Damn that Sigmund was a smartass.... :DQuote:
Originally Posted by vsquizz
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Damn that Sigmund was a smartass.... :DQuote:
Originally Posted by vsquizz
Mine's in the bottom drawer in the desk in the shed, the one the vice covered in crud is attached to. I bought it to use instead of my 'obnoxious boot polish brush' & have pulled it out a couple of times now to get a good shine on some shellawax cream on a 'rough n rustic' burl. I still use the 'obnoxious boot polish brush' to get the cream out of the holes & cracks & it helps to get rid of the fluff too.:DQuote:
Originally Posted by vsquizz
Cliff..Whats boot polish??..Is that the stuff I use on leap years when I change me jocks!:oQuote:
Originally Posted by Cliff Rogers
At the moment I have a couple of pairs of my kids old fleecy PJ's and these (having been washed a zillion times) seem to do a pretty good job (if you remember to remove the buttons first:o damhik). No fluff for Squizzy :D but I don't do a lot of fancy finishes and I don't have a lathe :( .
Cheers
Squizz, what's kids.... :D mine are grown up & gone....Quote:
Originally Posted by vsquizz
Squizz, what's PJ's, particularly fleecy ones.... :D
Squizz, what's fluff, :( Nah, I remember....
that's why we don't wear PJ's.... so we remember.... :rolleyes:
We found out what fleecy PJ's were when we shot through from Cairns Mate. People look at me funny when I tell them we used to turn the ceiling fan on in the main bedroom and leave it on for nine months:D .Quote:
Originally Posted by Cliff Rogers
My daughter's initials are PJ and she rarely gets called by anything else.
Cheers
See. You're almost back on the subject. :confused:
(Q:What are pajamas? A:What you hang on the end of the bed in case of fire.) ;)
Jack. I see a little thread digression here. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by JackoH
Squizzy. You can use the mop attached to a drill or grinder. It is exceptionally good for polishing odd shaped articles that you can't get any purchase on using cloths. Have a look on the main site.
We used ours mainly for polishing trophy bases and a small bottle carrier. Saved hours.
Phhewww, thank goodness for that, I thought it was another manual labour thing headed my way.:cool:Quote:
Originally Posted by
Cheers
Squizzy,
Manuel Labour, he's from Barcelona isn't he?
Fawlty Mick
Yeh, he's got a French cousin called Manuel Manipulation.Quote:
Originally Posted by journeyman Mick