Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Yes, it was legit.
Me too similarlyphil.p":3jc3c8sm said:We did mad things. I went past a place the other day and said to wife that there used to be an old coaching house on the site, and that my friend and I had taken the remains of the roof off, including all the timbers - 16 year olds in T shirts, trainers and shorts, with no harnesses, ropes, scaffold or even gloves. :shock: :lol:
AndyT":lido8mxe said:It's hard to resist these lovely little things, and frankly why would you?
This is how I could recognise most of them quite easily:
If your depth stop is troubled with rust, this might help - though yours is much cleaner than mine was - rust-removal-with-a-glass-fibre-brush-t107543.html
And if you don't like hammering the Rawlplug tool into granite walls, you could upgrade to one of these:
- see belgian-mechanical-hammer-t105907.html?hilit=%20rawl for more. John Rawlings was a prolific inventor whose products must have sold in millions worldwide.
ED65":35yvkfy5 said:2 and 3 were obvious as to type of whatsit, just didn't know the brands. This is the first time I think I've heard of 'Mitor'.
At that price I'd have to say no! But at £1.40 plus postage (CousinsUK.com) I'd say why not.DigitalM":35humi3w said:I was considering the glass fibre pen. About £7.50 on amazon. Are they worth it?
BRYAN":11prm0vj said:I see that the plough plane is English made.
So what is with the spelling then?
I always thought mitre = correct
miter= American, so just about allowable.
But mitor?
ED65":gpgilfrl said:At that price I'd have to say no! But at £1.40 plus postage (CousinsUK.com) I'd say why not.DigitalM":gpgilfrl said:I was considering the glass fibre pen. About £7.50 on amazon. Are they worth it?
I've had one of these for years that I've used in various ways. I first bought it as an eraser for Indian ink, which I long believed was their sole function as I never saw them for sale anywhere other than amongst the drawing supplies, often right beside conventional erasers. Then I tried it for abrading surfaces in model making and eventually for localised smoothing jobs in sculpture work (on materials like Milliput for those familiar with that sort of thing).
If you want to lay in what is likely to be a lifetime supply of refills for anyone, ten pack for £3.50.
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