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Chuck
WB2EDV



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peter Summerhawk 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, July 31, 2009 11:36 PM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Getting mice out of a repeater sight





  Anyone got a pic of this mousetrap? The attachment didn't go through.

  Thanks



  Peter



  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of kf0m
  Sent: Friday, July 31, 2009 9:03 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Getting mice out of a repeater sight



    

  Here is the ultimate repeater site mouse trap from the repeater builder 
archives in 2003. I was really surprised no one else had trotted it out yet. I 
also remember someone posting a picture to show that it really worked.

  John Lock
  kf0m at arrl.net 

  --- In [email protected], "Shanon Lee Herron" 
  <ka8...@c...> wrote:
  > Hi All,
  > 
  > A neighbor told me this one MANY years ago. Since then I have 
  seen it in
  > a sports magazine. Works great for the cabin up in northern 
  Michigan that
  > remains empty most of the time. NO SMELL!!!! The funny thing 
  about mice,
  > one will go to see what all the commotion is all about and trap 
  himself too.
  > 
  > Material list:
  > 
  > One 5 Gallon Plastic bucket
  > About two feet of 1/2" thin wall conduit
  > Unopened can of tomato soup or similar soup with no chunks or 
  solids in
  > it, pick a favorite
  > Package of Saltines Crackers
  > Jar of peanut butter
  > One Gallon of Automotive Antifreeze - undiluted
  > Electrical tape
  > A "Plank" of wood, about a two feet long, a piece of 1x2 or 1x4 
  will do
  > fine.
  > One drywall or #6 sheet metal type screw, one inch long will do.
  > One old pair of barbeque tongs to leave with the trap.
  > 
  > Tools needed:
  > 
  > 7/8" hole saw and drill motor to fit
  > 1/8" drill bit
  > Hack saw or pipe cutter
  > Screwdriver to fit the screw
  > Small Sauce Pan, bowl and spoon
  > Old can opener for liquids, the pointed type, (the other end of a 
  beer cap
  > remover)
  > 
  > 
  > Start with the bucket. Drill 7/8" holes across from one another 
  near the
  > top, maybe an inch or so down.
  > 
  > Slide the conduit across the top, through the two holes.
  > 
  > Mark it and cut it so that it protrudes one inch on each side. 
  The tape
  > will hold it in place later.
  > 
  > Open the soup using the old fashioned can opener. Pour the soup 
  in the
  > pan, remove the label and rinse out the can.
  > 
  > Start the soup to heat on the stove.
  > 
  > Using the same hole saw you used to cut the holes in the bucket 
  drill a
  > hole in the center of the top and bottom of the soup can.
  > 
  > Slide the conduit into one hole of the bucket, slip the can onto 
  the
  > conduit, slide the conduit out the other hole.
  > 
  > Wrap tape around the conduit outside the bucket on each end to 
  hold it
  > into place.
  > 
  > Do the same on each side of the soup can to hold it in the center 
  of the
  > bucket.
  > 
  > Drill a 1/8" hole in the side of the bucket at the top, across 
  from the
  > center of the soup can.
  > 
  > Run the screw through the side of the bucket and into the "Plank" 
  so that
  > the plank touches the top of the bucket and then the other end 
  rests on the
  > floor. Like a ramp. Without the screw the mice will knock it down.
  > 
  > Fill the bucket with about 3" of Antifreeze.
  > 
  > Smear peanut butter on the outside of the soup can.
  > 
  > Your done. Go eat soup and crackers.
  > 
  > The mice will walk the plank, jump to get to the peanut butter, 
  roll off
  > the can as it spins, ka-ploop, they drown, perfectly preserved, 
  don't even
  > get stiff, no smell, antifreeze don't evaporate or freeze. This is 
  where
  > the tongs come in. I have gotten as many as 13 in the bucket in 
  just two
  > weeks! Funny thing, the white fur on them turns the color of the
  > antifreeze.
  > 
  > Good luck. Shanon KA8SPW> 




  

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