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Yo Calif Bill
On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 16:59:54 -0500 (EST), fire man wrote:
Keyser Söze Wrote in message: On 3/4/16 2:16 PM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 13:31:29 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: Gosh, and you can't remember with whom you worked while serving your country in Vietnam. What a hero, Krause. -- Not even a nice try, dickhead. Of course I remember, but no one has to respond to your repetitive and idiotic "demands." Go **** yourself, if you can get it up, which I doubt. Every time someone embarrasses you with the truth, you seem to respond with vulgarities and attempted put downs. One would expect you, with your fine education, to be a little more clever. Skipper could teach you a thing or two about turning a phrase. Or perhaps he could just tell the truth. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, audiophools, and narcissists...not guns! |
Yo Calif Bill
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Yo Calif Bill
On 3/5/2016 6:40 AM, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 21:35:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 8:28 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 19:11:33 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 6:54 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 18:32:31 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: That's one advantage of living where I do. We don't have building permits. Maybe for commercial property but for residence and farms, no... Why is that an advantage? Because people are responsible for their own destiny? If Tim's house burns down, why is that anybody else's business? You can't be serious. How about the people who may someday buy Tim's house full of unpermited and un-inspected for basic safety purposes? (Not doubting Tim ... just using him as an example since he said permits are not required where he lives for residential buildings). Caveat Emptor? If they live in a place where they know there was no building code process, they need to do their due diligence. There is still no guarantee that a homeowner did unpermitted work, even in your town. Perhaps it is actually better if you don't have this illusion of safety. How about unsuspecting guests that may be staying in a DIYurselfer abode full of "modifications"? I could say the same thing about a dozen other things that may be lurking in a house. You are probably more likely to be bitten by a dog and then there are the guns ;-) I suspect you will find they have a lot more fires in places with strict building codes than places without because the homeowners are generally more aware of their responsibilities. There are certainly many things a homeowner should and can do without a permit. But major changes ... structural or electrical ... should require a permit and a followup inspection for code and safety. Most fires are caused by the stuff the home owner plugs in, not the building wiring. I have been through this process myself several times and my wife built over 100 houses. Trust me the permit and inspection process is just a feel good program that employs a lot of bureaucrats. I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything. Your typical muni inspector leaves the shop with 20 or 30 cards in his pocket, spread out over a county. He is not really looking at much. The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed. I was working on a lot of pretty interesting projects tho. I guess you are special. But most inspectors know what they are looking for since they do it on a regular basis and they get to know who does good work and who doesn't. My son-in-law is a licensed electrician with his own business. The inspectors in the towns he does work have gotten to know him and the type of work he does. They can tell with just a cursory inspection his work is to code and is done correctly. Like I said the illusion of safety. You are saying they just trust the guy doing the work to never screw up. Most residential contractors are hiring other people to do the work. I don't know much about Massachusetts but in Florida and Maryland, the contractor is licensed but the guy actually twisting the wirenut will be anything from a carded journeyman to a guy they just hired last week. Anyone with a rusty pair of Kliens and a mouth full of wirenuts could call himself an electrician when the housing boom was going and I bet it is getting that way again. The contractor is only as good as the worst guy on his team, on his worst day. The inspector is only spot checking the work. "Drive by" inspections are more common than the AHJs want to admit. I wouldn't just pick on residential. When I was at IBM and also an inspector, I had a standing bet that I could find a violation just about anywhere we were. I never bought my own coffee if they were willing to play. I find your thinking on this subject to be somewhat conflicting but also amusing. On one hand you dismiss the importance of having qualified and licensed people doing structural or electrical work on homes or whatever yet you brag about your 8 years of being a super sleuth "inspector" of other people's work. I saw no bragging. Is this bragging? "I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything." Referring more to this: "The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed." Maybe "bragging" is the wrong word. "Boasting? perhaps? :-) |
Yo Calif Bill
On Sat, 5 Mar 2016 07:19:34 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 3/5/2016 6:40 AM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 21:35:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 8:28 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 19:11:33 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 6:54 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 18:32:31 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: That's one advantage of living where I do. We don't have building permits. Maybe for commercial property but for residence and farms, no... Why is that an advantage? Because people are responsible for their own destiny? If Tim's house burns down, why is that anybody else's business? You can't be serious. How about the people who may someday buy Tim's house full of unpermited and un-inspected for basic safety purposes? (Not doubting Tim ... just using him as an example since he said permits are not required where he lives for residential buildings). Caveat Emptor? If they live in a place where they know there was no building code process, they need to do their due diligence. There is still no guarantee that a homeowner did unpermitted work, even in your town. Perhaps it is actually better if you don't have this illusion of safety. How about unsuspecting guests that may be staying in a DIYurselfer abode full of "modifications"? I could say the same thing about a dozen other things that may be lurking in a house. You are probably more likely to be bitten by a dog and then there are the guns ;-) I suspect you will find they have a lot more fires in places with strict building codes than places without because the homeowners are generally more aware of their responsibilities. There are certainly many things a homeowner should and can do without a permit. But major changes ... structural or electrical ... should require a permit and a followup inspection for code and safety. Most fires are caused by the stuff the home owner plugs in, not the building wiring. I have been through this process myself several times and my wife built over 100 houses. Trust me the permit and inspection process is just a feel good program that employs a lot of bureaucrats. I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything. Your typical muni inspector leaves the shop with 20 or 30 cards in his pocket, spread out over a county. He is not really looking at much. The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed. I was working on a lot of pretty interesting projects tho. I guess you are special. But most inspectors know what they are looking for since they do it on a regular basis and they get to know who does good work and who doesn't. My son-in-law is a licensed electrician with his own business. The inspectors in the towns he does work have gotten to know him and the type of work he does. They can tell with just a cursory inspection his work is to code and is done correctly. Like I said the illusion of safety. You are saying they just trust the guy doing the work to never screw up. Most residential contractors are hiring other people to do the work. I don't know much about Massachusetts but in Florida and Maryland, the contractor is licensed but the guy actually twisting the wirenut will be anything from a carded journeyman to a guy they just hired last week. Anyone with a rusty pair of Kliens and a mouth full of wirenuts could call himself an electrician when the housing boom was going and I bet it is getting that way again. The contractor is only as good as the worst guy on his team, on his worst day. The inspector is only spot checking the work. "Drive by" inspections are more common than the AHJs want to admit. I wouldn't just pick on residential. When I was at IBM and also an inspector, I had a standing bet that I could find a violation just about anywhere we were. I never bought my own coffee if they were willing to play. I find your thinking on this subject to be somewhat conflicting but also amusing. On one hand you dismiss the importance of having qualified and licensed people doing structural or electrical work on homes or whatever yet you brag about your 8 years of being a super sleuth "inspector" of other people's work. I saw no bragging. Is this bragging? "I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything." Referring more to this: "The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed." Maybe "bragging" is the wrong word. "Boasting? perhaps? :-) Compare that to some of Harry's bragadacio. No comparison. As a commander, I often inspected my troops and their equipment. Usually I saw things that were overlooked by the NCO's and the troops. I don't consider the sentence above to be either bragging or boasting. Just a fact. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, audiophools, and narcissists...not guns! |
Yo Calif Bill
On 3/5/2016 7:30 AM, John H. wrote:
On Sat, 5 Mar 2016 07:19:34 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/5/2016 6:40 AM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 21:35:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 8:28 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 19:11:33 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 6:54 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 18:32:31 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: That's one advantage of living where I do. We don't have building permits. Maybe for commercial property but for residence and farms, no... Why is that an advantage? Because people are responsible for their own destiny? If Tim's house burns down, why is that anybody else's business? You can't be serious. How about the people who may someday buy Tim's house full of unpermited and un-inspected for basic safety purposes? (Not doubting Tim ... just using him as an example since he said permits are not required where he lives for residential buildings). Caveat Emptor? If they live in a place where they know there was no building code process, they need to do their due diligence. There is still no guarantee that a homeowner did unpermitted work, even in your town. Perhaps it is actually better if you don't have this illusion of safety. How about unsuspecting guests that may be staying in a DIYurselfer abode full of "modifications"? I could say the same thing about a dozen other things that may be lurking in a house. You are probably more likely to be bitten by a dog and then there are the guns ;-) I suspect you will find they have a lot more fires in places with strict building codes than places without because the homeowners are generally more aware of their responsibilities. There are certainly many things a homeowner should and can do without a permit. But major changes ... structural or electrical ... should require a permit and a followup inspection for code and safety. Most fires are caused by the stuff the home owner plugs in, not the building wiring. I have been through this process myself several times and my wife built over 100 houses. Trust me the permit and inspection process is just a feel good program that employs a lot of bureaucrats. I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything. Your typical muni inspector leaves the shop with 20 or 30 cards in his pocket, spread out over a county. He is not really looking at much. The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed. I was working on a lot of pretty interesting projects tho. I guess you are special. But most inspectors know what they are looking for since they do it on a regular basis and they get to know who does good work and who doesn't. My son-in-law is a licensed electrician with his own business. The inspectors in the towns he does work have gotten to know him and the type of work he does. They can tell with just a cursory inspection his work is to code and is done correctly. Like I said the illusion of safety. You are saying they just trust the guy doing the work to never screw up. Most residential contractors are hiring other people to do the work. I don't know much about Massachusetts but in Florida and Maryland, the contractor is licensed but the guy actually twisting the wirenut will be anything from a carded journeyman to a guy they just hired last week. Anyone with a rusty pair of Kliens and a mouth full of wirenuts could call himself an electrician when the housing boom was going and I bet it is getting that way again. The contractor is only as good as the worst guy on his team, on his worst day. The inspector is only spot checking the work. "Drive by" inspections are more common than the AHJs want to admit. I wouldn't just pick on residential. When I was at IBM and also an inspector, I had a standing bet that I could find a violation just about anywhere we were. I never bought my own coffee if they were willing to play. I find your thinking on this subject to be somewhat conflicting but also amusing. On one hand you dismiss the importance of having qualified and licensed people doing structural or electrical work on homes or whatever yet you brag about your 8 years of being a super sleuth "inspector" of other people's work. I saw no bragging. Is this bragging? "I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything." Referring more to this: "The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed." Maybe "bragging" is the wrong word. "Boasting? perhaps? :-) Compare that to some of Harry's bragadacio. No comparison. As a commander, I often inspected my troops and their equipment. Usually I saw things that were overlooked by the NCO's and the troops. I don't consider the sentence above to be either bragging or boasting. Just a fact. Whatever John. I was not addressing you anyway and I am not really interested in getting in a stupid argument with you. What's the temp down there anyway? Shouldn't you be heading for the golf course on an early Saturday morning? |
Yo Calif Bill
On Sat, 5 Mar 2016 07:39:34 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 3/5/2016 7:30 AM, John H. wrote: On Sat, 5 Mar 2016 07:19:34 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/5/2016 6:40 AM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 21:35:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 8:28 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 19:11:33 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/4/2016 6:54 PM, wrote: On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 18:32:31 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: That's one advantage of living where I do. We don't have building permits. Maybe for commercial property but for residence and farms, no... Why is that an advantage? Because people are responsible for their own destiny? If Tim's house burns down, why is that anybody else's business? You can't be serious. How about the people who may someday buy Tim's house full of unpermited and un-inspected for basic safety purposes? (Not doubting Tim ... just using him as an example since he said permits are not required where he lives for residential buildings). Caveat Emptor? If they live in a place where they know there was no building code process, they need to do their due diligence. There is still no guarantee that a homeowner did unpermitted work, even in your town. Perhaps it is actually better if you don't have this illusion of safety. How about unsuspecting guests that may be staying in a DIYurselfer abode full of "modifications"? I could say the same thing about a dozen other things that may be lurking in a house. You are probably more likely to be bitten by a dog and then there are the guns ;-) I suspect you will find they have a lot more fires in places with strict building codes than places without because the homeowners are generally more aware of their responsibilities. There are certainly many things a homeowner should and can do without a permit. But major changes ... structural or electrical ... should require a permit and a followup inspection for code and safety. Most fires are caused by the stuff the home owner plugs in, not the building wiring. I have been through this process myself several times and my wife built over 100 houses. Trust me the permit and inspection process is just a feel good program that employs a lot of bureaucrats. I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything. Your typical muni inspector leaves the shop with 20 or 30 cards in his pocket, spread out over a county. He is not really looking at much. The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed. I was working on a lot of pretty interesting projects tho. I guess you are special. But most inspectors know what they are looking for since they do it on a regular basis and they get to know who does good work and who doesn't. My son-in-law is a licensed electrician with his own business. The inspectors in the towns he does work have gotten to know him and the type of work he does. They can tell with just a cursory inspection his work is to code and is done correctly. Like I said the illusion of safety. You are saying they just trust the guy doing the work to never screw up. Most residential contractors are hiring other people to do the work. I don't know much about Massachusetts but in Florida and Maryland, the contractor is licensed but the guy actually twisting the wirenut will be anything from a carded journeyman to a guy they just hired last week. Anyone with a rusty pair of Kliens and a mouth full of wirenuts could call himself an electrician when the housing boom was going and I bet it is getting that way again. The contractor is only as good as the worst guy on his team, on his worst day. The inspector is only spot checking the work. "Drive by" inspections are more common than the AHJs want to admit. I wouldn't just pick on residential. When I was at IBM and also an inspector, I had a standing bet that I could find a violation just about anywhere we were. I never bought my own coffee if they were willing to play. I find your thinking on this subject to be somewhat conflicting but also amusing. On one hand you dismiss the importance of having qualified and licensed people doing structural or electrical work on homes or whatever yet you brag about your 8 years of being a super sleuth "inspector" of other people's work. I saw no bragging. Is this bragging? "I used to have plenty of time to do inspections because I only did 1 or 2 a day but I still knew I was not able to check everything or even a significant percentage of everything." Referring more to this: "The guys I was inspecting were always shocked at the stuff I looked at but it was really more curiosity than inspecting. I did embarrass them a few times, seeing stuff they walked by every day and never noticed." Maybe "bragging" is the wrong word. "Boasting? perhaps? :-) Compare that to some of Harry's bragadacio. No comparison. As a commander, I often inspected my troops and their equipment. Usually I saw things that were overlooked by the NCO's and the troops. I don't consider the sentence above to be either bragging or boasting. Just a fact. Whatever John. I was not addressing you anyway and I am not really interested in getting in a stupid argument with you. What's the temp down there anyway? Shouldn't you be heading for the golf course on an early Saturday morning? Temp is 36. 'Chipped' my ankle bone, whatever that means. Won't be golfing for a while. Go to the ortho guy Monday AM. Running around in a splint now. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, audiophools, and narcissists...not guns! |
Yo Calif Bill
On 3/5/16 7:30 AM, John H. wrote:
As a commander, I often inspected my troops and their equipment. Usually I saw things that were overlooked by the NCO's and the troops. I'll just bet you inspected their "equipment." |
Yo Calif Bill
On 3/5/16 7:39 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Whatever John. I was not addressing you anyway and I am not really interested in getting in a stupid argument with you. What's the temp down there anyway? Shouldn't you be heading for the golf course on an early Saturday morning? I've been unimpressed by the design, choice of materials, and execution of many of the "homebrew" construction projects I've seen depicted here in rec.boats. |
Yo Calif Bill
On 3/5/16 8:05 AM, John H. wrote:
Temp is 36. 'Chipped' my ankle bone, whatever that means. Won't be golfing for a while. Go to the ortho guy Monday AM. Running around in a splint now. -- Wow...it is a hopeful sign that both you and your idiot buddy, FlaJim, are disintegrating before our very eyes, as it were. Maybe you an "putt" the ankle bone on the other foot. |
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