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#41
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JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote:
On Jul 2, 5:07 pm, HK wrote: JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 4:53 pm, HK wrote: Nope, retired to take care of family... You have failed at about everything, I mean, like Dick said. You worked for a bunch of crooks at some power company and wrote a flyer for a union.. So much is the story of your life.. Did they even use the material you wrote? snerk go learn how to use a roll of masking tape to mark a waterline, mr. pitiful.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are making up stories again. Go hide under your desk and read about painting on Google.. I saw the photos of your personal rowboat, bozo. You don't know how to mark a waterline. It looked like you put the boat in the water and then used a crayon to mark the waterline after you had a few too many beers. Nope, you are making it up as usual.... Are you saying you were sober when you painted that boat? I had no idea I had "worked...at some power company." Which one? Oh...which power company, ****-for-brains, or is this yet another of the hundreds of bizarre claims you make after too much of loogy's dope? |
#42
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posted to rec.boats
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HK wrote:
JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 5:07 pm, HK wrote: JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 4:53 pm, HK wrote: Nope, retired to take care of family... You have failed at about everything, I mean, like Dick said. You worked for a bunch of crooks at some power company and wrote a flyer for a union.. So much is the story of your life.. Did they even use the material you wrote? snerk go learn how to use a roll of masking tape to mark a waterline, mr. pitiful.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are making up stories again. Go hide under your desk and read about painting on Google.. I saw the photos of your personal rowboat, bozo. You don't know how to mark a waterline. It looked like you put the boat in the water and then used a crayon to mark the waterline after you had a few too many beers. Nope, you are making it up as usual.... Are you saying you were sober when you painted that boat? I had no idea I had "worked...at some power company." Which one? Oh...which power company, ****-for-brains, or is this yet another of the hundreds of bizarre claims you make after too much of loogy's dope? He probably thought, your employer,Ullico was a power company. http://www.gazette.net/gazette_archi.../185685-1.html |
#43
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posted to rec.boats
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J i m wrote:
HK wrote: JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 5:07 pm, HK wrote: JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 4:53 pm, HK wrote: Nope, retired to take care of family... You have failed at about everything, I mean, like Dick said. You worked for a bunch of crooks at some power company and wrote a flyer for a union.. So much is the story of your life.. Did they even use the material you wrote? snerk go learn how to use a roll of masking tape to mark a waterline, mr. pitiful.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are making up stories again. Go hide under your desk and read about painting on Google.. I saw the photos of your personal rowboat, bozo. You don't know how to mark a waterline. It looked like you put the boat in the water and then used a crayon to mark the waterline after you had a few too many beers. Nope, you are making it up as usual.... Are you saying you were sober when you painted that boat? I had no idea I had "worked...at some power company." Which one? Oh...which power company, ****-for-brains, or is this yet another of the hundreds of bizarre claims you make after too much of loogy's dope? He probably thought, your employer,Ullico was a power company. http://www.gazette.net/gazette_archi.../185685-1.html Yeah, but it turns out it's a parasite on a parasites ass... |
#44
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jul 2, 7:48*pm, HK wrote:
JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 5:07 pm, HK wrote: JustWaitAFrekinMinute! wrote: On Jul 2, 4:53 pm, HK wrote: Nope, retired to take care of family... You have failed at about everything, I mean, like Dick said. You worked for a bunch of crooks at some power company and wrote a flyer for a union.. *So much is the story of your life.. Did they even use the material you wrote? *snerk go learn how to use a roll of masking tape to mark a waterline, mr. pitiful.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You are making up stories again. Go hide under your desk and read about painting on Google.. I saw the photos of your personal rowboat, bozo. You don't know how to mark a waterline. It looked like you put the boat in the water and then used a crayon to mark the waterline after you had a few too many beers.. Nope, you are making it up as usual.... Are you saying you were sober when you painted that boat? I had no idea I had "worked...at some power company." Which one? Oh...which power company, ****-for-brains, or is this yet another of the hundreds of bizarre claims you make after too much of loogy's dope?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - duly noted. |
#45
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jul 2, 3:56*pm, Gene Kearns
wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35*am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...nnovations.php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." * - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. |
#46
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jul 3, 8:42*am, Loogypicker wrote:
On Jul 2, 3:56*pm, Gene Kearns wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35*am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...nnovations.php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." * - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. Aluminum is a great material for boats sometimes. My old 18' Grumman canoe is 47 yrs old and in great shape. It weighs much less than most smaller boats. Whenever I go with kayakers, they are always amazed the humongous canoe weighs so little. It did require repair once when it got lodge under a tree on a flooded river and the Al tore. Got it welded and it is almost as good as new. |
#47
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posted to rec.boats
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Frogwatch wrote:
On Jul 3, 8:42 am, Loogypicker wrote: On Jul 2, 3:56 pm, Gene Kearns wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35 am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...nnovations.php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. Aluminum is a great material for boats sometimes. My old 18' Grumman canoe is 47 yrs old and in great shape. It weighs much less than most smaller boats. Whenever I go with kayakers, they are always amazed the humongous canoe weighs so little. It did require repair once when it got lodge under a tree on a flooded river and the Al tore. Got it welded and it is almost as good as new. "When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes..." Now *that* is a laugh...a relative of loogy holding down an actual job. |
#48
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posted to rec.boats
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On Jul 3, 4:06*pm, HK wrote:
Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 3, 8:42 am, Loogypicker wrote: On Jul 2, 3:56 pm, Gene Kearns wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35 am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum.. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...novations..php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." * - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. Aluminum is a great material for boats sometimes. *My old 18' Grumman canoe is 47 yrs old and in great shape. *It weighs much less than most smaller boats. *Whenever I go with kayakers, they are always amazed the humongous canoe weighs so little. *It did require repair once when it got lodge under a tree on a flooded river and the Al tore. *Got it welded and it is almost as good as new. "When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes..." Now *that* is a laugh...a relative of loogy holding down an actual job.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Uh, oh, your filter is faulty again. Oh, and want to compare degrees and job performance, asshole? |
#49
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "HK" wrote in message ... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 3, 8:42 am, Loogypicker wrote: On Jul 2, 3:56 pm, Gene Kearns wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35 am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...nnovations.php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. Aluminum is a great material for boats sometimes. My old 18' Grumman canoe is 47 yrs old and in great shape. It weighs much less than most smaller boats. Whenever I go with kayakers, they are always amazed the humongous canoe weighs so little. It did require repair once when it got lodge under a tree on a flooded river and the Al tore. Got it welded and it is almost as good as new. "When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes..." Now *that* is a laugh...a relative of loogy holding down an actual job. It was one of those prison training programs. |
#50
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posted to rec.boats
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Don White wrote:
"HK" wrote in message ... Frogwatch wrote: On Jul 3, 8:42 am, Loogypicker wrote: On Jul 2, 3:56 pm, Gene Kearns wrote: On Thu, 2 Jul 2009 10:45:23 -0700 (PDT), Loogypicker penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |On Jul 2, 11:35 am, Gene wrote: | On Thu, 02 Jul 2009 06:41:10 -0500, Richard Casady || wrote: | On Wed, 01 Jul 2009 13:20:05 -0400, HK wrote: | | And for a superior boat building material? Welded plate aluminum. | | It's not bad with rivets. All airplanes are riveted, none welded. | | Casady | | (1) Rivets and boats are as big a PITA as Integral Fuel Tanks and | Rivets.... unless you have a fondness for corrosion and leaks.... | | (2) Wrong.http://www.eclipseaviation.com/compa...nnovations.php | | -- | | Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 | | "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by | the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. | So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. | Catch the trade winds in your sails. | Explore. Dream. Discover." - Unknown | | Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. | | Homepagehttp://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm | |One of the troubles with aluminum is it's fracturability. You can take |a piece of aluminum bar stock, say 1/4"x2", put it in a vice, score it |across somewhere with a razor knife, using light pressure, and if you |start flexing it, that's where it'll break, and it'll be a clean break |right where you scored. That is so predictable, I don't allow my students to have a scriber in their tool box..... -- Yep. When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes, they were VERY careful to not even scratch the pieces if they were replacing. Aluminum is a great material for boats sometimes. My old 18' Grumman canoe is 47 yrs old and in great shape. It weighs much less than most smaller boats. Whenever I go with kayakers, they are always amazed the humongous canoe weighs so little. It did require repair once when it got lodge under a tree on a flooded river and the Al tore. Got it welded and it is almost as good as new. "When my uncle was working on aluminum airframes..." Now *that* is a laugh...a relative of loogy holding down an actual job. It was one of those prison training programs. Stamping out license plates? |
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