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system 4-50

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Posts posted by system 4-50

  1. My father's family buried their treasures in their garden.  This was 1939/40ish and the Russians were coming.  It is still there (now part of Ukraine, and the Russians are still coming…).  The principle and most highly cherished item in the collection was a typewriter, I'm told.

  2. I can't add salt to food, it gives me leg cramps in the night.

    OP:

    Get yourself a glass container with a good-fitting glass lid.

    Put a cup of phosphorus pentoxide inside the container together with but separate from, your salt.

    Seal the joint between the lid and the container with a non-setting, non-aqueous, sealing grease.

    Dry salt guaranteed.  Whether its still edible or not, I don't know :-

    Wiki:

    "Phosphorus pentoxide itself is not flammable. Just like sulfur trioxide, it reacts vigorously with water and water-containing substances like wood or cotton, liberates much heat and may even cause fire due to the highly exothermic nature of such reactions. It is corrosive to metal and is very irritating – it may cause severe burns to the eye, skin, mucous membrane, and respiratory tract even at concentrations as low as 1 mg/m3."

     

  3. I'd like to point out the distinction bewteen "coal" and "smokeless fuel", so I will.

    This taken from Wiki:

    "Smokeless fuels serve as a potential replacement for fuels such as coal, which produce smoke upon combustion. Examples of smokeless fuels are anthracite, coke, charcoal and hexamine fuel tablets. Smoke-free carbonaceous fuels for domestic use are usually supplied in the form of standard pillow-shaped briquettes." 

    Coal is quite different from Smokeless Fuel.

  4. 11 hours ago, Jennarasion said:

    You would be shocked with my discoveries over the months 😂 im going to be booking a bss exam soon, just to see whats not up to scratch in general

    Don't book a BSS inspection unless you need one anyway.  Book an unofficial "pre-BSS" inspection from a BSS guy instead.  If you have an official BSS inspection then your current BSS certificate becomes void and you have to get any significant work done immediately regardless of how important you think it is.  If you have a "pre-BSS" inspection then you can deal with any issues in your own time frame though obviously you'd get any serious ones done quickly.  Once all work is done then you can get the same guy to do the official BSS and it won't take very long.  This will cost more but can save a lot of stress.  I did this when installing my gas systems as I didn't want my BSS voided by any faults found in the gas system which I wasn't relying on anyway.

    • Greenie 1
  5. My narrowboat, as was, not useful but I enjoy wallowing in the memory so here goes:

    Mostly solo so able to just manage with only 60ft.

    SF stove central in boat, both x and y.  So lounge central also.  

    Galley at stern so that wife who does all our cooking was near to the steerer (on the rare occasions that she came on the boat) who was more willing to be out in the cold.  Straight either side layout kitchen, with full 60cm cooker& hob on one side & narrow units including sink on the other.

    6 seater dinette in between.

    Straight sofa convertable to bunk beds in the lounge, NO "L" shaped sofas because I detest them.  (The horizontal portions are too deep for my legs, the backs are not sufficiently near-vertical for me, and the angle is wasted space.)

    Gas water heater in the lounge on the adjacent bathroom wall to minimise pipework to the shower.

    Jabsco flush mascerating toilet connected to pumpout tank near the bow.

    Bedroom with fixed double bed 200 x 140 cm so bigger than some, with 800L water tanks underneath.

    6 seater well deck.

    4 x 13Kg gas bottles in transverse bench locker at stern.

    All services, pipework, wiring, etc completely accessible.

    What will I do next time?  72ft.  An automatic folding rigid canopy over the cruiser stern.  Pale roof colour.  But definitely same hull builder.

    • Greenie 1
  6. from Wiki:

    For nearly all models of induction cooktops, a cooking vessel must be made of, or contain, a ferrous metal such as cast iron or some stainless steels. The iron in the pot concentrates the current to produce heat in the metal. If the metal is too thin, or does not provide enough resistance to current flow, heating will not be effective. Induction tops typically will not heat copper or aluminum vessels because the magnetic field cannot produce a concentrated current, but cast iron, carbon steel and stainless steel pans usually work. Any vessel can be used if placed on a suitable metal disk which functions as a conventional hotplate.

     

  7. 4 hours ago, Yvonne samosa said:

    Small plot of land to rent or buy? Anyone know of anything please?

    A friend of mine sells 1 sq M plots of land in Scotland, would one of these suit you?  You acquire a title of "Laird of .." for your plot.

  8. Bubble testers have a maximum throughput, not that it is relevant in this small load case.  So I had two.  No inspector ever used them, they all connected a manometer instead.  One did eventually show that gunk from the bottles was getting down the lines which was useful.  Bubble testers do introduce extra joints but they live in the relatively safe area near the bottles.  In my next boat, probably on the Astral Plane, I will not bother with installing them.  (One ispector said I should have installed only one bubble tester with a bypass loop and valves.)

  9. 5 hours ago, peterboat said:

    Same on our moorings most livaboards are there due to divorce or failed relationships, both sexes.

    It is time somebody put some serious work into researching why so many relationships fail.  Our kids endure so many years of education, and how much of that is focused on helping them to make successful partnerships? Almost none?  If more were successful there would a need for fewer individual housing units.  Perhaps fewer(!) liveaboards?   A government initiative to encourage long-lived three and four-somes might even eliminate the housing shortage at the cost of encouraging 72ft narrowboats and more fatties?

    • Greenie 1
  10. 8 minutes ago, peterboat said:

    Do they move? If so as long as they are causing obstruction of the highway they aren't doing anything wrong as long as the vehicles are road legal. Cornwall recently had to explain its actions with a freedom of information request on campervans second time of asking they eventually provided the required information. Afterwards a series of prosecutions had to be reversed. We park on roads etc using various apps we have never been asked to move on. We use lots of very cheap car parks as long as we are allowed. 

    not?

  11. 10 hours ago, Jerra said:

    I think the last time we were able to feed ourselves was in the 18th century so it isn't a new phenomenon.  

     

    The population then was around 6,500,000

    One day we will be able to feed ourselves again.  Because a lot of people will have died off to get us back to nearer that figure in a major famine.  Unless we still have sufficient unburnt oil to turn into food, or we have perfected limitless energy from nuclear fusion that is not the Sun.  Or we have invented perpetual motion.  Look up famine in Wikipedia to see how fragile our food supply has been.  In olden times a crop yield of 7 for 1 was excellent.  Now with modern technology we get 30 to 1, but our population has grown to an extent where we depend on that.  Spanish Flue and Covid have reminded us that our environment hates us and that we should be planning for the worse yet to come.

    But it won't happen today, so have a nice day!

  12. We are overpopulated.  We are unable to grow enough food to feed ourselves despite highly intensive methods that make no allowance for the varying climate that this country is known to have had in the past.  We can import stuff now but this will not always be true.  The standards for housing have been watered down so they are smaller.   Our population density makes no allowance for the vast areas of our country that nobody wants to live in.  We have insufficient wealth-creating industries to absorb extra workers but we are highly skilled in developing service industries that drain resources.   We are going to seed, with the decline in living standards that goes with it, and its only going to get worse.  We are going to be poorer and poorer.  

    • Greenie 2
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