Any chance that you may be left foot braking? TC doesn't like that.
John
On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 11:39 AM, Robert Rentfro [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It seems that the rpm drops to 750 coming out a corner after a stop (like
waiting to turn left) and when you accelerate out of the turn it
On Sep 23, 2008, at 7:00 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Panera doesn't have iced coffee.
Curt:
I grew up in Mass (Lexington) and have lived in Des Moines for the
past 21 years. We do too have iced coffee. The Panera in Ames has
iced coffee. I've gotten it there several times. Your waitress
They're all Chinese?
--R
Wonko the Sane wrote:
The Iowa
State (Ames) folks are more like the MIT ... crowd.
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For new parts see official list sponsor: http://www.buymbparts.com/
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To
I want to figure out a lever to switch between inside and outside...
We run a woodstove most of the winter so the added moisture should be helpful...
-Curt
--- On Mon, 9/22/08, Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] RE What about you?
They had it but didn't make me get it... When I was in Toronto in February I
couldn't find anywhere that had non-sweet tea...
-Curt
--- On Mon, 9/22/08, Wilton Strickland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Wilton Strickland [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] What about you?
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Actually -- yes, it seems that way when we go to the Ames mall. Hadn't
thought of that before but you are correct.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 7:41 AM, Rich Thomas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
They're all Chinese?
--R
Wonko the Sane wrote:
The Iowa
State (Ames) folks are more like the MIT ...
Oh, I've got to jump on this
My position:
Using a wood stove does nothing to reduce the moisture in your home.
Using a electric heat does nothing to reduce the moisture in your home.
If you disagree with this position, than please answer the following question:
When using a wood stove or
You are absolutely correct. When it is cold outside (i.e., winter,
usually) the air holds less moisture (humidity, water vapor) so when it
is heated up it is still dry. I used a steamer kettle on my woodstove
in the winter, helped a lot.
I had a triple-dekka in Boston years ago, rented the
Does the air bag function?
On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 9:44 PM, Kaleb C. Striplin [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
I just changed one the other day, well, it was the whole bumper. Took
me longer to find the tools than to do the job
--
LT Don
http://don.homelinux.net/~don/
apt-get update
apt-get
Using a wood stove does nothing to reduce the moisture in your home.
Using a electric heat does nothing to reduce the moisture in your home.
Yes, but heating any air reduces its relative humidity, and
the usual winter fare is too uncomfortable unless you do
something about it. (Here, anyway.)
I always suspected you were a trouble maker.
BillR
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 9:08 AM
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Subject: [MBZ] O/T Moisture in air
Oh, I've got to jump on this
I'm thinking your saying that in fact there is no difference in the heating
media.
If so, I agree. Oil Hot water heat is just as dry as electric base boards.
Pete
-- Original message --
From: Jim Cathey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Using a wood stove does nothing to
A caution. Check underside of roof occasionally during winter to make sure
excessive moisture is not condensing there - 'does in many areas of the
country.
Wilton
- Original Message -
From: Jim Cathey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Sent: Tuesday,
Yeah, but your winters will be moderating as the planet heats up...
Besides, my BIL is the biggest whiner about the cold, and he has lived in
Manitoba and Edmonton his entire life.
On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 5:06 PM, R A Bennell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yeah, but we know you are going to complain
Ethelred (the Unready: 1982 380 SL) has got innumerable issues to deal
with, but one that's the most in-your-face irritating is the seatbelt
warning light that cycles with nearly every bump. So I pulled the
warning module (next to the cruise control amplifier hanging from the
brake pedal support)
Y'all missed some good BBQ. Great bunch of folks
from the eastern US. Paul and Shirley from FL in
a SL 320 with lotsa miles on it. Werner and Nancy
in a 300D 2.5 (probably has lotsa miles, but that
topic didn't come up) Keith with his beautiful
300SEL 109. Love the air suspension! Carl
Womens pantyhose make a better filter. You get two bags, and the
stretch out as they fill.
At 08:32 PM 9/22/2008, you wrote:
I installed (I am sure duct tape was involved) one of my socks to the end of
the dryer discharge hose. Caught 99% of the lint -- but had to be changed
occasionally.
On
A simple, good Catheyesque fix!
Congrats on a new one!
At 09:51 AM 9/23/2008, you wrote:
Ethelred (the Unready: 1982 380 SL) has got innumerable issues to deal
with, but one that's the most in-your-face irritating is the seatbelt
warning light that cycles with nearly every bump. So I pulled the
I did that one winter also. NOT a good idea. lots of moisture on the
windows, stuff got mildewed, etc.
There's a HELL of a lot of water in a load of laundry.
Dan
On Sep 23, 2008, at 9:58 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I want to figure out a lever to switch between inside and outside...
We
Heating oil has been in a relative freefall lately, down to ~$3.70 in the last
couple days from $4.79 when my oil company sent out pre-pay letters in July.
I declined to lock in a price and so far that has been a gamble well paid off.
We'll fill up this week at $1/gal less than we were offered
I've never done it, wife would not be able to figure it out.
My Dad did it for 20years {Winter Only}, using one of Mom's nylons. Worked
fine, added heat and moisture to a very cold basement.
Pete
-- Original message --
From: Dan Weeks [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I did
In the winter it is, in the summer time when you've been out doing something an
iced coffee is just the thing while you're cruising around in your vintage
automobile...
-Curt
Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 19:37:05 -0400
From: Bill R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] What about you?
To: [EMAIL
A pair of the wife's stockings around the duct will kill the lint problem...
The moisture problem bothers me a little.
The idea of a heat exchanger interests me although it won't get as much of the
heat as just ducting it in would and as I say we could actually benefit from
some of the moisture.
My wife gave me a Craftsman drill/driver combo for Christmas 19.2v. Not a bad
kit, the driver isn't as good as the drill, its slower and hard to put pressure
on. Definately get a standard chuck!
Dad has the same drill in 14v, his is lighter and has similar grunt but mine
lasts longer. For you
C'mon coffee and engineers belong together...
We just got a new coffee machine here that makes a decent latte, its busy all
the time.
-Curt
Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 20:55:59 -0500
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] What about you?
To: Mercedes Discussion List
I have a Firestorm 12v thats a decent drill but can only drive a handful of 3
inch screws on a charge. My Crapsman 19.2v can drive many...
-Curt
Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 20:55:08 -0700
From: Kevin Kraly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] OT - cordless screw drivers
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Get an impact driver. I bought an inexpensive Ryobi model from Home Depot last
winter and have been quite happy
with it. I have been driving 3 inch deck screws attaching 2X4's as strapping on
a ceiling out at the cottage and it
has done fine. Might not be a journeyman quality tool in the long
Loren Faeth wrote:
Womens pantyhose make a better filter. You get two bags, and the
stretch out as they fill.
With all the lint that comes out the dryer vent, I've got to think the only
purpose for the dryer's internal lint screen is to start fires that can be
blamed on the homeowner for
Is there maybe more than one Panera in Ames? This one was where LT Don told us
to go eat at Red Lobster...
There wasn't any iced coffee I could see, she suggested I could put ice in hot
coffee... I hate doing that, ends up watery.
-Curt
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 07:23:07 -0500
From: Dan Weeks
With a woodstove it goes up the pipe, you use inside air for combustion air.
Replacement air has to be drawn from the outside where ambient moisture is
lower.
I dunno about electric, never heard that as a complaint before.
-Curt
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 13:07:48 +
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nope, one on South Duff (hwy 69), the old Hardees building.
When were you in Ames, and why didn't you holler on the way through?
At 11:40 AM 9/23/2008, you wrote:
Is there maybe more than one Panera in Ames? This one was where LT
Don told us to go eat at Red Lobster...
There wasn't any iced
So, you agree! The wood stove doesn't make it dryer
Pete
-- Original message --
From: Curt Raymond [EMAIL PROTECTED]
With a woodstove it goes up the pipe, you use inside air for combustion air.
Replacement air has to be drawn from the outside where ambient
/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com
-- next part --
An embedded message was scrubbed...
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] O/T Moisture in air
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 17:13:59 +
Size: 806
Url:
http://okiebenz.com/pipermail/mercedes_okiebenz.com/attachments/20080923
Do you have a model number for this one?
Buy one of the Bosch drivers -- I have the one with the tilting head and
the thing is amazing.
Yes - a Bosch drill/driver would go well with my Leicas and Linhof.
I guess those Germans know how to build other than Benz parts.
--
OK Don, KD5NRO
Well, if you want a practical solution on what to do with all that lint?
Get a spinning wheel and make thread or yarn, then take up weaving or
knitting... And viola! Fully recyclable piece of clothing.!
Just a thought! Too much time on my hands, I agree!
Chuck
On Sep 23, 2008, at 9:33
On Sep 23, 2008, at 12:19 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there maybe more than one Panera in Ames? This one was where LT
Don told us to go eat at Red Lobster...
The one I go to is just south of downtown a few blocks, on 65.
Dan
___
On Sep 23, 2008, at 12:19 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nope, one on South Duff (hwy 69), the old Hardees building.
When were you in Ames, and why didn't you holler on the way through?
THAT's the one I go to. Hwy 69, not 65.
Dan
___
Dan Weeks wrote:
I did that one winter also. NOT a good idea. lots of moisture on the
windows, stuff got mildewed, etc.
There's a HELL of a lot of water in a load of laundry.
If you're going to keep that water indoors, get yourself some wooden drying
racks and quit running the dryer.
I can truthfully say that with my Hitachi and it's rapid charger and two
batteries I have never run out of power. I might also mention that I can't
do that stuff for more than 30 minutes on a good day. That probably makes a
difference.
BillR
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
OK Curt, on your recommendation I might give it a try when it gets hot
again. Well, actually it is up to 79 outside now and climbing, but I'm
talking about the 90+ stuff - then I'll go for a drive.
BillR
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of
We did the pantyhose thing one winter [west central Indiana] and I dont
remember any problems. I also don't remember doing it a second time,
though. My memory never was what it sort of remember it used to be.
BillR
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On
Sure it does, it moves air around thus bringing dryer air into the house where
otherwise that air transfer wouldn't take place.
If your woodstove was setup with an external source of air then no it wouldn't
cause any extra drying of the house's air.
-Curt
--- On Tue, 9/23/08, [EMAIL
I'd agree with my Craftsman, if I've got neither battery charged I either need
more screws or need more material or need a break.
-Curt
--- On Tue, 9/23/08, Bill R [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Bill R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [MBZ] OT - cordless screw drivers
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED],
On Amazon (I buy tools from them, good deals) they have a reconditioned
one for $80, very good price.
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8keywords=Bosch%20driversearch-type=besttag=coffeeresearch13289-20index=toolslink_code=qs
Bosch PS10-2 Litheon 10.8-Volt Lithium-Ion I-Driver Kit
The washers built 40 years ago with blackmore or blackwell (or
something like that) designed guts had a spin cycle like a commercial
laundry extractor (centrifuge). They would wind up and whine like a
banshee, but stuff came out pretty dry. They were deemed unsafe by
our consumer watchdogs.
Modern front loaders usually have a fast spin cycle. My Bosch is great, takes
less than half the time it used to to dry laundry, either on the outside line
(preferred) or in the dryer.
We used to vent the dryer in the house in the winter, but since I've tightened
up the windows and gotten the
So I got my 190D back, the diff bearing is still making noise but the shrieking
symphony of the stuck parking brake cable is gone.
I've gotten one quote so far for $450 shipped for a diff from somewhere on the
west coast. Still waiting on another quote. Meanwhile Fred has found an early
'84
Very good - thanks!
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 12:49 PM, Rich Thomas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Amazon (I buy tools from them, good deals) they have a reconditioned
one for $80, very good price.
http://boston.craigslist.org/nos/cto/85203.html
All the wood and moldings are gone?
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To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to:
Almost forgot to mention if you do a place that makes it for you try it with
milk instead of cream. I find the cream at Dunkin Donuts for instance to taste
kinda waxy...
-Curt
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 13:30:42 -0400
From: Bill R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] What about you?
To: [EMAIL
As I recall, Marshall said these seldom wore out unless abused (e.g., run
dry). Even if yours is bad, an average used differential should work fine.
Also, as I recall, Marshall said the noise problem was often the rubber
mount (which gets hard) and not the actual differential.
Scott Ritchey
Speaking of which I got to see a Farmall Super MD on Sunday, it was running a
shingle mill. The MDs all started on gas and when the engine warmed up could
switch over to diesel. Its pretty amazing to see in action.
That shingle mill was from the 1890s and was pretty much all the Super MD could
Interesting, I seem to remember that also.
How big a deal is the mount to do? I'm putting together my next parts order
right now anyway.
-Curt
--- On Tue, 9/23/08, Scott Ritchey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Scott Ritchey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [MBZ] 190D diff continued
To: [EMAIL
Who would vandalize such a pretty car?
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 4:02 PM, Curt Raymond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://boston.craigslist.org/nos/cto/85203.html
All the wood and moldings are gone?
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For new parts see
On Sep 23, 2008, at 3:15 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So I got my 190D back, the diff bearing is still making noise
The diff on my 82 300SD has been making noise for the 55k miles I've
been driving it. It's never gotten any worse, so I've stopped
worrying about it.
Dan
82 300SD, 310k
Already a parts car?
Bissell Cove Quahog Auto Salvage Co
Dwight E. Giles, Jr.
Wickford RI 02852
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Curt Raymond
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 4:03 PM
To: Diesel List
Subject: [MBZ] WTF?
Loren,
I recently read a new book-photo essay type book on the Lincoln Highway-have
you seen it? That would be sweet-MB's from NYC to CA.
Dwight
Dwight E. Giles, Jr.
1978 240D 4 speed. 218K miles.
1979 240D- auto -250K + miles. (SOLD).
1990 300D 2.5t 160K miles.
Wickford, RI
-Original
Curt, et al.
The 201 diff. bolts to the sub-frame, no mounts.
Fred Moir
Lynn MA
300TD
190DT Bent
190DT Blue
At 04:24 PM 9/23/2008, you wrote:
Interesting, I seem to remember that also.
How big a deal is the mount to do? I'm putting together my next
parts order right now anyway.
-Curt
Alles.
It's twin (with mouldings) is in Naumkeg J/Y 90 380SEL
Fred Moir
Lynn MA
At 04:30 PM 9/23/2008, you wrote:
Who would vandalize such a pretty car?
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 4:02 PM, Curt Raymond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://boston.craigslist.org/nos/cto/85203.html
All
Several years ago, I was at PNP scrounging parts for my 81 300D; 'glanced
inside a 126 beside the 123 I was picking from, and low and behold, there
lay on the rear floor of the 126 a complete set of wood door moldings
perfectly matching those in my 91 126! 'Snapped 'em up; 'used one of 'em
few
Two words. Impact Driver. They are the best screwdriver ever
invented. I have the 18v Dewalt version and it's rumored to be able to
drive a 6 lag bolt into wood without a pilot hole. I've not tried it
myself, but maybe I will later today.
When driving screws into hard wood, you must drill pilot
They keep promising global warming but so far we have not seen much
improvement. I say, bring it on - especially
about January.
Randy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of andrew strasfogel
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 8:29 AM
To: Mercedes
My doctor says that people need humidity levels that are bad for the house. He
says water running off of the
windows is about right.
Randy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Rich Thomas
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 7:31 AM
To: Mercedes
I wonder about using some sort of housing with either an air filter out of a
car or out of a shop vacuum? I sort of
wonder if the dust needs to be taken down to a small level - 1 micron? Maybe
use the stocking first and then the
filter to keep the filter cleaner longer? Or, one might be able
I use it on ANY screw. Small or large. It will NOT strip them if you
keep enough pressure on the screw, which turns out to be way less
pressure than ANY drill driver I've ever used.
Luther
OK Don wrote:
I noticed those, but have never used one. Yes, I know about pilot
holes, and have the
Following is an article I wrote on the subject several years ago. It's
long, but some listers may find it useful. For others, please forgive me
for boring you with it.
MOISTURE CONDENSATION IN ATTICS CRAWLSPACES
By Wilton Strickland
A combination of excessive moisture (high relative humidity
Ironic timing -- when I saw the subject line, I slid up to the computer,
about to to reply that Wilton might have some professional expertise in
this area. You fired a JATO bottle before I had the opportunity.
(How many folks are Googling JATO, Wilton? grin)
D.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 5:47
It seems than at Mon, 22 Sep 2008 21:37:06 -0400, Mitch wrote:
Curt Raymond wrote:
In another couple weeks I'm going to stop sending dryer air
outside to see if it will impact our oil usage...
That kind of moisture can do real damage to a house...
Or be a great assistance to keeping
Your mpg may vary. Lots of variables.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 5:35 PM, Fmiser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It seems than at Mon, 22 Sep 2008 21:37:06 -0400, Mitch wrote:
Curt Raymond wrote:
In another couple weeks I'm going to stop sending dryer air
outside to see if it will impact our oil
Yes, Wonko, I do have some experience/expertise in this area. 'Little bit
in the JATO area, too. BTW, you know, of course, what is commonly known as
JATO is REALLY RATO (Rocket Assisted Take Off). Did you ever see it used
on a CG aircraft? 'Think I've seen some photos of such.
Wilton
-
Before my time. When I earned my Aircrew Wings (1976) the Albatross had been
banned from water landings and was being babied for more potential years on
the airframe. We were based at the Otis AFB site, really long runways (only
a third of which we needed on Runway 32).
Was a kick on runway 32 to
Yeah, 'thought I'd seen photos of HU-16 JATO takeoff. I agree, JATO not
advisable for 'copters.
Wilton
- Original Message -
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 7:43 PM
Subject: Re: [MBZ] OT -
I like this drill a lot, except for the hex bit requirement - any way
to adapt a jacobs chuck to one of these beasts?
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 12:49 PM, Rich Thomas
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Amazon (I buy tools from them, good deals) they have a reconditioned
one for $80, very good price.
Found a photo of one of my favorite airframes. This plane was bullet-proof.
It was NOT built on a Monday -- it was built like a Benz (and was a lot like
a 240D).
http://www.semperparatus.com/images/hu16e_grumman_albatross.jpg
Hundreds of hours navigating the 7245 out on George's Bank.
This one is both the swivel Bosch, AND an impact driver! Looks about
right for installing cabinets, but uses hex bits. It's ALWAYS
something!
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 5:31 PM, Luther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use it on ANY screw. Small or large. It will NOT strip them if you
keep enough
hell if I know, never wrecked the car.
Wonko the Sane wrote:
Does the air bag function?
On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 9:44 PM, Kaleb C. Striplin [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
I just changed one the other day, well, it was the whole bumper. Took
me longer to find the tools than to do the job
Yep, a fine, tough bird.
Wilton, 5000 hrs in another toughun.
- Original Message -
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 8:10 PM
Subject: Re: [MBZ] OT - moisture in air
Found a photo of one of my
I will be out of the office starting 09/23/2008 and will not return until
12/24/2008.
I have moved on to another project outside of Chrysler. If you need
assistance please contact David Dorann (248-576-8340) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For
BTW, the only thing I get to come up on the military.esptgear site is the
photo of gold wings. What are they, Navy enlisted aircrew wings?
Wilton
- Original Message -
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 23,
Oh, I'm sorry! I meant COAST GUARD wings! Or do they use same as Navy?
Wilton
- Original Message -
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 8:10 PM
Subject: Re: [MBZ] OT - moisture in air
Found a
Yes (and answering your following email) -- they are Aircrew Wings. Navy and
Coast Guard and (I think) Marines share the same badge. In some ways, they
are more valued in the Coast Guard than pilot wings. Pilots did six years
and went to the airlines -- aircrew folks often hung around for a
I think the air bag has some interconnection to the front bumper -- but I
might be in error.
If the steering wheel doesn't have a big balloon sticking out, we should be
cool.
D.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 7:21 PM, Kaleb C. Striplin [EMAIL PROTECTED]wrote:
hell if I know, never wrecked the car.
The temp sensor is in the front bumper.
Brian Toscano
Sent from my BlackBerry Smartphone provided by Alltel
-Original Message-
From: Wonko the Sane [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 20:23:12
To: Mercedes Discussion Listmercedes@okiebenz.com
Subject: Re: [MBZ] W124 Front Bumper
Came across a nice looking 81 300SD (126) at the gas station in Des
Moines today while i was filling up. Guy said he moved here from GA,
car has Georgia plates on it. He said 270k miles. Had new tires and
looked decently maintained. Seems like a cheap price for a nice
SD. I have his phone
There's a HELL of a lot of water in a load of laundry.
We dry on racks when time and conditions allow.
So how's that worse than venting the dryer inside?
With my Fisher and Paykel,
I had picked that out as our next washer, to replace
the 40yo Kenmore. (Well over 30, anyway.)
So my wife
Oh, I understand. You have every right to be proud of those gold wings, and
I meant no less - just trying to make sure I had the nomenclature right.
Don't forget, I've been enlisted, too, though only 3 years and 7 months -
B-47E maint. crew chief .
I'm also very well aware that it takes more
cool! I always thought an MD would be fun Our original '39 H
started on gas then ran on kerosene. The WWII vintage TD series
crawlers are interesting too. For a while IH had a TD that was
bigger than any caterpillar product.
At 03:23 PM 9/23/2008, you wrote:
Speaking of which I got to see
On Sep 23, 2008, at 8:47 PM, Loren wrote:
Came across a nice looking 81 300SD (126) at the gas station in Des
Moines today while i was filling up. Guy said he moved here from GA,
car has Georgia plates on it. He said 270k miles. Had new tires and
looked decently maintained. Seems like a
It is fairly low RPM/high torque so drilling is not a forte. You can
put those speed drill bits with the hex ends in it for pilot holes and
such, but it doesn't do too well.
--R
OK Don wrote:
I like this drill a lot, except for the hex bit requirement - any way
to adapt a jacobs chuck to
Who was looking for a copy of Parallels?
They have a bundle deal out right now that's got Parallels and 9-10 other
titles for $49. I got my copy this way...
http://www.parallels.com/en/green_bundle1/
Dan
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For new parts
On reconsidering, I already have a couple of corded drills - don't
really need another drill, so will only consider this tool to be a
screw driver.
I looked on Lowes' web site, and yes, they do sell Bosch, but the site
said that my local store didn't carry them. We went there anyway, to
look at
I tried this once, almost thirty years ago - built a box out of three
A/C filters, aluminum sheets (top and bottom) and duct tape. There was
way too much moisture in the house, and fine lint did pass through the
filters. Of course, it was too dry without it --
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 5:37 PM, R A
The fibers are too short to make thread from. We tried making hand
laid paper with it - still too short, had to mix it with other fibers.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 12:21 PM, Chuck Landenberger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, if you want a practical solution on what to do with all that lint?
Get a
If you really won't lint, strain the washer water.
I plumbed my house for both black and gray sewage. The black goes directly
to the septic plant. The gray goes to a settlement barrel, then to a 55
gallon barrel with a float operated pump.
I made a six port manifold that allows gray water to
no connection to the bumper
Wonko the Sane wrote:
I think the air bag has some interconnection to the front bumper -- but I
might be in error.
If the steering wheel doesn't have a big balloon sticking out, we should be
cool.
D.
--
Kaleb C. Striplin/Claremore, OK
92 300SD, 92 300E
Where have you been, I though you were dead
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The temp sensor is in the front bumper.
Brian Toscano
Sent from my BlackBerry Smartphone provided by Alltel
--
Kaleb C. Striplin/Claremore, OK
92 300SD, 92 300E 4Matic, 91 300D, 91 300E, 89 560SEL,
87 300SDL x2, 86
That was random...
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2008 1:36 PM
To: mercedes@okiebenz.com
Subject: [MBZ] Ralph E Wasserbaech is out of the office.
I will be out of the office starting
She is attending both Jesuit schools here and at home. For some
reason the jeebus stuff does not seem to compute for her. Still
trying to get her head around people believing in spaghetti. Too hard
to have her understand it is tongue in cheek. I think the way they
teach is too literal
Temp-daughter looks at me strange when I tell her to eat veggies. Or
fruit, or even something new in the way of food, or tell her new
things that challenge her vision of reality. It is as if she were
confronted by a fish and it starts talking to her.
Anyway, she likes her coffee. Talks
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