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Thread: A Polishers Handbook
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14th January 2003, 05:00 PM #1New Member
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- Nov 2002
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- Melbourne, Vic., Australia
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A Polishers Handbook
Does anyone know where can I purchase
"A Polishers Handbook"
2002 Edition by Neil Ellis
whichout using Visa details over WWW.
Ren
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14th January 2003, 05:13 PM #2Member
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- Jan 2001
- Location
- Caboolture,QLD,Australia
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G'day Ren,
I bought mine from AWW they have really good service.
Dod
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14th January 2003, 07:33 PM #3
Fill in your details on the SECURE Online Book Order and type Cheque Payment in the "Card Holders Name" space on the form. You will be contacted re payment details.
Our Secure site is 128 bit encrypted.
All information submitted on our site is
kept strictly confidential. We don't keep or sell any of the info submitted on the site because:
1 It takes up valuable space.
2 Only a really low bastard would do that.
3 I'm not clever enough to know how.
As you are in Melbourne, you could try Carba-Tec Richmond or Woodworking Warehouse Breaside.
Hope this helps
Cheers - NeilKEEP A LID ON THE GARBAGE... Report spam, scams, and inappropriate posts, PMs and Blogs.
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14th January 2003, 07:34 PM #4Member
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- Jan 2001
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- Caboolture,QLD,Australia
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Sorry Ren I used the wrong letters "AWW". Should have been AaWR Australian Wood REview. Their phone number is 07 3806 2288.
I ordered a book two days before Christmas and it arrived in time. I spoke to Tanya.
Regards
Dod
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15th January 2003, 08:30 AM #5Member
- Join Date
- Jul 1999
- Location
- Melbourne
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- 9
Carba-Tec sell the book.
Cheers.
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15th January 2003, 10:38 AM #6New Member
- Join Date
- Nov 2002
- Location
- Melbourne, Vic., Australia
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- 3
Thank you all for your help.
I can't wait to read it.
Renato
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18th January 2003, 05:12 PM #7
The book is generally good but there are some discrepancies which should be addressed on the page of common measurements
Stupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
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18th January 2003, 06:00 PM #8
So what the hells wrong with these Common Measurements?
UNDERSTANDING FINE & COARSE MEASUREMENTS
As used by woodworkers is sheds, garages and workshops throughout Australia.
Compiled by Neil Ellis for National Woodworkers Calendar 1997
Hairsbreath: Smallest measurement. If you can find it, you can use it - approx 1 millionths of a micro millimetre.
Foofteenth: much bigger - 25 micro mm
Gnatshair: 15 Foofteenths
Gnatsdick: not an exact measurement. Usually between 10 - 20 Gnatshairs (dependant upon how well hung the Gnat is)
Beesdick: the most commonly used fine measurements (usually bigger than a Gnatsdick, but not always) 1/100th mm or there about.
Fairy’s fart: all encompassing measurement - covers all sizes below .25mm.
A metrik: one millimetre (mm)
A Smidgen: also called a Smidg - 7.35mm but 7mm is near enough.
A Tad: 1.3 centimetres
A Touch: two Tads
A Bit: three Smidgens
A Little Bit: 15 Smidgens or there about
Heaps: also called Lots - 10 Tads, 1 Smidg & a Metrik
Stacks: also called Lots more - 5 Heaps
Bags: also known as Bagful - 350 Tads
Bulls Roar: 734 metres - almost exactly 1,000 smidgen or there about
Klick: 1 Kilometre
Country Mile: 3.218 Klicks
Thick as a Brick: a brickies measurement that should never used in woodwork
Thick as 2 planks: 984cm from beam to beam.
Beam: hunk of wood too long and too cumbersome for one person to handle alone.
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18th January 2003, 06:06 PM #9
And also
A BIT - unit of measure, which, when removed is usually a bit too much.
Hope the last posting wasn't a bit too much.
Cheers - NeilKEEP A LID ON THE GARBAGE... Report spam, scams, and inappropriate posts, PMs and Blogs.
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18th January 2003, 09:26 PM #10
Geez, Bloody Perfectionists!!!!
Jack the Lad.
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21st January 2003, 08:24 AM #11
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21st January 2003, 09:04 PM #12Member
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- Oct 2001
- Location
- Sheffield, Tasmania
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- 4
While admitting Neil’s Handbook is a great buy despite the missing definitions, I would like to point out another deficiency.
In the section under glues, there appears to be one glaring omission. While never having personally used Wheatbix to glue up any actual jobs I believe its adhesive properties must be way out front of anything else on the market. How many of you have, like me, spent hours trying to get the damned stuff off the kids high chairs finally having to resort to chipping it off with a knife! No marketplace glue would stick to chrome like that! Must be a market out there for an entrepreneur!
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Badger - A gruff short tempered animal that sleeps most of the winterBadger - A gruff short tempered animal that sleeps most of the winter
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