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Rocket science and ng sailors
schlackoff, you do not have a clew on anything to do with engines.
Just pulling the heads and dropping the pan can be called a "teardown" and those things are relatively easy to do. Not more than a days work. Not that they'll do that every time. It all depends on where they are in the service cycle. But keeping their single engine, their sole source of livelyhood and safety, working in top shape is what the engineer is paid to do. Steve |
Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
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Rocket science and ng sailors
Huh? schlackoff, do you have any idea waht a freeze plug is, or what its
purpose is? Of course. And the fact that you think they're impossible to clean proves you don't. schlackoff, you can clean the bottom of soup cans discarded in the garbage, too, but that doesn't mean anyone does it. ever meet nervous, drunken commercial fishing boat crew, schlackoff, who cleaned the freeze plugs on an engine the night before sailing? Steve |
Rocket science and ng sailors
oh? what plugs are that, schlackoff, that are need to be cleaned on a 4-108
used by a long-liner fishing boat? And cleaned the night before sailing by the nervous, drunken crew? okay, schlackoff, which engine are you willing to bet on? Perkins 4-108. There are plenty of them in commercial seagoing vessels and they have electrical plugs that can be cleaned. You lose, idiot. Steve |
Rocket science and ng sailors
why would you clean glow plugs, schlackoff, at all, let alone the night before
sailing on a commercial fishing boat by the nervous, drunken crew? schlackoff, they can be soaked in pineapple juice, too, but why? what would be the purpose? To clean them. But then again, you're the one saying it's impossible to do. Steve |
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