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References: [ +from:ken.landaiche@nokia.com: 138 ]

Total 138 documents matching your query.

61. RE: painted shop floors (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2002 11:43:51 -0800
I painted with toxic epoxy. Early reports of water based epoxies were not very favorable. But I'll bet they have improved greatly over the years. It has held up very well to jack stands and jacks. I
/html/shop-talk/2002-03/msg00130.html (9,333 bytes)

62. RE: Questions on Air line plumbing (NOT PVC) (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Fri, 1 Feb 2002 15:42:14 -0800
Just this morning I was shopping for compressors and had this conversation about piping with the proprietor. Here is a summary. Copper pipe is fine. You already have the pipe, but the larger the dia
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00002.html (10,226 bytes)

63. Compressor ratings (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2002 14:47:41 -0800
I burned out my tiny compressor this winter by running it continuously one day. It made lots of impressive smoke. So now I'm shopping for a two stage unit (that can run at 100% duty cycle!) and am fa
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00067.html (7,584 bytes)

64. RE: Spotweld cutters (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2002 09:21:58 -0800
I have never heard of a spotweld cutter. How does one actually use them? Ken Landaiche /// unsubscribe/change address requests to majordomo@autox.team.net or try /// http://www.team.net/mailman/listi
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00090.html (7,299 bytes)

65. RE: Spotweld cutters (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2002 09:41:42 -0800
So it is used to cut out spot welds! I thought it _made_ spot welds with 3/8" holes in them for some very mysterious reason. Thanks for the education. Ken (fiberglass car :) Landaiche Visualize a sma
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00092.html (7,944 bytes)

66. RE: Concrete Advice (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2002 09:52:39 -0800
A friend of mine who epoxied his garage floor found a material designed to fill those expansion cracks to make the whole floor smooth. It must be at least slightly elastomeric; he knows what expansio
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00117.html (7,635 bytes)

67. RE: Light Bulb Dilemma (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Wed, 20 Feb 2002 08:57:47 -0800
Check the voltage at the fixtures. Ken Friend of mine is having a rough time with light bulbs in his living room. We've gone through a few things to try and we're coming up dark. His next step is to
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00128.html (9,294 bytes)

68. RE: compressed air system components (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2002 18:06:00 -0800
It looks like the HF auto-drain isn't a very good idea. Ken (getting set to plumb a compressor) Landaiche /// unsubscribe/change address requests to majordomo@autox.team.net or try /// http://www.tea
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00184.html (8,148 bytes)

69. RE: When to use SWA (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2002 13:51:17 -0800
I don't know what your building codes are like. But here regular wiring can be run to outbuildings in PVC conduit in a trench. BTW, what's SWA? Ken I have 2 small outbuildings that I use as workshops
/html/shop-talk/2002-02/msg00193.html (7,733 bytes)

70. RE: I'm not, but Why can't I (score: 1)
Author: ken.landaiche@nokia.com
Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2002 20:27:46 +0200
I think you are right; it has to do with DEATH, avoiding it. Compressors don't normally clean the air. In fact some allow oil vapors to get into the air. I suspect a breathing air compressor has to f
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00078.html (8,869 bytes)

71. Compressor unloading (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2002 11:35:37 -0800
Here's a twist on the compressor thread. Lets say I find the perfect upright, oiled compressor. The ones I see at Home Depot are on pallets. So they manage to load it onto my pickup, probably with a
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00121.html (7,996 bytes)

72. RE: Compressor unloading (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2002 14:15:41 -0800
Thanks everyone for the suggestions. It looks like my problem isn't as much of one as I thought. I've read here for years that they were top heavy and assumed they were also heavy heavy. To summarize
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00132.html (8,072 bytes)

73. RE: Compressor unloading (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2002 15:21:27 -0800
Come now, any excuse to buy beer will be taken. :) Of course then I'll have to get a mini refrigerator. But any decent shop should have one of those. Ken L it Don't you have any friends? Or are you j
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00134.html (8,241 bytes)

74. RE: something I hope you never need (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 09:54:46 -0800
Having seen lots of convincing looking hoaxes, I checked all of these numbers on the companies' websites. They are the correct fraud reporting numbers. Ken Landaiche --Original Message-- FYI To prote
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00141.html (7,391 bytes)

75. RE: bolt shear strength (score: 1)
Author: <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 09:42:35 -0800
Not to beat this too far into the ground, but I would think that threads or their absence, or their profile, would change stress concentrations and so the shear strength. Maybe tensile and shear stre
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00190.html (8,378 bytes)

76. RE: project insurance (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2001 17:18:54 -0800
I have non-opped my Europa several times during the winter. I also use State Farm. The procedure has been to get full insurance, then after a month, cut it back to "Fire and Theft" at about $50/six m
/html/shop-talk/2001-12/msg00076.html (8,642 bytes)

77. RE: humidifiers? (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Nov 2001 10:55:23 -0800
During college, I lived in a very old house with a hot water heating system. Up in my room in the attic, just about no heat came out of the radiators. So I had the brilliant idea of removing the regu
/html/shop-talk/2001-11/msg00071.html (8,256 bytes)

78. RE: Basement floor (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2001 09:45:26 -0700
What is under the tiles? What are the tiles? Could you just paint over the tiles? That would be the least allergenic solution. We had a loading dock floor at work whose linoleum tiles were cracking.
/html/shop-talk/2001-10/msg00004.html (7,690 bytes)

79. RE: Sinking cottage (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2001 09:53:21 -0700
Why is it sinking? My 1928 house appears to be sinking as well. But it is really that the sandy soil around it creeps slowly down hill, like a decades-long avalanche. It amounts to the same thing, th
/html/shop-talk/2001-10/msg00005.html (8,804 bytes)

80. RE: Sinking cottage (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2001 15:34:32 -0700
Professional house lifters have lots of hydraulic hoses and jacks. From one location at the truck, they can lift a house using quite a few jacks. I still wonder about the rigidity, though. The slab f
/html/shop-talk/2001-10/msg00008.html (7,921 bytes)


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