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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#201
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:23:53 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:05:56 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Bod" wrote in message ... On 28/10/2016 20:14, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 05:16:24 +0100, Simon Mason wrote: On Thursday, 27 October 2016 23:12:40 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: On Thursday, 27 October 2016 21:17:57 UTC+1, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: They like to show their bell ends in their lycra shorts. This girl at work used to ask me "How is it hanging, Simon?" I used to say "to the left and then to the right". I've always said "to the left" (a quote from Bill Cosby). So when cycling it's moving constantly? Does that not cause swelling? :-) Not when its as small as yours and his is. Mine is 7'' and hits the buffers. Same here, which I always thought was average. According to google, the average is a pathetic 6", and in some countries 5! What is "hits the buffers"? Use your imagination. He hasn't got one. I have an excellent imagination. Fantasy. Fantasy requires imagination. Nope, just whacky weed etc. That helps. That's all a psycho like you needs. What do you believe makes me psychopathic? What you propose be done with those whose cars have DLR etc. |
#202
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 29/10/2016 19:13, James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:06:55 +0100, Bod wrote: On 29/10/2016 18:44, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 18:40:32 +0100, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 18:30:56 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg Good grief! http://www.swldxer.co.uk/kitchen1.jpg Look at my garage! https://www.dropbox.com/s/pubh98t82o...82%29.jpg?dl=0 Oops, replied twice because I put the clocks back, messages in wrong order, didn't think it had sent. Don't do it again or you will get lemon juice squeezed over your buttocks, by Mr Pounder. Does he like male buttocks? Am I supposed to know? |
#203
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 29/10/2016 19:13, James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:05:11 +0100, Bod wrote: On 29/10/2016 18:40, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 18:30:56 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg Good grief! http://www.swldxer.co.uk/kitchen1.jpg Look at my garage! https://www.dropbox.com/s/pubh98t82o...82%29.jpg?dl=0 That's what we like to see, proper cable clipping :-) It was too heavy and some kept disconnecting. We don't want to know about your sexual problems. |
#204
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Saturday, 29 October 2016 21:06:14 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote:
But missed the bit where he said he was planning to drive a taxi at night instead. SWMBO doesn't want me doing chav jobs when I am capable of much more. |
#205
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On 29/10/2016 19:53, James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:23:53 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 29 Oct 2016 20:05:56 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Bod" wrote in message ... On 28/10/2016 20:14, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 05:16:24 +0100, Simon Mason wrote: On Thursday, 27 October 2016 23:12:40 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: On Thursday, 27 October 2016 21:17:57 UTC+1, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: They like to show their bell ends in their lycra shorts. This girl at work used to ask me "How is it hanging, Simon?" I used to say "to the left and then to the right". I've always said "to the left" (a quote from Bill Cosby). So when cycling it's moving constantly? Does that not cause swelling? :-) Not when its as small as yours and his is. Mine is 7'' and hits the buffers. Same here, which I always thought was average. According to google, the average is a pathetic 6", and in some countries 5! What is "hits the buffers"? Use your imagination. He hasn't got one. I have an excellent imagination. Fantasy. Fantasy requires imagination. Nope, just whacky weed etc. That helps. That's all a psycho like you needs. What do you believe makes me psychopathic? The severed heads on your mantelpiece. |
#206
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 01:41:17 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 23:34:52 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, so more likely to bridge. -- Maybe the grass looks greener on the other side of the fence because that is where the leaky septic tank is buried. |
#207
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 01:41:17 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 23:34:52 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. |
#208
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Saturday, 29 October 2016 20:05:13 UTC+1, Bod wrote:
Good grief! http://www.swldxer.co.uk/kitchen1.jpg Look at my garage! https://www.dropbox.com/s/pubh98t82o...82%29.jpg?dl=0 That's what we like to see, proper cable clipping :-) This is my arrangement - it feeds a DAB radio, amplifier, LED lamp charger, pond pump and soldering iron. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cv_LCnFXgAA7tUp.jpg |
#209
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On 30/10/2016 03:55, Simon Mason wrote:
On Saturday, 29 October 2016 20:05:13 UTC+1, Bod wrote: Good grief! http://www.swldxer.co.uk/kitchen1.jpg Look at my garage! https://www.dropbox.com/s/pubh98t82o...82%29.jpg?dl=0 That's what we like to see, proper cable clipping :-) This is my arrangement - it feeds a DAB radio, amplifier, LED lamp charger, pond pump and soldering iron. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cv_LCnFXgAA7tUp.jpg Did you design it yourself? ;-) |
#210
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 03:02:06 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 01:41:17 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, that's runny. -- Mrs. Morse: "Sam, stop tapping your fingers on the table, it's driving me crazy!" |
#211
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 03:02:06 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 28 Oct 2016 01:41:17 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. |
#212
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On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 19:46:53 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 03:02:06 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. -- Make like a post-it note and stick around.... |
#213
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 19:46:53 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 03:02:06 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. |
#214
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 22:23:01 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 19:46:53 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. -- Peter is listening to "Who's the best - DJ Mad Dog feat. Tommyknocker" |
#215
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 22:23:01 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 19:46:53 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. |
#216
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 22:23:01 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. -- "You seem to have a cracked vertebrae." the Emergency Room doctor told the high school aged boy. "What happened?" "Well, you see," the teenager replied, "I was kissing my girl good-night and damned if her brother didn't come out the back door and step right in the middle of my back." |
#217
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 30 Oct 2016 22:23:01 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. Both don't bridge and fall. |
#218
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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in 1534902 20161031 030031 "Rod Speed" wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? |
#219
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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Bob Martin wrote
Rod Speed wrote James Wilkinson Sword wrote Rod Speed wrote Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? We choose not to. You get to like that or lump it. |
#220
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 03:00:31 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. Both don't bridge and fall. The adjectives are all subjective. -- Only public user defined types defined in public object modules can be used as parameters or return types for public procedures of class modules or as fields of public user defined types. (VB6 compilation error) |
#221
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 07:39:37 -0000, Bob Martin wrote:
in 1534902 20161031 030031 "Rod Speed" wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? YOU trim it if you want it trimmed. Neither of us require it. -- He was so unlucky . . . Last week, his inflatable doll ran off with his airbag. |
#222
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 03:00:31 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 00:29:34 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. Both don't bridge and fall. The adjectives are all subjective. Irrelevant to whether neither bird **** will bridge. |
#223
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 20:27:43 -0000, Rod Speed wrote:
"James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 03:00:31 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. Both don't bridge and fall. The adjectives are all subjective. Irrelevant to whether neither bird **** will bridge. They produce a wide range of consistencies. There will be a certain percentage water which does. -- Little Sally came home from school with a smile on her face, and told her mother, "Frankie Brown showed me his penis today at the playground!" Before the mother could raise a concern, "Sally went on to say, "It reminded me of a peanut." Relaxing with a hidden smile, Sally's mum asked, "Really small, was it?" Sally replied, "No, salty." Mum fainted. |
#224
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 20:27:43 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 03:00:31 -0000, Rod Speed wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "pamela" wrote in message ... On 21:52 26 Oct 2016, James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 21:25:49 +0100, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: David Lang wrote: On 26/10/2016 17:22, Simon Mason wrote: On Wednesday, 26 October 2016 09:29:44 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: Its actually because they are much more reliable when moulded. I have just fitted 4 LED security lamps and needed to feed 2 core through a brick wall - I have 20 odd old wire up plugs though so had plenty to hand. I do it the other way, cut the moulded socket off an extension lead, feed the cut end thru the hole in the wall and then wire that into the light or whatever. Easier with some lights than others. These lights only come with about 1ft of three way, so you have to drill a foot long hole in the exterior bricks and feed two core in from inside, fit a plug and find the nearest indoor socket. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg So you now have an exposed chocky block outside in the wet and a metal light with no earth? You are a special kind of stupid. He is a cyclist. They really are a very special kind of stupid. Or not a wimp like you two, scared of a bit of electricity. All that will happen in the rain is a bit of electric will leak from live to neutral and cost him pennies. What if it's more than a little bit of leakage (maybe from something like bird droppings)? The most that might do is trip the RCD. RCDs are for pussies, I have fuses. It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. Which is why I prefer fuses. Less likely to trip. It wouldn't trip due to bird **** regardless of which is used. And very unlikely to end up with bird **** on it where it is either. If the bird**** conducted to some rain on the wall and to the ground, an ELCB might trip. Nope, because the metal bits on the choc block wouldn't be in contact with the bird ****. You wrote "unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block" If it is, it wont bridge between the choc block and the wall. Depends what the bird has eaten. Nope, not when its very sloppy **** it doesn't. More sloppy is more likely to travel further. Not not BRIDGE between the block and the wall, stupid. Sloppy spreads out more, Yep. so more likely to bridge. Nope, more likely to fall down the gap and not bridge, stupid. No, Yep. that's runny. Same thing. You have remedial work to do on your adjectives. Nope, they mean the same thing as far as bridging is concerned. Different consistency. Not enough to matter where bridging is concerned. The difference between falling off and sticking is very important. Both don't bridge and fall. The adjectives are all subjective. Irrelevant to whether neither bird **** will bridge. They produce a wide range of consistencies. There will be a certain percentage water which does. And that wouldn't be described as runny or sloppy either by anyone with even half a clue about what those words mean. |
#225
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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In message , James Wilkinson Sword
writes On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 07:39:37 -0000, Bob Martin wrote: Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? YOU trim it if you want it trimmed. Neither of us require it. Then switch to e-mail. No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text to see a one line reply, which explains why, when the two of you get carried away, few if any others comment. We're just seeing the first page of quoted text, and swiftly moving on. The only reason I saw your reply above was because Bob snipped for you. -- Graeme |
#226
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En el artículo , Graeme
escribió: No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text Just killfile the chuckle brothers. You won't be missing anything. -- (\_/) (='.'=) systemd: the Linux version of Windows 10 (")_(") |
#227
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![]() "Mike Tomlinson" wrote in message ... En el artículo , Graeme escribió: No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text Just killfile the chuckle brothers. You won't be missing anything. I don't even bother to kf'em. Any posts by PHucker or Superdick simply get bypassed unless I wanna take the ****. |
#228
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Graeme" wrote in message ... In message , James Wilkinson Sword writes On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 07:39:37 -0000, Bob Martin wrote: Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? YOU trim it if you want it trimmed. Neither of us require it. Then switch to e-mail. No thanks, we use usenet for a reason. No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text to see a one line reply, Quite a few clearly do. which explains why, when the two of you get carried away, few if any others comment. Nope, they don't comment because there is nothing they are interested in being discussed. When there is, like with the question of reversing into your own driveway or driving in forwards, plenty do comment. We're just seeing the first page of quoted text, and swiftly moving on. Plenty must be reading it otherwise they wouldn't comment on what interests them like the reversing/ forward question or with the question of the visibility out the front and back of the car. The only reason I saw your reply above was because Bob snipped for you. Your problem. We couldn't care less what you do or do not read. |
#229
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Tue, 01 Nov 2016 13:02:52 -0000, Graeme wrote:
In message , James Wilkinson Sword writes On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 07:39:37 -0000, Bob Martin wrote: Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? YOU trim it if you want it trimmed. Neither of us require it. Then switch to e-mail. No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text to see a one line reply, which explains why, when the two of you get carried away, few if any others comment. We're just seeing the first page of quoted text, and swiftly moving on. If anyone is interested in the conversation, they reply and snip. If they are not interested it doesn't get snipped. So where is the problem? What you're doing is complaining about conversations you're not involved in not being formatted in the way you like. -- Waiter, waiter, what's wrong with these eggs? I don't know Sir, I only laid the table. |
#230
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "James Wilkinson Sword" wrote in message news ![]() On Tue, 01 Nov 2016 13:02:52 -0000, Graeme wrote: In message , James Wilkinson Sword writes On Mon, 31 Oct 2016 07:39:37 -0000, Bob Martin wrote: Can't you two learn how to trim when quoting? YOU trim it if you want it trimmed. Neither of us require it. Then switch to e-mail. No-one else wants to plough through pages of quoted text to see a one line reply, which explains why, when the two of you get carried away, few if any others comment. We're just seeing the first page of quoted text, and swiftly moving on. If anyone is interested in the conversation, they reply and snip. If they are not interested it doesn't get snipped. So where is the problem? What you're doing is complaining about conversations you're not involved in not being formatted in the way you like. He's claiming he never reads any post that hasn't been snipped. I don't actually care what he does or does not read. |
#231
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 18:40:10 +0100, ARW wrote:
On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 13:37:22 +1100, "Rod Speed" wrote: It might blow a fuse if you are unlucky enough to get some bird **** that is very sloppy right on the areas where there is some metal down in the block. Unlikely tho. So not worth putting into the forthcoming 18th edition regs then? **** the regs, just make the light come on. -- Her face was a perfect oval, like a circle that had its two other sides gently compressed by a Thigh Master. |
#232
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Wed, 26 Oct 2016 22:18:10 +0100, Mike Tomlinson wrote:
En el artículo , ARW escribió: I like pretty women that perform a function. You could call James Wankinson aka PHucker a ****, but then ****s tend to be attractive and serve a useful purpose. Only some ****s are attractive. -- Why are there 5 syllables in the word "monosyllabic"? |
#233
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Thu, 27 Oct 2016 08:33:23 +0100, Simon Mason wrote:
On Thursday, 27 October 2016 08:29:18 UTC+1, F Murtz wrote: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CvtPqEOXYAEybSS.jpg Good grief! http://www.swldxer.co.uk/kitchen1.jpg What are you moaning about now? All that stuff on the bench top, not put away in the drawers, stupid. He is just proving that the British can get a modest selection of food. It is a cycling tradition to photograph your bike with Marmite. http://bit.ly/2fi6MBb Ketchup tastes better. http://keyassets.timeincuk.net/inspi...-s-630x419.jpg -- A waiter brings the customer the steak he ordered with his thumb over the meat. "Are you crazy?" yelled the customer, "with your hand on my steak?" "What" answers the waiter, "You want it to fall on the floor again?" |
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