No, it actually only takes one to make my hand cramp, I just didn't want to
sound like a baby. ;)
Ron,
Certain jurisdictions in NJ used to require the engraved dual color plastic
placards like you're talking about, and they added so much extra info, the
placard was the same size as a regular
You may need to change your email from the blitzkrieger to the Limp Wrist.
On 3/19/2014 12:50 PM, Ben Young wrote:
No, it actually only takes one to make my hand cramp, I just didn't want to
sound like a baby. ;)
Ron,
Certain jurisdictions in NJ used to require the engraved dual color
Forest,
Did you also want to change yours to 'The-I-Don't-Get-Sarcasm-Guy?'
Benjamin Young
On Wed, Mar 19, 2014 at 1:21 PM, Forest Wilson cherokeefire...@aol.comwrote:
You may need to change your email from the blitzkrieger to the Limp Wrist.
On 3/19/2014 12:50 PM, Ben Young wrote:
Has anyone ever tried laminating hydraulic placards or general information
signs before, and would you be willing to offer any pros or cons of doing
this?
NFPA 13 only says that the signs have to be metal or rigid plastic. So my
thought is if you use a heavy enough laminating pouch, say 5-7
: sprinklerforum-boun...@lists.firesprinkler.org
[mailto:sprinklerforum-boun...@lists.firesprinkler.org] On Behalf Of Ben
Young
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2014 10:56 AM
To: sprinklerforum@lists.firesprinkler.org
Subject: Laminated placards and info signs
Has anyone ever tried laminating hydraulic
Is your hand really sore and cramping after filling out 2 Hydraulic
Plaque signs?
On 3/18/2014 12:55 PM, Ben Young wrote: I know I can't be the only
person that gets tired of filling out hydraulic placards. My hand starts
cramping up after two, and the last one is always barely legible.
I think the laminating reference is to using one piece of plastic, say red,
with information written like lettering templates and then laminating a
solid backing, say white, to it. You get highly legible signage and if the
letters are big enough it also doubles as the requirement for raised or