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pbwe

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Everything posted by pbwe

  1. Wellll, the mention of screen takes all the romance out of it.
  2. I think these are related observations. Too much in engineering nowadays, the aggressive cost cutting practices result in the bulk of capital used during the early design and procurement work, and late project work (ha! where welding occurs) becomes cost constrained. Since engineering is a relative high wage scale cost, every managment effort is made to limit it. In general, the persons working early in the project (typically discipline engineers) are not the same as those closing out the project (procurement/logistics engineers). Technical and same employer continuity for most engineers (
  3. The variety of austenitic stainless steel types are developed for practical reasons. The utility of type 304 for all service conditions is not universal, e.g.: consider with simple sea water and that annoying chloride ion.
  4. The tint is a high temperature chromium oxide, and the color indicates the temperature at which the oxide formed and/or the thickness of the oxide. There is no basis for metallurgical embrittlement in this context and the oxide forms in the solid state and is a surface film only. For the weld shown, the blue tint is not an issue, it is wire brushed away, but some reqirements may limit tinting to the straw color for surfaces in corrosion service. The consistency of the the tint areas along the length of the weld reflects both shielding gas coverage and reduced heat flow in the thinner pipe w
  5. 500 rnds of CCI 22 wmr 40 gr. from bass pro. First buy of 22 wmr in more than 6 months. 100 rnds of Barnes TSX in 308 for the Saiga. Not cheap, but good to have in inventory.
  6. ~30 yeas ago, I spent summers hiking in Glacier Natl. Park and Waterton. There were still grizzly there at the time. I made "clappers" out of 8" long 2x4. Eventually put on hand straps and neoprene padding (after a time, hands would go numb otherwise). These were light, easy to hang, made a nice loud clap' and were easy to use frequently. On occasion I did hear crunching through the brush, but never encountered any bear up close.
  7. I'll second the Vanentine One. Don't speed much nowadays, but the jurisdictions are tight for cash and all leniency is going away. (if speeding does not get you, the rolling stop or unsignalled lane change will) It's nice to know where they are in any case (V1 delineates multiples of front, side, and rear origins), and even going with the flow can be 15 over, so when it alarms I check my speed. The lasers are challenging, but the V1 has detected them with good lead time provided you are not the first in line, but immediate braking/down shifting is advised in any case. Had my first one
  8. In case this is useful; for my DIY surface dressing, I take cut pieces of SiC wet/dry automotive abrasive paper and "Elmers" glue it to appropriately sized (flat or radius) wood pieces (gluing the radiused forms takes a bit of practice; preform the paper and keep working it as it the glue sets). I use it dry only. On hard steels the SiC media does not last long, but it is easy to get accuracy and control of cut. 320 grit is where I start (exept when single cut mill smooth needle filing is first needed), and 600 is where I finish, and then lightly work the action with automotive "scratch re
  9. "Current metallurgical theory is that the testing process itself is damaging, and weakens the bolt. Batch tested is probably the best solution, that and understanding that no manufacturing process is perfect and the internet now allows the smallest possible percentage of anecdotal stories to be perceived as normal." If the "testing process" simulates normal use, there should be no significant damage to, or metallurgical deterioration of the material (here the component steel). "Batch testing" of service critical components should be standard practice. Still, the particular techniques of
  10. Regarding who brings their problems where, consider: "Confessions of an economic hitman" and "Apologies of an economic hitman". Screwing all of Central and South America, is where it's at.
  11. Mexican vigilantes form to face down cartel crime. Note the presence of guns in civilian hands. The challenge for the US [citizen] is that the government is the organized crime.
  12. We can have lives ruined on trumped up charges. They can get retrained. Sounds fair.
  13. The movie is a collage of real information facets, and salutory for that. If interested parties want to continue to watch/learn the about all the pieces in the puzzle, and in real time: Then www.zerohedge.com. and the roster on their sidebar I call zerohedge a front row seat on the slow motion train wreck of Western civilization. Essentially all the film topics relating to the controlling factions has been discussed for years on zerohedge. In general, their's is information that the mainstream media intendedly does not report. As I see it, the real issue for the 99%
  14. pbwe

    HD ammo

    Thank you GunFun for the write-up. I too have the #4 shot loaded as primary for HD in the Saiga. Slugs are on hand for machinery, cover, or distance. (as a semiauto, there has been not one failure in hundreds or rounds) However, the first at home goto is a semiauto 22 wmr rifle (fitted with aimpoint micro and kidd 2 stage. loaded with 50 gr. softpoints). After a couple years working with pistols, I decided that accuracy is primary, and pistols, for variant conditions of anxiety, no/low light, or longer distance, required simply too much time and effort to develop and maintain contro
  15. The past three days, I go morning and evening to a WM that got a couple 10x boxes of CCI 22 WMR in. Almost 1000 rounds in hand. I find zero heavy grain 22 wmr from internet sellers. And a 1000 more still sitting there, quiet as it's kept ....
  16. By another: The ammo situation is getting desperate This morning I lucked out and was able to buy several cases of ammo. On the way home I stopped at the gas station and this drop dead gorgeous blond was filling up her car at the next pump. She looked at the ammo in the back of my car and said in a very sexy voice, "I'm a big believer in barter, big boy. Would you be interested in a trade of sex for ammo?" I thought it over for a few seconds and responded......"Well, just what kind of ammo have you got to trade?"
  17. Thanks for the effort and contribution. It's informative that there appears to be relative little/significant difference. As a normalized support carriage, I'd suggest an anchored wood frame with the gun held in position by stout bungee cord or similar.
  18. 3 boxes of Win 12ga PDX Defender 3 boxes of CCI 22 WMR 3 boxes of Fed Vital Shok 308 3 boxes of Rem 12ga Slugger (Ha!, Guess where; all ina days driveby) Midway rifle bag arrived today. Aimpoint Micro T-1 2moa is shipped today. Surprise surprise surprise; Bass Pro had 2 Ruger 22 WMR rotary mags hanging on the near empty rack.
  19. For the size and lightness for pocket carry in holster: FEG R61, or Radom P64, both in Makarov. Loaded with oddball Chinese FMJ (that show to penetrate deepest in wet phone books test) Scattered about the house are CZ 82's. Loaded with Buffalo Bore +P.
  20. Looks fun to be sure. I'd think fine sand would be appropriate. I'll stick with my postal rubber band for the time being.
  21. Well I'm fulla schitt. That certainly looks to be straight cut. And what occurs to me is that straight cut is specified for barrel threading in order that the threads that are cut in the barrel are cut full depth for the entire cut distance to very near the termination of the thread. A tapered thread die started at its wide end would not cut a full depth thread at the termination end. In a similar case, I first cut a thread starting at the wide end, cut to the distance needed, and then reversed the die direction so that the narrow end is threaded first onto the newly cut threads, and by
  22. Your quote suggests there may be a confusion. There are dies that are "straight cut" but these are used exclusively to clean up damage/corroded threads. I've only seen these once in my life in a refinery context where they have many very specialized tools. So, I interpret your die absolutly has to have tapered cutting facets; in other words, the opening is wider on one side, and this is the start side. Ordinarilly, a thread die has a noticable cone shaping of the thread cutting facets, and this can be seen. Or, insert a low angle cone shape in one side of the die opening, and it goes
  23. We have a nominally 6x6 walkin closet that I stripped when I did a master bath reno. 2 adjacent walls interior, and 2 exterior, exterior are brick veneer. multiple studs screwed and glewed about the door jamb. After filling all stud space with stacked stud wood (gathed from local construction debris), bolted 10 ga on the interior walls (a mix of rusty schitt pieces from a local steel surplusser). Wall board needed separate drilled holes in steel and internet searched/supplied self tapping screws with counter sunk heads. Door&jamb is stout steel construction security type (craigslist!)
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