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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
Calif Bill wrote: "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... Did it specifically state *SPARK plugs*? There are many, many kinds of "plugs", you know. In a diesel? that can be cleaned? Goto http://www.andreagail.com/The_Andrea...drea_gail.html And look at the motor. Gas? Turns out, those pictures are of a sister with a 12-71 (no glow plugs BTW) It seems the Andrea Gail had a Cat. otn |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
"JAXAshby" wrote in message ... wayne, you seem to know something about that particular engine. would you mind explaining to "steve" just where all those crew-cleanable plugs are on that engine? Thanks. "steve" seems to draw a blank spot when asked. Goto http://www.andreagail.com/The_Andrea...drea_gail.html And look at the motor. Gas? ================================== DD 671 ? Gas engine? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
Jakass, you are the dummy who stated the AG's engine was gas because you
read they cleaned some plugs. Remember, you stated the engine was gas. YOu did not state the author was wrong. YOU stated the AG's engine was gas! "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... cay lif bill, the irony on the original statement should not have been lost on you from the get-go, and if perhaps you missed it you STILL should have come up to speed by the 8th or 10th reiteration. wake up, dude. Did it specifically state *SPARK plugs*? There are many, many kinds of "plugs", you know. In a diesel? that can be cleaned? Goto http://www.andreagail.com/The_Andrea...drea_gail.html And look at the motor. Gas? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 18:27:21 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote: Jakass, you are the dummy who stated the AG's engine was gas because you read they cleaned some plugs. Remember, you stated the engine was gas. YOu did not state the author was wrong. YOU stated the AG's engine was gas! ================================================== == Jax has way too much time on his hands and gets his jollys by making outrageous statements and waiting for the flack to fly. If you feed the troll he gets bigger. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
I had a bowel movement this morning
hoary, that is more than we needed to know. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
Wasn't the problem with the ice-maker, that the spark plugs were
fouling-out? And, didn't the plugs eventually burn up from the fouling? After being cleaned numerous times? the "plugs" cited were for the engine. The author was adding "color" and didn't know that diesel engines don't have plugs. Neither did his editors, at least for the first edition. I assume the error was corrected in later editions. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
billie, are you one of the loose marbles that rolled westward after some
earthquake? The Andrea Gail did not have a diesel engine even the the author of The Perfect Storm had the drunken, anxious crew cleaning the plugs on the engine the night before sailing. wayne, you seem to know something about that particular engine. would you mind explaining to "steve" just where all those crew-cleanable plugs are on that engine? Thanks. "steve" seems to draw a blank spot when asked. Goto http://www.andreagail.com/The_Andrea...drea_gail.html And look at the motor. Gas? ================================== DD 671 ? Gas engine? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
hey, loose marble billie, you somehow missed the irony that was apparent right
for the get-go. you know, as in "the author said it so it has to be true, otherwise they wouldn't print it". Jakass, you are the dummy who stated the AG's engine was gas because you read they cleaned some plugs. Remember, you stated the engine was gas. YOu did not state the author was wrong. YOU stated the AG's engine was gas! "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... cay lif bill, the irony on the original statement should not have been lost on you from the get-go, and if perhaps you missed it you STILL should have come up to speed by the 8th or 10th reiteration. wake up, dude. Did it specifically state *SPARK plugs*? There are many, many kinds of "plugs", you know. In a diesel? that can be cleaned? Goto http://www.andreagail.com/The_Andrea...drea_gail.html And look at the motor. Gas? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
wayne, weren't you going to help out "steve" by telling one and all where to
find the plugs on a diesel engine? yup, that was you. wrote: Jakass, you are the dummy who stated the AG's engine was gas because you read they cleaned some plugs. Remember, you stated the engine was gas. YOu did not state the author was wrong. YOU stated the AG's engine was gas! ================================================= === Jax has way too much time on his hands and gets his jollys by making outrageous statements and waiting for the flack to fly. If you feed the troll he gets bigger. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
Sort of like Harry, but at least he keeps it on topic.
"Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 18:27:21 GMT, "Calif Bill" wrote: Jakass, you are the dummy who stated the AG's engine was gas because you read they cleaned some plugs. Remember, you stated the engine was gas. YOu did not state the author was wrong. YOU stated the AG's engine was gas! ================================================== == Jax has way too much time on his hands and gets his jollys by making outrageous statements and waiting for the flack to fly. If you feed the troll he gets bigger. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
kasskisser, mark your file DNR.
schlackoff, you are saying that a nervouse drunken fishing boat crew would -- could? -- clean the fuel injectors the night before sailing? why would you say anything like that? have you no idea what is involved in cleaning fuel injectors? Also, do you think injectors are cleaned just for the hell of it? schlackoff, wanna tell us why glow plugs might be cleaned by drunken fishing boat crew the night before sailing? By an author, just about any electrical connection could be referred to as "plugs". Remember, the person stating such was a writer, not an expert on ship propulsion systems history! Now, why clean these particular "plugs"? I don't know if you realize this, but in a salt water environment, metal connections have a tendency to corrode. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 09:19:58 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: Steven Shelikoff wrote: There you have it. Joxie claims it's impossible to clean a diesel engine's injectors. Joxie claims it's impossible to clean glow plugs. Joxie claims it's impossible to clean electrical connections. You're a bright guy, Steve. Why do you bother with Jax-Ass? Sometimes he's fun to tease. But it gets old fast. He's too stupid to even understand when his own dumb style of argument gets used against him. Steve |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
okay, basekisser, mark your medical file Do Not Resusitate.
kasskisser, mark your file DNR. schlackoff, you are saying that a nervouse drunken fishing boat crew would -- could? -- clean the fuel injectors the night before sailing? why would you say anything like that? have you no idea what is involved in cleaning fuel injectors? Also, do you think injectors are cleaned just for the hell of it? schlackoff, wanna tell us why glow plugs might be cleaned by drunken fishing boat crew the night before sailing? By an author, just about any electrical connection could be referred to as "plugs". Remember, the person stating such was a writer, not an expert on ship propulsion systems history! Now, why clean these particular "plugs"? I don't know if you realize this, but in a salt water environment, metal connections have a tendency to corrode. Man, you ARE dumb!!!! |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
base kisser, whatever are you babbling about? the discussion was the supposed
plugs on the engine on a comercial longliner fishing boat. now, base kisser, *you* are talking about tossing a fishing line from some bridge over a creek. wayne, weren't you going to help out "steve" by telling one and all where to find the plugs on a diesel engine? Man, you are thick. Several people here have told you where to find plugs on a diesel engine. You even have a damned picture to look at. Are you too dumb to figure out that because someone says "plug", they don't necessarily mean "spark plug"?? Hey, last weekend, when fishing, I tied a plug to my line, and fished it for a couple of hours. I'll bet, because of your brain power, you're thinking, how to hell did I think I'd catch something with a spark plug, right? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
huh? base kisser, you don't have any rational clew what the word "analogy"
means, as you clearly show in your post below. Let me help enlighten you thusly: a·nal·o·gy ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-nl-j) n. pl. a·nal·o·gies Similarity in some respects between things that are otherwise dissimilar. A comparison based on such similarity. See Synonyms at likeness. Biology. Correspondence in function or position between organs of dissimilar evolutionary origin or structure. A form of logical inference or an instance of it, based on the assumption that if two things are known to be alike in some respects, then they must be alike in other respects. Linguistics. The process by which words or morphemes are re-formed or created on the model of existing grammatical patterns in a language, often leading to greater regularity in paradigms, as evidenced by helped replacing holp and holpen as the past tense and past participle of help on the model of verbs such as yelp, yelped, yelped. base kisser, whatever are you babbling about? the discussion was the supposed plugs on the engine on a comercial longliner fishing boat. now, base kisser, *you* are talking about tossing a fishing line from some bridge over a creek. Okay, just to show how stupid you are, first, it's called an analogy. Look it up in the dictionary. Second, where did I mention that I was fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
where did I mention that I was
fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? base kisser, when you stated that the Andrea Gail, or at least longliners like her, might normally used a Perkins 4-108 as its main driving engine you clearly stated you knew nothing about fishing or fishing boats, say what you might see "from some bridge over a creek". |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
LOL
that is way too funny "basskisser" wrote in message om... (JAXAshby) wrote in message ... huh? base kisser, you don't have any rational clew what the word "analogy" means, as you clearly show in your post below. Let me help enlighten you thusly: a·nal·o·gy ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-nl-j) n. pl. a·nal·o·gies Similarity in some respects between things that are otherwise dissimilar. A comparison based on such similarity. See Synonyms at likeness. Biology. Correspondence in function or position between organs of dissimilar evolutionary origin or structure. A form of logical inference or an instance of it, based on the assumption that if two things are known to be alike in some respects, then they must be alike in other respects. Linguistics. The process by which words or morphemes are re-formed or created on the model of existing grammatical patterns in a language, often leading to greater regularity in paradigms, as evidenced by helped replacing holp and holpen as the past tense and past participle of help on the model of verbs such as yelp, yelped, yelped. base kisser, whatever are you babbling about? the discussion was the supposed plugs on the engine on a comercial longliner fishing boat. now, base kisser, *you* are talking about tossing a fishing line from some bridge over a creek. Okay, just to show how stupid you are, first, it's called an analogy. Look it up in the dictionary. Second, where did I mention that I was fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? Oh, my...you poor dumb ****! Analogy, you idiot. Try again. "plug", again, has SEVERAL meanings. You picked spark plug for some ignorant reason. Now, here is the analogy. You read the word PLUG, and (wrongly) thought it was spark plug. Now, stay with me, I used a PLUG.....a fishing PLUG.....the analogy is.....drumroll....PLUG.....PLUG. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
"John Smith" wrote in message news:9jBJc.98525 LOL that is way too funny Jax and bass goin' at it. It just doesn't get any better than this! |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
Frick and Frack
or is it Dum and Dumber "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "John Smith" wrote in message news:9jBJc.98525 LOL that is way too funny Jax and bass goin' at it. It just doesn't get any better than this! |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
base kisser, the discussion has always been about the engine in the Andrea Gail
(check the headline). so why hell are *you* talking about fishing from a bridge over some fricken' creek????? where did I mention that I was fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? base kisser, when you stated that the Andrea Gail, or at least longliners like her, might normally used a Perkins 4-108 as its main driving engine you clearly stated you knew nothing about fishing or fishing boats, say what you might see "from some bridge over a creek". Uh, you stupid putz, I NEVER said anything about longliners like her using Perkins 4-108!! NEVER!!!! Please show where I stated such. OR, go back into hiding. Jeez, THAT remark was just plain dumb, even for you. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
obviously you can't read English, base ****er. you wanna explain to the world
why anyone should take you seriously?? huh? base kisser, you don't have any rational clew what the word "analogy" means, as you clearly show in your post below. Let me help enlighten you thusly: a·nal·o·gy ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-nl-j) n. pl. a·nal·o·gies Similarity in some respects between things that are otherwise dissimilar. A comparison based on such similarity. See Synonyms at likeness. Biology. Correspondence in function or position between organs of dissimilar evolutionary origin or structure. A form of logical inference or an instance of it, based on the assumption that if two things are known to be alike in some respects, then they must be alike in other respects. Linguistics. The process by which words or morphemes are re-formed or created on the model of existing grammatical patterns in a language, often leading to greater regularity in paradigms, as evidenced by helped replacing holp and holpen as the past tense and past participle of help on the model of verbs such as yelp, yelped, yelped. base kisser, whatever are you babbling about? the discussion was the supposed plugs on the engine on a comercial longliner fishing boat. now, base kisser, *you* are talking about tossing a fishing line from some bridge over a creek. Okay, just to show how stupid you are, first, it's called an analogy. Look it up in the dictionary. Second, where did I mention that I was fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? Oh, my...you poor dumb ****! Analogy, you idiot. Try again. "plug", again, has SEVERAL meanings. You picked spark plug for some ignorant reason. Now, here is the analogy. You read the word PLUG, and (wrongly) thought it was spark plug. Now, stay with me, I used a PLUG.....a fishing PLUG.....the analogy is.....drumroll....PLUG.....PLUG. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
base ****er be one dumb bunny. lost to this world, that boy is.
LOL that is way too funny "basskisser" wrote in message . com... (JAXAshby) wrote in message ... huh? base kisser, you don't have any rational clew what the word "analogy" means, as you clearly show in your post below. Let me help enlighten you thusly: a·nal·o·gy ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-nl-j) n. pl. a·nal·o·gies Similarity in some respects between things that are otherwise dissimilar. A comparison based on such similarity. See Synonyms at likeness. Biology. Correspondence in function or position between organs of dissimilar evolutionary origin or structure. A form of logical inference or an instance of it, based on the assumption that if two things are known to be alike in some respects, then they must be alike in other respects. Linguistics. The process by which words or morphemes are re-formed or created on the model of existing grammatical patterns in a language, often leading to greater regularity in paradigms, as evidenced by helped replacing holp and holpen as the past tense and past participle of help on the model of verbs such as yelp, yelped, yelped. base kisser, whatever are you babbling about? the discussion was the supposed plugs on the engine on a comercial longliner fishing boat. now, base kisser, *you* are talking about tossing a fishing line from some bridge over a creek. Okay, just to show how stupid you are, first, it's called an analogy. Look it up in the dictionary. Second, where did I mention that I was fishing "from some bridge over a creek"? Oh, my...you poor dumb ****! Analogy, you idiot. Try again. "plug", again, has SEVERAL meanings. You picked spark plug for some ignorant reason. Now, here is the analogy. You read the word PLUG, and (wrongly) thought it was spark plug. Now, stay with me, I used a PLUG.....a fishing PLUG.....the analogy is.....drumroll....PLUG.....PLUG. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
I am laughing at base ****er. NObody is THAT stew ped, is he?
LOL that is way too funny Jax and bass goin' at it. It just doesn't get any better than this! |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
yes
obviously you can't read English, base ****er. you wanna explain to the world why anyone should take you seriously?? Again, stupid boy, let's make this simple, where did the author state ANYTHING about SPARK plugs? It's that damned simple... |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
base kisser, you stated the engine on the Andrea Gail might well have had
**ELECTRICAL** ---- PLUGS ---- on its drive engine and the only diesel engine you could name that you felt had **ELECTRICAL PLUGS** was a -------------- Perkinns -------------- 4-108. base kisser? do you always have this much trouble trying to read English? base kisser, the discussion has always been about the engine in the Andrea Gail (check the headline). so why hell are *you* talking about fishing from a bridge over some fricken' creek????? Again, stupid, please show where I've ever said anything about the Andrea Gail and a Perkins diesel. |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
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The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
so, base kisser, just *which* diesel engines (as used on longliner fishing
boats) have spark plugs did you say? base kisser, you stated the engine on the Andrea Gail might well have had **ELECTRICAL** ---- PLUGS ---- on its drive engine and the only diesel engine you could name that you felt had **ELECTRICAL PLUGS** was a -------------- Perkinns -------------- 4-108. base kisser? do you always have this much trouble trying to read English? base kisser, the discussion has always been about the engine in the Andrea Gail (check the headline). so why hell are *you* talking about fishing from a bridge over some fricken' creek????? Again, stupid, please show where I've ever said anything about the Andrea Gail and a Perkins diesel. Again, you stupid ****ing idiot, I NEVER mentioned any particular diesel engine. Damn it, will you LOOK at the damned posts before making such dumb statements? |
The Andrea Gail had a gasoline engine
JAXAshby wrote:
so, base kisser, just *which* diesel engines (as used on longliner fishing boats) have spark plugs did you say? Got much time aboard longline fishing boats, JaxAss? |
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