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• #80602
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• #80603
Pretty sure my parents' rarely used Sony one is going spare. I'm away for two weeks, how urgent is your need?
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• #80604
If you have a relatively new tv it may have this built in if you plug in an external USB HDD or flash drive.
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• #80605
How do I fix this? Photos arent opening on my computer.
1 Attachment
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• #80606
How do I fix this? Photos arent opening on my computer.
Opens pretty much any raster image file. Small, free, great batch functions. Not a full image editing program, but enough that literally every image I've ever posted anywhere has been through Irfanview (and no other raster image editor) for one reason or another.
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• #80608
Well me neither, but hey no worries
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• #80609
Are enamel paints toxic when dry?
I've made a little steel tumbler and want to paint it, I have enamel paints in various colours but I don't really want to poison anyone...
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• #80610
Don't.
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• #80611
That's impossible to really know. You are unlikely to find out without extensive testing on bunny rabbits and mice etc. The chances are stuff used for Airfix models and the like may be safe but then they're not designed for heat or rattling against teeth and the like. If the surface is good enough and you can scrounge like a champion a local plating firm might chuck it in with something else they're doing. Et voilĂ a chromed tumbler - much cooler.
This all depends on there being a local platers and you prostituting yourself. -
• #80612
Rah, guess I'll just use stainless next
Time :) -
• #80613
I want some cord to make a pulley for a broken zip.
The type I'm after is that stuff that you get on the end bit of USB lanyard.
Weirdly this isn't the first time I've been after some. Does anyone know what it's called by any chance?
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• #80614
a shoelace?
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• #80615
No, I'm after that specific type of thread - I guess it's some sort of nylon thread? Seems to be attached to loads of things.
I just wondered if anyone knew if it has a specific name / mm, etc.
Although I've now found that you can get various sorts of kevlar threads, which would do the same.
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• #80616
Webbing, you can get cotton or nylon. I use it a lot at work and always prefer to use cotton. You can get various widths and it comes on a roll so you can get as much/little as you need.
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• #80617
is it possible to buy miniture reproductions of famous sculptures? ideally Hepworth, or Moore.
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• #80618
I'm thinking of buying a Roku stick but there seem to be loads of options. Just looking for cheap, 1080p (4k not needed) and that's about it. Alternatively (this would be my preference) are any of the Android sticks any good. I had one a few years ago and it was pretty poor. Just something portable to plug into the back of a tv.
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• #80619
Anyone got experience with Clement Xplor USH?
I've been using them for a couple of month and feel they may be a bit more slippery than what I'm used to... Could just be coincidental though. Nearly fell off today on the little roundabout north of Lambeth bridge... Luckily I wasn't clipped in, flat pedals, and I could just about save it, would have been otherwise nasty with all the traffic around... I wasn't leaning much and wasn't going very fast either. -
• #80620
Probably because the knobbie on the side don't offer much grip compare to slick tyres, plus if you rode them above idea pressure, it's very slippery.
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• #80622
Be best if you specify diameter; are you referring to the skinny bit or the longer shoelacey thing?
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• #80623
True indeed about side thingy... But I never inflate above recommendations though. Thanks
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• #80624
You may even need to inflate below recommendation to get the best range of grip, speed and comfort.
MTB tyres usually recommend 40psi (ish), but even then, dropping to 20psi make a massive difference in grip allowing the tyres to spread more on the ground, ditto to cyclocross tyres that people often run at 25-35psi, way below the recommendation of those tyres just so it'll work in the mud.
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• #80625
Ed Scoble stars in this weeks episode of PSI:London
bustedpumpgauge.jpg
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