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Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On Wed, 02 May 2007 02:14:40 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: Then again, the original diesel engine ran on coal dust if my memory is correct. Yes indeedy do. I am firmly in the diesel/electric camp. I've already stated why. |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On May 2, 6:10�am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Wed, 2 May 2007 06:10:07 -0400, "RCE" wrote: Right now I am trying to learn the bass. I've always approached the bass guitar as a real guitar missing two strings. :) I can play one decently, but I never quite got the hang of being able to really "play" it. You want a real challenge, try a lute. *Mrs. Wave has a collegue who is a virtuoso lute player and has a 14 course lute tuned in d-minor. She plays in some big time baroque quartets. *It took me six months to learn just a simple little tune on a 6 course lute which is tuned like a *tenor viol da gamba - intervals are perfect fourths between all the courses except the 3rd and 4th, which differ by a major third. It's a really interesting sound though. I've always been fascinated by the lute. I dont' know a thing about one, but I have a guitarone, whish is similare in shape only. Yeah, its a "bass guitar" a REAL "bass guitar" http://www.fretstore.com/images/GuitarronSample.jpg |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On 2 May 2007 05:12:50 -0700, Tim wrote:
On May 2, 6:10?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 2 May 2007 06:10:07 -0400, "RCE" wrote: Right now I am trying to learn the bass. I've always approached the bass guitar as a real guitar missing two strings. :) I can play one decently, but I never quite got the hang of being able to really "play" it. You want a real challenge, try a lute. rs. Wave has a collegue who is a virtuoso lute player and has a 14 course lute tuned in d-minor. She plays in some big time baroque quartets. t took me six months to learn just a simple little tune on a 6 course lute which is tuned like a 4enor viol da gamba - intervals are perfect fourths between all the courses except the 3rd and 4th, which differ by a major third. It's a really interesting sound though. I've always been fascinated by the lute. I dont' know a thing about one, but I have a guitarone, whish is similare in shape only. Yeah, its a "bass guitar" a REAL "bass guitar" http://www.fretstore.com/images/GuitarronSample.jpg I love mariachi music!!! Years ago, I used to sit in once in a while with a local group of Spanish musicians - great stuff. That's cool beans. Even for a bass player. :) |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On May 2, 7:31�am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On 2 May 2007 05:12:50 -0700, Tim wrote: On May 2, 6:10?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 2 May 2007 06:10:07 -0400, "RCE" wrote: Right now I am trying to learn the bass. I've always approached the bass guitar as a real guitar missing two strings. :) I can play one decently, but I never quite got the hang of being able to really "play" it. You want a real challenge, try a lute. rs. Wave has a collegue who is a virtuoso lute player and has a 14 course lute tuned in d-minor. She plays in some big time baroque quartets. * t took me six months to learn just a simple little tune on a 6 course lute which is tuned like a 4enor viol da gamba - intervals are perfect fourths between all the courses except the 3rd and 4th, which differ by a major third. It's a really interesting sound though. I've always been fascinated by the lute. I dont' know a thing about one, but I have a guitarone, whish is similare in shape only. Yeah, its a "bass guitar" *a REAL "bass guitar" http://www.fretstore.com/images/GuitarronSample.jpg I love mariachi music!!! Years ago, I used to sit in once in a while with a local group of Spanish musicians - great stuff. That's cool beans. Even for a bass player. :)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Here, Tom. Just for you... http://youtube.com/watch?v=xHMWsdnGk6Y |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On 2 May 2007 05:50:07 -0700, Tim wrote:
On May 2, 7:31?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On 2 May 2007 05:12:50 -0700, Tim wrote: On May 2, 6:10?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 2 May 2007 06:10:07 -0400, "RCE" wrote: Right now I am trying to learn the bass. I've always approached the bass guitar as a real guitar missing two strings. :) I can play one decently, but I never quite got the hang of being able to really "play" it. You want a real challenge, try a lute. rs. Wave has a collegue who is a virtuoso lute player and has a 14 course lute tuned in d-minor. She plays in some big time baroque quartets. t took me six months to learn just a simple little tune on a 6 course lute which is tuned like a 4enor viol da gamba - intervals are perfect fourths between all the courses except the 3rd and 4th, which differ by a major third. It's a really interesting sound though. I've always been fascinated by the lute. I dont' know a thing about one, but I have a guitarone, whish is similare in shape only. Yeah, its a "bass guitar" ! REAL "bass guitar" http://www.fretstore.com/images/GuitarronSample.jpg I love mariachi music!!! Years ago, I used to sit in once in a while with a local group of Spanish musicians - great stuff. That's cool beans. Even for a bass player. :)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Here, Tom. Just for you... http://youtube.com/watch?v=xHMWsdnGk6Y Love it. http://youtube.com/watch?v=kcR5_7nz3...elated&search= |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
Not that coal dust might not have been used at some point, but I
wonder how a dust could be injected into a cylinder of compressed air? A liquid seems more ideally matched to the technical requirement. In the mid 80s, power companies were toying with the idea of power stations fueled by a coat-oil slurry. Somewhere around here I have a short paper on the engineering of it. There was also a brief interest in reviving oil-fired steam locomotives to replace diesels, and the fuel being discussed was a coal-oil slurry. I think it was BMW during WW2 which actually built and flew some coal-slurry engines (for the Me264, if memory serves). If Rudolf Diesel had mixed coal dust with vegetable oil ... |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On 2 May 2007 08:21:51 -0700, "
wrote: If Rudolf Diesel had mixed coal dust with vegetable oil ... The world would be a much differernt place. Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda. :) |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On May 2, 6:10 am, "RCE" wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... On May 1, 8:51 pm, "RCE" wrote: Bring it and your strumming fingers over. Here's a recent (like last week) and not completely finished project I've been working on. http://www.eisboch.com/musicroom Still have a few things to hook up and some peaking and tweeking to do. Now that is a beautiful playroom, nice job. Does the family jam with you? Always like jamming with folks who won't tell me I suck;) Mrs. E., some of her friends and other female family members occasionally do their "girls night out" get togethers at our house and they like to fool around doing the Karaoke thing. I included that capability in the room design so they can use it for that. I fool around, mostly by myself on the keyboards or guitars. Sometimes I'll program a set of midi file songs in the computer, have the computer automatically load them to the keyboards and I'll attempt to play along on one of the guitars. Right now I am trying to learn the bass. Eisboch You should check out the Hal Leonard play along series, got mine at Guitar Center. They have books that represent almost all types of music, from 60's, 70's, blues, metal, country, even a series on "hair rock" like poison and cinderella. They come with very complete sheet music and a cd containing two versions of each song in the book. One version has all the music including the leads so you can folow the music, the other has the guitar section cut out so you can play along yourself, neither have vocals. Very well done of course, music sounds very close to origional so it's like a karoke setup for guitar. A few years back I decided to start playing and decided I would also learn to read music so I have Alfreds basic guitar method. The wife play some too, but even better she bought a sweet ovation celeb, black of course. My fav is my latest, a Takamine 12 string. I guess the best thing that happened lately is my middle child marrying a professional guitar teacher, needless to say, we invite them for dinner a lot;) |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On 2 May 2007 05:12:50 -0700, Tim wrote: On May 2, 6:10?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Wed, 2 May 2007 06:10:07 -0400, "RCE" wrote: Right now I am trying to learn the bass. I've always approached the bass guitar as a real guitar missing two strings. :) I can play one decently, but I never quite got the hang of being able to really "play" it. You want a real challenge, try a lute. rs. Wave has a collegue who is a virtuoso lute player and has a 14 course lute tuned in d-minor. She plays in some big time baroque quartets. t took me six months to learn just a simple little tune on a 6 course lute which is tuned like a 4enor viol da gamba - intervals are perfect fourths between all the courses except the 3rd and 4th, which differ by a major third. It's a really interesting sound though. I've always been fascinated by the lute. I dont' know a thing about one, but I have a guitarone, whish is similare in shape only. Yeah, its a "bass guitar" a REAL "bass guitar" http://www.fretstore.com/images/GuitarronSample.jpg I love mariachi music!!! Years ago, I used to sit in once in a while with a local group of Spanish musicians - great stuff. That's cool beans. Even for a bass player. :) Years ago while stationed at Camp Pendleton a group of us ventured down to Tijuana for an evening. We were in one of the beer joints when a mariachi group stopped at the table soliciting money for their music. We didn't speak Spanish and they didn't understand English. We asked them to play the *best* song they knew. You guessed it, they played Besame Mucho. |
Downgrading boat, or boating hours?
On May 2, 2:47?am, "RCE" wrote:
I think Wayne is correct, although the coal dust approach didn't work out. http://www.dieselpage.com/tipshis.htm Eisboch We can agree that "exploding" is a decent indicator that something didn't work out. :-) When Diesel introduced his functioning engine at the Paris Exposition in 1900, it was fueled by peanut oil. Good image of that original engine at this site, by the way; http://www.dieselveg.com/rudolf_diesel.htm By 1900, Diesel felt that the primary market for his engine was probably going to be agriculture. One of the benefits of the vegetable oil engine was that many farmers would be able to "grow their own fuel". There was an abundance of crude oil available back then and no clear idea of exactly what could or should be done to use it profitably. Particularly after Diesel's mysterious death, the emphasis switched from using vegetable products to using crude oil when firing diesel engines Fast forward 107 years. Using a renewable resource, like vegetable oil, now begins to make more sense than buying scarce crude oil from sources increasingly controlled by governments that are somehwat unstable or hostile toward the US. |
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