeanor, though woe betide any dog that got in his face, on his patch. But any violence was strictly business and did not in the least affect his temperament towards humans. Hybrid vigour is everything, stuff these sickley short lived sib-bred/line-bred pedigrees. Marcus
  17. I found I was bombarded by endless Russian Bride offers (incl some rental models) on the internet, when searching for 2nd hand tractors. I did wonder whether someone had developed an algorithm that identified that anyone searching for a 2nd hand tractor was likely to be an older bachelor farmer and therefore susceptible to such big-titted blonde blandishments. Or at least that is what I explained to the Wife.
  18. As an absolutely untrained person, I bought a forestry winch, hooked it on the old DB1490, and commenced using it. Without watching YouTube. Despite it being the faster line speed model it all happens in slow motion, as in the front wheels will lift, and lift, and lift, giving anyone 1/2 competent more than adequate time to react. And since the "winch in" button must be depressed to winch, all rather fail-safe in operation. As for sideways pulls etc etc, this should be an obvious no-no, or rather approached with suitable trepidation. Ditto for staying out of the way or reach of a broken wire, though it should be impossible to break the wire, as it is simply so easy to run a way over-specced (i.e. in tensile strength) wire, so that failure mode is the winch or tractor stalling. And damage to the wire should be easy to discern, when pulling it out. So I experienced a few "learning experiences" but all with zero risk or fuss But one cannot fix stupid, and I understand your reservations with respect to employee safety. Marcus EDIT Dammit, I saw that very clip earlier today, but see my "cannot fix stupid" comment. Like no lower pully, all simple leverage stuff(to me at least)
  19. My wife, while a University student, attempted to persuade her grandmother to buy their council house in Greenock, for very very little money, her grandparents being very longstanding tenants. Despite both still working and running 2 cars and 2 caravans(we never could understand the 2 caravans btw), i.e. they could well have afforded the purchase, they would not countenance the idea. But spent stupid amounts fitting double glazing etc etc etc, generally just before the Council did the same for the other tenants. Plumb pig-headed daft. Lovely people though. But still daft.
  20. Someone mentioned being mortgage free at retirement, I have reason to imagine that is key to financial freedom, and retirement to whatever extent. In part courtesy of the(then, before the property BOOM) relatively lower NI house prices, in part due to our relatively modest extra TA earnings(but at least the TA kept us from weekend consumer spending and left no time for other money-burning hobbies) we worked our way up the property ladder mortgage free, while driving a very ordinary car(singular, one car only, between 2 wage earners ). Oddly we did not make money "flipping" or selling on properties,(and we only owned 2 before this final self-built home) beyond what would have accrued from investing the money with a Building Society. BUT The key is to have a clearly defined goal to focus on and work towards. And, where possible avoid subsidizing Bankers or Car dealers lifestyles, by avoiding finance on either of their products. Cash(N.B. honestly earned and taxes paid) is King. Marcus
  21. Has to be better than a Transit sized Fiat, where the passenger kept a big Saxo plastic salt container, and of necessity lying on its side( one the size of a small flask) in the glovebox, for his daily portion of chips. Unfortunately he was less than particular about ensuring the top was properly secured.(And Ditto for 20l petrol Jerry Cans! etc etc, a proper walking disaster area) Anyway furthur to this, Mr.Fiat had thoughtlessly located the fusebox directly under the glovebox. A proper unfixable bag-of-shite by the time it was discovered, after sommat electrical stopped working.
  22. Oddly, or not, I do not denigrate hard working migrants sending money home to their families, after all many British breadwinners have worked abroad and sent their earning home, down through the years, however just how much some of, what percentage of, these young male migrants contribute to the British economy, if or since they are living in little more than Doss houses and spending as little as possible in the local economy, in order to maximize their exported earnings, is questionable, especially if they are working in the black economy, like our car wash Romanians. And an unfortunate percentage of these Romanians are of very doubtful morality, known to be running brothels and other criminal enterprises in parts of Belfast, and taking jobs from them now unemployed local paramilitaries in the process! That said a local family owned steel fabricator took on some Russian welders after the collapse of the Soviet Union, they, or more likely their sons or nephews are still working there, with a very high work ethic, and being provided with decent housing, some also invited the boss out to family weddings in Russia. So they are highly respected workers in the local community. I understand the young males work long enough and hard enough to provide for a family back home, and perhaps set themselves up with a house and business. Again such has been working life from time immemorial. Anyway What I was trying to say was I rather believe such local empirical evidence rather than conjured up statistics from some possibly/probably biased organisation with an axe to grind. marcus
  23. The third machine was the blue one producing 1.0m long beech billets, being strapped into(I am reasonably certain) very tight 1.0m3 billet bundles. I thought productivity was high, with the rate the billets were coming off the conveyor, and the twin billet set-up to allow for strapping and removal of one , while output continued on the other. But yes the highly automated factory set up, in the first clip, with 4 blokes then hand picking the bigger blocks and hand feeding 4 separate splitters, puzzled me, & not a little, but the sophistication (and £ cost) of the rest of the set-up led me to conclude that it must make financial sense. marcus
  24. Well then, why do Labour MP'S devote so much time and energy on behalf of the non contributing, (if not downright sponging), population, including vigorously defending illegal economic migrants and dishonest asylum seekers. I am aware their are genuine cases, but my 40 years of listening to the debates in the Commons, have caused me to form a particular opinion, in respect of Labour's espoused values, which may be a trifle biased, but not overmuch. Like why did they appoint/annoint Comrade Corbyn as their leader, nevermind keeping that cognitively challenged and downright liability to Party credibility Diane Abbot in a senior position. marcus edited in bold italics, and still failing to properly describe the types of clearly undesirable immigrants I mean

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