AmphetamineCrown
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AmphetamineCrown

While this is a very useful technique, just be aware that the way he did it—going 360 around the piece—means you will be climb cutting in certain areas. That can lead to the piece jumping or tearout (both of which you actually see in the video). I might reverse direction to avoid that, since you might lose a finger or

I make a double batch of lemonade pretty much every Sunday during the summer, which means I’m squeezing about a dozen lemons a week. If you reach that level of lemon-squeezing goodness, I’m going to highly recommend an Orange-X juicer (http://www.amazon.com/Jupiter-Large-…). I’ve owned mine for about 20 years, and not

I usually toss it after about a month or so—but you have to store in the fridge. I’ll keep a spare tube in my pantry. Unopened they have a loooong shelf life. But since recipes usually call for a minimum of 1T, I don’t seem to have issues using them up. Or the anchovy paste tubes.

For small quantities, I just keep a squeeze tube in the fridge.

Drift away from the guard? You mean drift away from the fence? You might want to check the alignment between the blade and fence (and the blade v. miter slots). Not cheap, but I recommend the TS Aligner Jr. (http://www.ts-aligner.com/tsalignerjr.ht…) for cabinet saws (a contractor saw will never be as accurate, you

Still swingin’ and missin’. If you don’t think daypack covers are a substitute for waterproof packs, why bring them up when I said virtually no one make waterproof packs? If they aren’t waterproof, then why are they relevant? And I didn’t say no one makes waterproof daypacks, I pointed out they were rare and typically

And... you’ve answered none of my points. I’m thinking “[t]his is information I got from people at Patagonia, REI, Osprey” = desperately looking shit up on the web because you don’t actually know what the fuck you are talking about. And, as I’ll explain below, you can’t even apparently do that right. But, just because

“Where did I say that a pack cover converts a daypack into a dry bag?” Well, I asked “why is it that 99.99% of all daypacks sold aren’t waterproof” and you responded “[m]ost daypacks aren’t waterproof because it’s quicker to design a regular one and throw in a raincover, which companies make a ton of money from,” and

Do you realize how silly you sound claiming that higher end applications—more demanding environments and harsher conditions—don’t result in improvements to consumer goods? That’s rich. Hell, there are all sorts of consumer improvements that are directly attributable to R&D for the space program. So whether the average

I don’t think that is true. A prenup can’t address custody, nor can it address child support, both of which would be determined by a family court judge. But I don’t think having a child would invalidate the alimony provisions or asset division portions of a prenup.

I got married a little later in life (early 40s) and had sufficient net assets that I got a lot of unsolicited advice from various folks that I should get a prenup. Never seriously considered it, mostly on the basis of my view that planning for bad things tends to make bad things happen.* I also thought (accurately,

Desperate? Nah. I’ve already said you should go ahead and do whatever the fuck you want. I just have a low tolerance for reading stupidity without reacting. And it isn’t really hard to respond to your drivel. I get a notification, I click on it, see stupid shit, write a 30 second response, and I’m done.

Aw. So cute. You can throw out aspersions about my qualifications, but if I supply qualifications, all of a sudden it is “bragging.” And if I question your qualifications based on your silly statements, its suddenly an illegitimate discussion topic.

Having actually owned drybags, I’m not exaggerating with respect to the care they require. This is all leading me to believe you really don’t actually know what waterproof means or why it is undesirable for things like daypacks (especially if you don’t know the significance of the zipper on Arcteryx gear). Having used

You apparently googled the wrong shit on drybags. They are made for boating and wet activities. I’ve used them for decades for caving, and can personally attest that it require much more care than I’d ever want to apply to a daypack to keep them from smelling like someone vomited it them. But have at it.

“Waterproof” daypack = drybag. Drybags are usually used for very specific things, like whitewater rafting/canoeing/kayaking. Using one as an EDC seems silly, because any moisture you introduce into it accidentally is going to cause mildew because they don’t dry out inside under normal use. To the extent you find a

Arcteryx’s zippers are first class. Coupled with a DWR, why do you need more? Frankly, most daypacks I see aren’t intended to be weather resistant, much less waterproof...

Feeling like I ought to be experimenting with ssamjang. Anyone got a perverted ketchup-with-ssamjang recipe? Or should I just use it instead of ketchup?

It is a saw designed to quickly cut miter joints. Your confusion seems strained.

My rule on HF is not to buy anything from them that has the potential to cut me if it malfunctions... Not knowing what mrblerg’s definition of “break the bank” is, I know the Hitachi SCMS gets good reviews.