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Jim Wilkins[_2_] Jim Wilkins[_2_] is offline
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Default B&S Engine starts but won't run

wrote in message
...
On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 20:07:08 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 13:50:31 -0700, Larry Jaques
wrote:

On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 15:58:26 -0400,
wrote:

On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 10:51:50 -0700, Gunner Asch

wrote:

On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 05:17:54 -0700, Larry Jaques
wrote:

On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 21:30:55 -0400,
wrote:

On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 17:37:03 -0700, Gunner Asch

wrote:

On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 20:31:46 -0400,
wrote:

On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 15:28:12 -0700, Gunner Asch

wrote:

On Mon, 29 Aug 2016 14:02:49 -0400,

wrote:

A fne wire. like used on tags, poked up the jet gets the
job
started, then dose the fuel with B-12 or Sea Foam and run on
choke
untill the jet clears.

How's that??

(Grin)

Much better!! Keyboard problem or did you mash a finger?

Gunner, who has mashed a finger once or twice, causing him to
type
with a pencil eraser...slowly...



---
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Typing in half-light on a keyboard with half the letters worn
off and
a strange feel - with a couple of previously mashed pinkies
thrown in.

We can't help the half-light or old mashers, but if you get a
new
keyboard with the nibs still on F and J, that should help.
http://tinyurl.com/guuhchh $13.59, delivered! I should get one
myself. Me nibs're gone, too.


Salvation Army, Goodwill etc etc...have keyboards for a couple
bucks.

I've got about 20 spares at the one customer site and a few
extras
here at home too but they are all corded and this one is cordless.

If you're a touch typist, simply dot the F and J keys with a mound
of
epoxy or fingernail polish, or superglue a rounded piece of broken
key
to the tops. If you're not a touch typist, shame on you. You
should
have learned that by now. When computers came out, I sure was glad
I
took typing in 9th grade.

Nott a touch typist, sad to say. I twisted rnches in hgh school
insead of tappng keys. Serverd me very well for 26 years.

When I retired and bought my first computer ('94), I got a typing
course on CD and worked on it religiously for a couple years. Since
then I have reverted to the biblical method - "seek, and ye shall
find".
---

Gerry :-)}
London,Canada


I got into computers in the Teletype era, the early 70's. They don't
delete mistakes and I decided I'd rather be slower entering the text
and less embarrassed showing it to someone.

http://answers.google.com/answers/th...id/386870.html

The VT100 terminal was a marvelous advance. It accepted codes in
instant messages that permitted messing up the recipient's screen in
many creative ways, like making random letters break loose and slide
down to pile up at the bottom of the screen, or a little Pac-Man-like
sprite that would nibble a twisty path through your displayed program.
They only disrupted screen memory, not the source.

--jsq^Hw