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Smiffy2

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Posts posted by Smiffy2

  1. 52 minutes ago, Coombe Barton said:

    I have a microwave - haven't used it for about three years.

    Air fryer? What for?

    Is there anything that cooks better than in a conventional oven/hob? 'Cos that's what I use.

    Frozen chips, sausages, pies & pasties, small portions of roast meat, the things I quoted earlier. The point is that it's smaller, simpler and cheaper to run than a big oven.

    Some charities give them to families in financial distress as a way of cutting energy bills.

    • Like 8
    • Agree 2
    • Informative/Useful 4
    • Interesting/Thought-provoking 2
  2. 1 hour ago, Trestrol said:

    The Repair Shop is a good programme although even on the UK one some of the methods look a bit iffy. Dom on last night's was painting some large wooden wall plaque. Close up shot of a paint brush dipping in the paint, brush then lifted up and dribble paint everywhere. Anyone else get the feeling it's getting more about the sob story rather than the repair? Maybe it's just me getting a cynical old git in my old age. 

    Same thing happened with DIY SOS, the stories took over, and it often felt awkward...

    • Agree 2
  3. In the brief period of my life in which I worked for an estate agent, yes, downstairs rooms were referred to as 'reception rooms'. Probably not the dining room, unless you were stretching it.

     

    And some of the stories I could tell...

    • Like 15
    • Informative/Useful 1
  4. I've just seen an episode of the Australian version of 'Repair Shop' - the programme where members of the public bring broken things with high sentimental value to a bunch of experts who fix them up and leave everyone with a nice, warm fuzzy feeling.

    The Oz one left my jaw on the floor.

     

    A kid brought in a train set - literally a Hornby Dublo 3-rail set which had belonged to his grandfather. Neither he or his mother had ever seen it set up or running but they wanted it fixed.

     

    The boy said he wanted to see his 'favourite train' running again. He said it was the Flying Scotsman. That got my attention, 'cos I don't remember that one...

     

    In fact it was 'Duchess of Montrose' in BR Green. Missing the front bogie, the pony truck and the tender. And, it transpired, the motor.

     

    They gave the job to the 'electronics expert' - who repairs radios and so on. He proceeded to strip the motor from a working loco and just stuck it in Montrose. Which they then gave back to the child (who struck me as being a bit odd) still minus tender, bogie and pony truck, with no attempt to clean it up from its rather shabby condition.

     

    Then triumphant bleating as it ran round an oval of track on just the driving wheels whilst said kid squealed with delight.

     

    When I have seen what the team in the UK version can do I was appalled...

    • Like 6
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  5. I wonder if I might impose upon the worthies here for some advice, given that we have modellers of skill and resource?

    My daughter-in-law's father died last year, and she was greatly upset. Last month she visited - he lived in Spain - to find some mementoes to remember him by, only to find that most had been thrown away. She did find, however, a model plane (he was a keen amateur pilot) but in packing it her mother broke it into pieces, bent pieces at that.

    This is how it is now.

    RS2_2039.jpeg.5287a569f9140ec957a7fa39eeb0f8db.jpeg

     

    RS2_2040.jpeg.0b7ce1ee032d9f64c3d1e5a0a75662ad.jpegRS2_2041.jpeg.52489cd5e440ea2e63f1274bbd9d91ad.jpegRS2_2042.jpeg.82882ecd9a21204574679fb76332af07.jpegRS2_2043.jpeg.c32194ade135f2ef71c701c827a43798.jpeg

     

    It is very heavy, and may have either been a kit, or has been repaired in the past - signs of superglue. 

    What advice would you give a chimp who is desperately keen not to screw this up, as it would mean so much to her to see it fettled and standing on a proper plinth. The metal doesn't seem to be too brittle (I've partly straightened the airscrew with my fingers) but I know how casting metal goes...

    I've also cleaned and  fettled one of his film cameras (Nikon F60) and found a film in it which I've sent off to be processed. I'm planning to use that camera to take a 'family portrait' of Dan & Rebecca and have it framed as a memento.

     

    So any sound advice would be extremely appreciated. TIA.

    • Like 5
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  6. 2 hours ago, Hroth said:

     

    You tell the reader what you are going to tell them.

    You tell them.

    You tell them what you have told them.

     

     

    And all good lesson plans, of course.

    • Like 12
  7. In colloquial English 'French' often means 'done differently so we assume it's foreign and France is nearest' - see also French Knitting and French Cricket. And 'pardon my French' when using an English, or even Anglo-Saxon swearie.

    • Like 8
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