Discuss What have you done or learnt during lockdown in the Electricians Chat - Off Topic Chat area at ElectriciansForums.net
wow ,how the hell are you supposes to cut timber on that .lol. dont say we have another Fred karno make in boilers have we .Made things on my not so new toy
more like Fred Dibnah.wow ,how the hell are you supposes to cut timber on that .lol. dont say we have another Fred karno make in boilers have we .
i want one.
Good luck with the plaster mate.....I’ve got 3 jobs now held up due to no multi finish nationwide, have you seen the price of it on eBay ?.....are the worktops in situ or can you take them out to refurb?
You're the first person to spot that... Now sporting a keyless chuck so no key to worry about...How dare you leave the chuck-key in the chuck!
If they’re kitchen work tops, mull over whether you’re prepared to do the regular maintenance to keep them looking good. Been there once and subsequent kitchen refurbs we’ve steered clear of wood.
How to care for a wooden worktophey are existing tops in a kitchen which will get completely replaced within 5 years so I'm not too fussed about them being pristine all the time. Just need to get rid of stains and replace the finish to make them serviceable.
Been looking at hard wax oils which apparently don't need as much regular attention as standard oil finishes
I say that .. whilst actually having no say in our kitchen design My wife did get quite good at stripping back and applying fresh Danish Oil ...,, to the kitchen work top that is!They are existing tops in a kitchen which will get completely replaced within 5 years so I'm not too fussed about them being pristine all the time. Just need to get rid of stains and replace the finish to make them serviceable.
Been looking at hard wax oils which apparently don't need as much regular attention as standard oil finishes.
You're the first person to spot that... Now sporting a keyless chuck so no key to worry about...
That usually happens very shortly after starting up...Now sporting a keyless chuck
Learnt the lesson about chuck keys in school as one flew past my head and embedded in a wall, wasn't my machine but my mate one bay down...During the early days of my apprenticeship the machineshop foreman would go around and wack everyone on the head even if you left the chuck key in for just one second!
He had a fantastic sense of being able to be there just when you made any mistake whatsoever!
Sort of spot things like that from a mile away since then.
Guess it worked!
(he always had a real story for every mistake, from chuck keys, through cleaning swarf on a mill, to long hair pulling the operator's head into the machinery! - It was the 70's)
Learnt the lesson about chuck keys in school as one flew past my head and embedded in a wall, wasn't my machine but my mate one bay down...
Some School that was then?Had the same talk at high school, when they used to let kids loose on the power tools.
Just after a half hour safety talk, which included leaving chuck keys in the chuck....
2 minutes later.... "Wheeeeeeeee....... ding!"
My father in law spent over 50 years in machine engineering and he has some proper horror stories.Never actually seen it happen, but the foreman's story went along a similar vein, but involved more blood and gore to someone on the other side of the workshop!
My father in law spent over 50 years in machine engineering and he has some proper horror stories.
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