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onetrack

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onetrack last won the day on August 13

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  1. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    A ghost train.
  2. Todays gripe: I'm thoroughly sick of trying to buy new jeans and pants, and finding the zips are about 75mm long! - and they only reach halfway to the crotch of the strides! What is it about these clothes designers? Do they all think our dicks are located near our navel? Or are they making all mens pants zips the same as womens pants zips? As it is with these jeans and pants, you have to loosen your belt, undo your waist band and drop your strides several cm, to be able to get your old fella out for a wee! The only pants and jeans I've found that have decent 150mm length zips are from Rivers and Country Road - and now it looks like Rivers are going belly-up soon, so I'm going to be stuck with Country Road, which are normally pretty expensive, upmarket strides for good wear. I notice that even Levis and Gazman and Jag are adopting the short zips, so I don't know where all this change in basic good design is going to end up. I reckon the Chinese clothes designers have "dumbed down" a lot of our fashion and clothing now anyway, with good styling in clothes going out the window. Everywhere you look now, you see people dressed sloppily in puffer jackets, trakkie daks, shapeless elastic waist garments galore, and T-shirts now seem like a national icon. Even the collars on shirts today are rubbish, no doubt due to cheap Chinese design. Even good Italian clothes are starting to become a rarity - talk to any Italian, and they moan about how their Italian clothes manufacturing has been taken over by the Chinese in Italy, and dumbed down.
  3. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    It's a loose cannon.
  4. The day any Musk product is in my possession - or even worse - controlling everything in my house - is the day that will never happen.
  5. Trump admires Musk because he has the MOST money of any person in the world - and he recognises the POWER that comes with that wealth - and he's currently in awe of it. But there'll come a time, probably not too far off, when he starts to see Musk becoming a real threat to HIS power, and then Musk will be cast out of the LOYAL followers.
  6. They'd get really curious and examine everything in detail with puzzled looks, and provide entertainment to the observers. Cats and mirrors are the most comical, especially kittens.
  7. The older engines only need fuel additives if they're working long and hard, full throttle, full load. Most of them on display are only loafing along.
  8. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    Caught red-handed.
  9. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    I've always known the saying to be the plural. You wouldn't have just one seat as the best, it's always a group of seats, such as a balcony, or a section of a row of seats.
  10. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    Best seats in the house?
  11. You're not wrong there, Nev. Never come across a place so cold. What is it about the town that makes it so cold? Alpine winds? The altitude?
  12. I was quite surprised to see "Ballaarat" written multiple times on the Salter Bros website. I've never seen this spelling before, but apparently it was the original spelling of Ballarat, and used right up until recent times. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Ballaarat
  13. The original drummer for the Bee Gees, Colin "Smiley" Peterson, has died, aged 78. There's only one of the Gibb brothers left alive now - Barry - he's the last surviving member of the Bee Gees. Colin Petersen was drumming at public performances, as recently as last Saturday. He gained the nickname "Smiley", because he was the child actor of that name in the 1956 film, which also starred Chips Rafferty. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-19/bee-gees-drummer-colin-smiley-petersen-dead-at-78/104618874 Amazingly, Dennis Bryon, who was also a Bee Gees drummer after Petersen left, also died just five days ago, on the 14th November 2024. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/18/arts/music/bee-gees-drummers-dead.html
  14. onetrack

    Brain Teaser

    A recipe for success.
  15. I never knew that Villiers set up in Ballarat, either - but the website below gives us the entire history of the operation. Villiers moved into Ballarat because the Australian Govt placed tariffs on imported engines to protect local manufacturers. So Frank Farrer, the head of Villiers, decided it was viable to set up in Australia and not only meet the sizeable Australian demand for their products, but to export their products to NZ, the Pacific, and SE Asia. Interestingly, "New Australians" (European refugees from the devastation of WW2) made up a sizeable proportion of the Ballarat workforce. https://salterbros.com.au/villiers-australia/ Stationary engines appear to be their mainstay in the 1950's, it looks like motorbikes were a secondary product. I love the photo of the old semi with 1300 Villiers engines on board, being pulled by the Dodge Power Giant - get a look at the 44 gallon drum for a fuel tank! The old Dodge petrol V8's weren't exactly fuel misers! I owned a '62 Inter R190, it was powered by the (Red Diamond) RD-406 engine. Despite being only a 6 cyl, it did 2mpg empty, and 1mpg loaded, pulling my low-loader and Cat D6C's around! Most trucks of this era had a fuel drum tray behind the cabin - you always carried 2 or 3 drums of super petrol with you! I think the original IH fuel tank was 20 gallons, what were IH engineers thinking?
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