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codlasher

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Everything posted by codlasher

  1. I will pm you with some details of a contact I have near Naarwich. codlasher
  2. As long as my piece of string......Or 42' codlasher
  3. We've had apple since the original SE in the late 80's then the first iMac then mac mini's right up to last years model. Can't fault them. Don't get suckered in buying Microsoft's office programme costing £££'s, look for Oracles 'open office.org 3' for mac's and as it is an Oracle product is free. I'm running one here on this 2012 mac. The children are using the older minis (the ones in the slightly smaller box than the new items) without problems and turn in homework that is interconnected with the school network. We will upgrade again in about 2016. You will need a newer type screen as the older ones are not up to the speed of the new computer. Samsung SyncMaster S22B350 is a good match. Available from PC world. We're lucky in having an apple store in Naaarwich but the one in Regents Street is not too hard to get to either by train & tube and I think there is an apple store in Oxford too. Park and ride is entertaining! Hope this helps. I must apologise Swinny, I've just seen that you're in Yorkshire so London, Oxford & Naarwich are OUT!!! Sorry. codlasher
  4. I would write to your Landlord, just for the record, thanking him for his 'valuable' time and request that he considers repairing/replacing the cutters before the winter. This would hopefully spur him to do that which you have requested and is on the record so won't be taken from your deposit when you leave. Man sounds like an ar*e though! codlasher
  5. They can smell fresh Larch from a long way away and turn up to investigate. This is a close up of a beautiful insect. The black thing that looks like an extra leg is the borer/egg laying device.
  6. Alive Tuning - Land Rover Tuning Excellence This is a good company. There's a big BUT to chipping in that you must not forget the cost of removing the standard dual mass clutch and replacing it with a quality uprated item. Then you will be able to put this power through your transmission and onto the road! codlasher
  7. If you are using any type of single layer tin sheeting on a roof you will always have an issue with condensation. I use Cladco for many jobs and recommend them to clients too. I particularly like their pan tile sheets, these look good and make a new building blend in well. On the condensation issue with non insulated sheets; If you put a breathable membrane such as Tyvec in as an under layer you will remove the condensation issue. Put this layer in over your rafters and then counter batten ready for the Cladco sheets, problem solved! Reason I like Tyvec is that it is grey underside and white topside unlike the competition thus giving a more pleasant view from underneath. Remember to pull the Tyvec tight and a staple gun helps fix this to the rafters. You can use clear sheets for light too and a perspex sheet can be fixed underneath to provide the condensation barrier. A bit like secondary double glazing. codlasher
  8. V nice indeed! codlasher
  9. Me too! Get the one with two gas struts and then you can take one off. I have landed several hedge-trimming jobs this year and wouldn't be without it! codlasher
  10. Some years back I had a similar call and went out on my Can-Am 250 (ex army and still in its green/black livery) Spent an hour with the gentleman concerned rounding them up and getting them back into the field..... Spent the next hour trying to remember and hunting for where I'd left the bike in the woods....Oops camouflaged paintwork! codlasher
  11. In my nine months travelling on an old Honda 500 around Oz I saw many dead creatures on the tarmac road-sides. You could small them for nearly a mile before you got to them and the smell alerted me to the fly swarm that I had to go through as I passed the carcass. There were pleas from the cattle owners to not hit their animals with 45 gallon oil drums painted up to look like cows with smaller drums to look like calfs next to the big ones. One of my rules was never to travel at night. Two reasons; One was self preservation and the second was that I was there to see the country and I certainly would have missed it if I'd had done any travelling during the dark hours. When talking to younger gap yaar travellers some said 'what a good idea' others didn't give a monkeys as they just wanted to get from suburbia to suburbia as quickly as possible! Shame that. I did see some big Red roos in the north and they were not something I'd ever want to run into in any vehicle, roo bars or not!
  12. As has been said, let them go.... £0.70ppm for travelling, minimum, but you will find that wears thin with not being able to do local runs and you'll be loosing out. codlasher
  13. Don't forget to set up your direct debit National insurance payments. T'internet will guide you there. Set up another DD for £20 per month into a savings account and don't go near it. You will be very happy when you really need it. After that you'll be fine as you are 25 with the rest of your life ahead of you! Good luck! codlasher
  14. I wonder if Jacques Tati ever visited the kitchen......? [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LE9t98Gox60]Jaques Tati - Mon Oncle (Kitchen Scene) - YouTube[/ame]
  15. If you can find an old Allen scythe blade carrier or similar, you can make a brilliant & simple barbed wire strainer. You will need to cut one of the points, including the slot that the blade runs in, from this blade carrier and glue it (braze) to a bar/tube of about 3' in length. You then use the slot to put the wire in and the point to spike into the post and presto, a very simple device with no moving parts. I find old galvanised water pipe works for all these sorts of jobs.
  16. They really don't like being photographed! Get the vehicles rego too if you can. codlasher
  17. All I can say is that I had a front mounted pump on my old County as the original 1974 Ford pump certainly wasn't up to the job on the original crane. Modern tractors have two and three pumps in line as standard today but perhaps a dedicated pump would offer a faster flow and the spin off would be better crane speed plus the tractor could work other things such as a slewing drawbar on its integral system. The biggest plus in a front mounted pump would be that the oil system is kept separate from anything else. If disaster struck you can still use the tractor. codlasher
  18. Try Aztec. They make a non woven and a woven. PM me for any info if you like. I do this sort of thing on the odd occasion. codlasher
  19. In my pile I've Oak, Ash, Spruce, Sycamore, Silver Birch and Willow. I'll burn all of this but like the Oak for 'overnight' as this saves re-lighting in the morning. I'm not really fussed about species except when getting the water hot and then I like Spruce, Ash, Sycamore and Silver Birch. Nice roary fire! codlasher.
  20. I have owned a multitude of small rotary mowers over the years, all were second hand and usually Briggs powered. They are not the best of engines but the main thing is that spares are readily available on t'internet and will arrive at your door without much fuss. My 'newest' rotary self propelled is an Etesia PBTS (I think from memory!) I had some spare money and was fed up with a knackered Mountfield at the time so purchased new. This is now sixteen years old and still going strong! I bought it mainly as our local, at the time, dealer was their agent and I also liked the light-weight construction with the plastic deck and grass collector. It wasn't cheap though, but there's a lot to be said for quality, even with a 5hp Briggs motor. So I've done my own grass, other peoples on the odd occasion too and I've been and got myself some 'old git' contracts doing a little bit of mowing and hedge trimming round and about. Its now done a lot of work. Bottom line is; If it broke tomorrow I'd ring RT Machinery (Aylesbury) and have a similar new one couriered to me. A good mower! codlasher
  21. I had an 03 TD5 and had the brain out from under the seat to be remapped in 08, brilliant, more torque, a little better on MPG and more power throughout the rev range. BUT I then had to have the dual mass flywheel and clutch replaced for a solid item within three months of the upgrade. I have found this is a normal thing to have done and is never mentioned by the tuners. Just be aware that it is a cost item.... I suppose though in an older 5 this is a sensible thing to have done as the fork can be replaced at the same time and you've also a new clutch... codlasher.
  22. I wonder if a JCB Fastrac can tow at 40k? I think they are in a similar class as a Unimog. codlasher
  23. I've read some but not all the posts regarding this mobile saw. Some good points have been made too. My 1/2p's worth. Why a Unimog? Why not a second hand tractor, say a Deutz model with 40k or 50k box, plenty around and not so expensive. My fathers partner always said about mobile mills is that this was their downfall, they were mobile! He believed in bringing the timber to the mill as, in his opinion, this was always the easiest solution! He had one of the original Forestor portable sawmills for hire so understood the pitfalls. His old friend Mr Duncan Monroe milled on the West side of Scotland (using a static Woodmizer) and was never short of work. Moving the timber was sometimes an 'interesting' exercise for example with his lorry fully loaded going over Applecross before the road was improved!!!! Putting the machine on a big trailer bed to be pulled with a good tractor seems to be the best option, you then have the rigidity to keep the saw accurate and perhaps be able to mount a small crane to aid you in handling the produce....Run the tractor on white diesel and you are legal too...? I well understand your need for a big, simple and reliable saw. Good luck. codlasher
  24. I seem to have landed a number of hedge trimming jobs within our local community including the Village Hall. This, along with my own hedges, put me to thinking more about this system. I met easy-lift guy at the APF last year and he kindly demonstrated the system to me. I went away with a picture of it in my head as 'V useful' but not enough £'s to buy at that time. I have now managed to save enough, and price these jobs which have all been accepted, for a purchase. So yesterday I went to our local stockist and bought one. As an 'apprenticeship' I have cut all our front hedge, a job that normally takes me two part days because I'm an old git! I managed to do all this work in two hours......Job done.... I can still use my arms too which I found hard last year after doing the same hedge. So here's a big thank you from me for the system:thumbup1: codlasher
  25. Ah. There's a spin-off from this in that there's some REAL sh*t on the market as all sorts of pieces of abandoned lumps of metal are pulled from the weeds and backs of barns and labelled 'restoration projects' when they are only fit for the scrap pile! I've just watched an identical medium sized tractor exactly the same age as mine but with some 3000 more hours and a dodgy gear-box go for more than I'd ever expected. Still, that means there's loads of life left in mine yet! codlasher

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