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#51
posted to rec.boats
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On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote:
On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: Â*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. Â*He had to glass vials with the components in it. Â*He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. Â*I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. Â*I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Â*Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. Â*The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Â*Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. Â*After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. Â*:-) I would just use gravel. Â*Maybe quarter dust. Â*The small stuff that makes great pathways. Â*A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. Â*You're right. Â*It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. |
#52
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
On Thursday, 18 October 2018 13:16:14 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote: On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: Â*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. Â*He had to glass vials with the components in it. Â*He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. Â*I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. Â*I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Â*Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. Â*The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Â*Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. Â*After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. Â*:-) I would just use gravel. Â*Maybe quarter dust. Â*The small stuff that makes great pathways. Â*A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. Â*You're right. Â*It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. When you think about it...maybe even the insurance and upkeep would have been a burden on him. |
#53
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
John H. wrote:
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 23:20:17 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. He had to glass vials with the components in it. He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. :-) I would just use gravel. Maybe quarter dust. The small stuff that makes great pathways. A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. We've got six-inch curbs, so no fear of it being snow-plowed. But the mailbox is heavy. That's why I want to be sure of the support. It's made from high-density polyethylene (HDPE), better known as 'poly-lumber'. Pretty heavy stuff when compared to a tin or plastic mailbox. https://www.dutchcrafters.com/Amish-...ailbox/p/54986 Beautiful work on this thing. I think you are over thinking the strength needed. We have a similar style mailbox. Not at the curb, but on the porch. Is on a 4x4 in a tire rim. Bolt in the bottom and 4 rods from the side to the post. Rim filled with dirt as a planter. This is 2nd mailbox in same rim. Older box, had the plywood splitting. And that is over 25 years. |
#54
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
Oct 17True North Tim True North - hide quoted text - - show quoted text - Huh? I was just stating facts and common sense. John did state that there was water in the hole and the video said there should be no standing water. Others have commented on the same thing. ........ Well Don, you’re right about that. I mistakenly posted a post to the wrong post post. I’ll have to look up the post in question and repost my post on your post. 🙄😆 |
#55
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 12:16:09 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote: On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. *He had to glass vials with the components in it. *He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. *I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. *I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: *Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. *The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. *Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. *After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. *:-) I would just use gravel. *Maybe quarter dust. *The small stuff that makes great pathways. *A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. *You're right. *It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. Nice. Unfortunately all I can think about when I see that car is Jessica Simpson in her Daisy Duke hot pants. :-) |
#56
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
Tim says...
"Well Don, you’re right about that. I mistakenly posted a post to the wrong post post. Â*I’ll have to look up the post in question and repost my post on your post. 🙄😆" I fully understand. John has that effect on people. ;-) |
#57
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
On 10/18/2018 5:08 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 12:16:09 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote: On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: Â*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. Â*He had to glass vials with the components in it. Â*He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. Â*I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. Â*I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Â*Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. Â*The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Â*Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. Â*After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. Â*:-) I would just use gravel. Â*Maybe quarter dust. Â*The small stuff that makes great pathways. Â*A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. Â*You're right. Â*It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. Nice. Unfortunately all I can think about when I see that car is Jessica Simpson in her Daisy Duke hot pants. :-) Never really got into the "modern" version. I still think of Catherine Bach in the original series. Of course at 64 years old now she doesn't look quite the same as she did 30 something years ago. |
#58
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
4:23 PMTrue North Tim says... "Well Don, you’re right about that. I mistakenly posted a post to the wrong post post. I’ll have to look up the post in question and repost my post on your post. 🙄😆" I fully understand. John has that effect on people. ;-) .......... AAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHH!!! |
#59
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/18/2018 5:08 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 12:16:09 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote: On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: Â*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. Â*He had to glass vials with the components in it. Â*He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. Â*I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. Â*I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Â*Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. Â*The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Â*Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. Â*After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. Â*:-) I would just use gravel. Â*Maybe quarter dust. Â*The small stuff that makes great pathways. Â*A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. Â*You're right. Â*It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. Nice. Unfortunately all I can think about when I see that car is Jessica Simpson in her Daisy Duke hot pants. :-) Never really got into the "modern" version. I still think of Catherine Bach in the original series. Of course at 64 years old now she doesn't look quite the same as she did 30 something years ago. Not as fantastic, but still good. http://www.zimbio.com/photos/Catheri...st/YpuL-wCjvgx |
#60
posted to rec.boats
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New post stuff
On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 17:36:56 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:08 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 12:16:09 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/18/2018 10:51 AM, Its Me wrote: On Thursday, October 18, 2018 at 7:39:52 AM UTC-4, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/18/2018 5:58 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 18 Oct 2018 03:31:30 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - hide quoted text - On 10/17/2018 7:20 PM, Bill wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:54:57 -0400, John H. wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 16:19:33 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/17/2018 1:42 PM, John H. wrote: A friend told me about this stuff: Â*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uaIVIUVOyM Will try it. I remember my dad using stuff like that back when I was just a kid. Didn't come in a bag though. Â*He had to glass vials with the components in it. Â*He used it to put flotation foam on each end of a canoe and also between the rafters on the underside of a raft we had in a small lake. Only thing I noticed in the video is that there cannot be any standing water in the hole. Â*I seem to remember you commenting that there was water or the water table was very high or something. Yeah, like I told Greg - I'm going to let things dry up a bit. Project is now postponed until next week. We're going on a camping trip tomorrow. === John, I believe you're over thinking this thing. Â*I'd do it pretty much the way Greg has suggested: Â*Mix up some concrete the usual way with some sand and gravel; Insert post in ground; Pour concrete around it. Â*The concrete, being heavier than water, will sink to the bottom and push the water up until it overflows. Â*Check post for vertical, open a beer, and come back in a couple of hours. Â*After all it's just a mailbox, not a structural support for a high rise building. Â*:-) I would just use gravel. Â*Maybe quarter dust. Â*The small stuff that makes great pathways. Â*A heck of a lot easier to replace the post when a snowplow or idiot driver takes it out. "We call that "stone dust" around here. Â*You're right. Â*It's available in various colors and looks nice as walkways." Same as crusher dust? There's also pea gravel used on walkways. Believe it's a quarter of an inch in diameter. Pea gravel seems to be round stuff. Stone dust / quarter dust is more broken rock. Yup. Here's an example of a newly installed (by me) walkway that was pea stone covered by stone dust. It hadn't "packed down" yet but in time it did and became very hard. It was a walkway that ran from the driveway along the side of our house leading to the backyard and pool area. The truck was the F-350 diesel that I had all kinds of problems with and eventually got rid of it. Nice truck though ... Harley Davidson edition, all leather and every option. Hated to get rid of it but the 6.0L diesel Ford used at the time had serious issues. I had the General Lee for a while, put a new high performance 440ci engine in it but ended up gifting it to a Army dude who got seriously injured in Iraq due to an IED that blew up under his HumVee. He was a "Dukes of Hazard" nut and dreamed of having a car like this. Made his day (and mine). http://funkyimg.com/i/2MdAM.jpg Hemmings article about car: https://www.hemmings.com/blog/tag/randy-hyatt/ Great picture. It's funny how it just looks like a place that would be cold and snowy in the winter. There's just something about northern homes and landscaping that gives it away to my eye. It's a shame the guy sold the car. You never know what might have been going on in his life. I don't know if he sold it or not. Apparently other people, including the owner of the car museum in Florida who I bought it from became aware of the story and he removed it from eBay before it sold. Later, I received an email from a senior person in the military who was very kind in his words and thanks. That had more meaning to me than the car. The way I looked at it, he was married, had two young kids at the time, was medically discharged from the Army and maybe some extra money became more important than a goofy car. That's one thing I've done all my life. No strings attached to gifts. He didn't ask for the car. I decided to give it to him. Nice. Unfortunately all I can think about when I see that car is Jessica Simpson in her Daisy Duke hot pants. :-) Never really got into the "modern" version. I still think of Catherine Bach in the original series. Of course at 64 years old now she doesn't look quite the same as she did 30 something years ago. Did you see the new politically correct version? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHO1...ature=youtu.be |
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The only scum lower than people who post political stuff on rec.boats.... | General |