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- Today
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What sort of scrap bins do you hang around?? That's high quality scrap!
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Back in the day, many Chinese made better money by growing market gardens and selling food to european miners.
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Thanks very much onetrack, I've been wondering about it's origin for a fair while now. I found it in a scrap bin.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
onetrack replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
A large, moisture-laden air mass is feeding into a trough in front of a huge high pressure system, over Western Qld and Northern NSW. As you say, any decent amount of rain originates from the Northern maritime region latitudes. This tropical air mass is feeding in from the Northern section of the Indian Ocean, and it's bound to carry some reasonable amount of rain to SW Qld and Northern NSW. When the Bureau say there's a "100% certainty" of rain, they're not often wrong. Only the total amount of rainfall is in doubt, and that can vary widely over a relatively small area. I thought the weak cold front that came through W.A. on Thursday morning had nothing behind it. But the tip of another cold front followed it, and we got 8mm of rain in the City on Thursday night. However, the rain didn't penetrate very far inland. http://satview.bom.gov.au/ -
Willie, it's a Lake LA-4 amphibian yoke. https://baspartsales.com/lake-la-4-amphibian-control-yoke-assembly/?srsltid=AfmBOopFfbDmE4BcC52kNRcV9IE4eU08wTVYK_YIUP5JflOc0h75eehh They come up nicely when beab blasted. https://baspartsales.com/lake-la-4-amphibian-control-yoke-assembly-bead-blasted-diameter-7-8/?srsltid=AfmBOorPMarLKq9xxaiWzt0qwUAzBaC7XoZgtZcGp-SEWSt8LwPP4XzO
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Just wondering if anyone recognises what this yolk would belong to. It's only small, about 240mm across and has a logo in the centre that looks like an 'L'.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
facthunter replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Yes there's funny things happening in a couple of Places . It's hard to Predict the Amount of rain. from the Information I have. 1 inch won't do much. Nev -
It was well known amongst the farmer clients I did contract work for in the 1970's and 1980's, that trusts were necessary to avoid paying tax. They were rampant in that period, with many "smart" accountants promoting them.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
onetrack replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
OME is gonna be drookit on Monday and Tuesday, nothing surer. https://www.bom.gov.au/places/nsw/gilgandra/forecast/ -
There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
facthunter replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
The Biggest HIGH That I've ever registered on my Barometer is over New Zealand right now. 1041 mbs. These days, forecasts 2 weeks away are stretching it. Air Mass analysis is what's needed. Lots of water can only come from tropical maritime air. You will never get much rain from way down south and the Polar regions are as dry as deserts.. Air masses are Modified by what they Pass over. Nev -
Many Trusts are tax dodging RORTS. That's what They are aiming at. Nev.
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Boy Scouts Know their Knots.. Nev
- Yesterday
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Foreigners visiting our country say they often have difficulty with the Aussie vernacular. For example, the shortening of words. Arvo, servo, g'day, footy, etc. Another is the great Australian "NOT" - how the answer to many questions is what it's not - How are you today? Not bad. How much further? Not far. How many of those lollies did you eat? Not many. What did you pay for those sneakers? Not much. When are you knocking off? Not long.
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All bullshit to scare about making trusts not dodge tax.
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https://au.finance.yahoo.com/news/death-tax-hidden-in-the-budget-set-to-accelerate-inheritance-trend-do-it-earlier-005525441.html
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Celebrating Positives (offset of the Gripes Thread)
Litespeed replied to Jerry_Atrick's topic in General Discussion
Which means you have all the gear to build that rat bike -
It needs some juvenile deliquent boot camps to be set up, with decent instructors teaching these kids the basics of acceptable social behaviour, so they can learn to be useful citizens. Remember a lot of these kids just fend for themselves, they get fed poorly, get no boundaries set for them, follow no routines, stay up all night, get abused, get involved with drugs and alcohol. A lot of young girls indulge in bad behaviour because they're being sexually abused, get angry about it, and take out their anger on anything they can lay their hands on. Boot camps with strict but fair discipline, instructors who can teach the kids about relationships, behaviour, how to handle emotions, how to handle abusive behaviour - in general, all the life skills one needs to survive in the big bad world - are needed. But where you get these people from, I don't know. Most parents have their hands full with their own offspring playing up. The W.A. Govt started a few remote region boot camps for young Aboriginal criminals, but most fell over after a while as the people running them threw in the towel due to the demands on them. Getting the kids away from the city and into the bush takes away a lot of the source of the criminality problem. The cities are breeding zones for criminality.
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I seem to remember reading something about the Chinese doing a lot of crevicing in the old days.
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Celebrating Positives (offset of the Gripes Thread)
willedoo replied to Jerry_Atrick's topic in General Discussion
Yes, it is. He's a good bloke, a Kiwi originally and a machinist by trade. I used to do volunteer work with him at our local air museum. They sold their house in a hinterland town to move into a unit near the hospital, so between that and the health issues, he sold off all his workshop equipment. I bought most of it, a lathe, mill, bench grinders, steel welding bench, a press and heaps of other stuff. Being a machinist his lathe came with a lot of extras, a keyless chuck and heaps of tooling he'd made plus a lot of rounds in steel and ali for turning. -
I understand what you say, but just dropping everything and letting her go isn't going to teach her anything either. She has to learn there are consequences.
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Just seems like a summation of the facts at the time, to Me. Nev
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Move to Queensland. They have already done that. I don't consider it the Appropriate response. Education in Bluestone college at a young age is No answer to anything... Nev
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Today's gripe - the legal system. Yesterday a girl was up on over 100 charges, including hooning around in a stolen car and injuring someone, antisemitic activities and an online search "Where do Jews live." All charges were dropped by police prosecutors, because her solicitor said at 13 she was too young to know what she was doing was bad. What a crock of shit. Not only should she have been thrown in the slammer - she'd soon learn it was bad, but her parents should also have been charged with being lousy parents and for not keeping her under control. It's the same with all these kids running around fire bombing the place. Where are the parents? The age of criminal responsibility has to be lowered.
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I like this quote. It is from Victorian member of the legislative assembly WC Smith MLA in an 1874 speech. Talk about prejudice! In such cases, where through the poverty of the ground mines could not be profitably worked with European labour, the European population had no objection to Chinese exercising their proper function-namely, that of gold-field Scavengers. But all this time the Chinese were being educated underground by European miners. They were rapidly acquiring knowledge as to underground work. Chinese carpenters could now put timber together almost like cabinetwork. They did not work so rapidly as Europeans, but they worked for a price at which Europeans must give up competition with them. The Chinese had taken the outposts. They were at Haddon, Creswick, and Scottsdale, and were gradually extending their operations, and unless some reasonable arrangement was arrived at, they would gradually oust the Europeans altogether. They had no responsibilities in the form of wives and children, and all they looked for was rice, with a stolen fowl occasionally to flavour it, and some opium; and the amount they contributed to the general or local revenue was insignificant. As soon as they had mastered the underground work, which, as he had said, was being taught to them by Europeans, it would be impossible for the latter to compete successfully with them. They were allowed to work in poor mines, and he did not see how they were to be prevented by-and-bye from being introduced into mines paying dividends. That would be the inevitable conclusion, and this difficulty must be fairly looked in the face by Ballarat and every other gold-field. There were 350,000,000 of Chinese in China, and that fact alone demanded serious consideration.
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Celebrating Positives (offset of the Gripes Thread)
facthunter replied to Jerry_Atrick's topic in General Discussion
Good News. Nev
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