PEX!

Cross linked polyethylene. There are several joining systems for it now none of 
which require a torch. It has superior wear characteristics and is flexible 
enough to pull through walls and around corners provided they aren't to 
sharp.One may want to sweat an adaptor to the end of copper to extend a supply 
line.

So far I haven't used the stuff but I expect I soon will.


 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Hodges 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 9:45 PM
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people


  Dale,

  Why would this process become obsolete? What am I missing? I take it there
  must be something new and improved coming out soon.

  Thanks,

  Tom

  _____ 

  From: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  On Behalf Of Dale Leavens
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 9:38 PM
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people

  Tom,

  I don't know that I have a particularly good way but I have soldered a lot
  of joints over the years.

  It seems to me I have written extensively on the subject a couple of years
  ago. I wonder if that is somewhere in the archives?

  If I had a good recording system I suppose I should record a tutorial, the
  subject comes up fairly frequently. Soon though the process will become
  obsolete.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Hodges 
  To: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 9:26 PM
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people

  Dale,

  Do you have a good method for sweating cooper pipe for the visually
  impaired? If so, I would like to hear about it.

  Thanks,

  Tom

  _____ 

  From: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com>
  yahoogroups.com [mailto:blindhandyman@
  <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com]
  On Behalf Of Dale Leavens
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 9:16 PM
  To: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people

  I guess I have had pretty good luck. The only woodworking show I have been
  to so far was in London, I went with my son. There was a chap demonstrating
  and selling the Tormek wet slow speed sharpening system which I was very
  interested in at the time. Between demonstrations I asked if I could come
  around his side of the bench to examine and handle the tool. Within minutes
  he got right into it and soon had me demonstrating the equipment with his
  instruction to the next gathering of onlookers. I darn nearly bought one
  just on the strength of that.

  It was a clerk in a local hardware store who taught me to sweat copper pipe.

  I did run into a problem with a shop teacher here back in about 1975, one of
  those after hours night school classes. For me the big problem was that he
  didn't approach or tackle it directly with me but went off to the college
  people in Timmins and to one of the other class members where they arranged
  some sort of agreement where the other student was to assist with
  supervising me. I didn't find out about that arrangement until one day the
  other student didn't make it. The instructor blurted it all out. The
  interesting think is that the other student wasn't there because earlier
  that evening he had cut some part of his own hand while trimming tile or
  something on his own table saw at his home.

  Ultimately I relented, the instructor had apparently told his supervisor
  that if he had to accept me then the buddy system to which I had not agreed,
  never even heard of would be implemented otherwise he would refuse to run
  the class. I probably could have forced the issue but it would have
  destroyed the class for the others and I decided I didn't need to harvest
  that bad feeling, particularly in a small town.

  It wasn't really much of a class, nothing formally taught, it was however an
  opportunity to use power tools on a scale I would likely never be able to
  afford and probably a chance to ask and gain experience from an already
  skilled person.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bob Kennedy 
  To: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 7:36 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people

  There is no limit to ignorance. I was at the woodworking show a few years
  back, a huge showing of all sorts of dangerous tools for working with wood.
  One of the guys selling Forrest Saw blades was on his stage and didn't want
  to sell me a blade because he didn't know how a blind person could work a
  table saw and not lose fingers. I can't seem to resist a nasty come back
  sometimes and told the guy I didn't know how a company with such a good name
  would let an idiot represent them in the public place. I did manage to
  resist dropping his $150 blade on the concrete floor. But a lot of people
  walked away from his display after they heard him. 

  Strangely enough, the next display was for Grip-Tite and the guy running the
  booth gave me a 2 by 4 and told me to run it through his table saw. I told
  him about the guy from Forrest and he couldn't believe it. 

  There are good people out there but it's always covered up by the ignorant
  ones...
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jewel 
  To: blindhandyman@ <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com> yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 7:04 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Dealing with people

  One of our department stores had a very good special on 20 inch chainsaws
  recently, and being a
  sucker for chainsaws, I went along to buy one.

  The nasty little jumped-up salesman wouldn't sell me one unless I was
  prepared to sign a waiver to
  the effect that if injured, I would not sue them. I had no worry about
  signing such a document, but
  it was a clear case of discrimination for anyone can injure themselves with
  a chainsaw, and do those
  others have to sign a waiver? no they don't!
  Now, this is a store that sold me, without hesitation, a rotary garden hoe
  that didn't have a
  clutch, even though, for reasons of safety, I had, distinctly, said that a
  clutch it must have.
  I did not find that it had no clutch until I got it home and was attempting
  to find the safety
  feature I had demanded it * MUST have!
  When I say a * clutch, I mean that the machine can be put out of gear, so
  that the hoe tines stops
  spinning, but the motor is still running.

  Jewel

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