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#811
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:22:13 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 23:56:23 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 23:32:27 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 04:25:50 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "rbowman" wrote in message ... On 10/02/2018 04:55 PM, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:27:05 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 05:45:16 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/09/2018 01:08 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: I really ****ed off a horserider once. I was driving a very old Range Rover automatic which had a conversion to LPG. It very often misfired, made loud bangs, and changed gear without warning. I managed to cause a small explosion and a loud revving of the engine just as I passed a horserider coming the other way along a narrow country road. The horse **** itself, and so did the rider. I did better than that... I was coming down a narrow road that went past a dude ranch on my Harley. Coming the other was was a herd of dudes on their docile refugees from a canning factory led by a genuine wild west cowboy. ****head's horse had a nervous breakdown while the guests' nags barely roused from their stupor. it doesn't take much to set them off. I've worked with horses enough to know most of them are a neurotic bundle of nerves. If the horse can't handle public roads, trailer it to a nice quiet horse trail someplace. Indeed. Horses on roads were fine, before the invention of the motor car. They weren't actually, lots got killed by them bolting etc. They're not the brightest of animals. They're actually quite a bit smarter than most, just a neurotic bundle of nerves. They basically evolved that way because they are prey to stuff like lions and tigers etc. At one time I worked on a Forest Service ranch that was the winter home for about 250 head of saddle and pack stock, both mules and horses. I preferred the mules. The only problem is a mule is smart enough to look out for number one while you can coax a horse into doing stupid things. otoh, most mules aren't afraid of a length of rope laying in the trail, running water, tree branches blowing in the wind, llamas, bicycles, elk, deer, shadows, or whatever else will trigger a horse. I've just been to this one again and was again reminded that quite a few of them were kept where they were wanted to be when not actually doing anything by just a line of white plastic cord keeping them from wandering around. That's surprising, I always see temporary electric fence. Not sure that would work very well with Clydesdales, they have very hairy legs. They operate at about 6000V, I guess it can spark through the fur. I doubt it. We did some field trials back in the late 60s and did use an electric fence to keep the sheep in the trial blocks. One of us used to have his dog with him all the time. The fence didn't stop the dog. Until one day after heavy rain, the dog tried to go thru the fence yet again. He never tried it again after that. So how come it gets through the much thicker wool of the sheep? It doesn't, it works on their noses and legs. Don't Clydesdales have noses? |
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#812
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:24:59 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:03:11 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:19:23 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 02:49:56 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/29/2018 03:46 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: We have 1,2,5,10,20,50,100,200 pence coins. They're all equally used. Why use two 25 cent coins when you can use a 50? No idea. Almost all the coin trays have 5 buckets but the fifth is most often used to hold paper clips, rubber bands, or other small items. One explanation is the half dollar was the last of the coins to contain silver and when the silver prices went up they were hoarded and fell out of circulation. By the time the composite coins came out people had gotten away from using them. Chicken or egg, but most vending machines and the pay phones didn't take them. The US did have 2 and 3 cent pieces in the 1800's. There was the naive thought that a coin's bullion value should match its face value so there was some jockeying around. The nickel won the popularity contest. The 20 cent piece didn't last long either. That was a political move by the silver miners to have the government buy more silver. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_of_Gold_speech The US has solved that problem. None of the coinage has real worth although you can make sort of a low grade zamak out of pennies. Illegally, of course. Why do you have such complicated terms for your coins? Ours are just called by their value - 20p, 50p, etc. Pity about the sovereign, crown, half crown, groat, shilling, sixpence, quid etc. None of those are used anymore apart form "quid" which is simply a synonym for "pound". There are still slang terms for your decimal coins and notes. Which aren't used. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slang_...United_Kingdom The only slang term in use for a denomination is "quid". |
#813
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:21:29 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:04:27 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:11:04 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 03:13:46 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/29/2018 03:48 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: Finally, if you live in an RV you get to keep it. And modify it. Lot rent is quite a bit less than rental properties. I take it RV means campervan? Those depreciate way faster than houses. If you don't plan on selling it who cares? Besides, as you argued for automobiles, buy them used after they depreciate. Still a lot of repairs to do, like rust, and the engine of course. Aluminum doesn't rust. RV's also include trailers so there is no engine https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recreational_vehicle My brother had a motorhome but he towed a Toyota yacht tender behind it. That's a very common practice so you have a vehicle smaller than a bus to drive around. With the trailer, you can drop the trailer and you have the tow vehicle for driving around. There are quite a few full-time RVers in the US. Some are retirees, others are younger and find employment as they go. https://www.outsideonline.com/185778...re-you-park-it When I hit the road it was in a pickup similar to the 3rd photo, rather than a van or some of the pickups with larger camper shells. It was inconspicuous and could go anyplace. I wandered around the western US for a year, going to Arizona for the winter months, and then spent a year as a Forest Service volunteer. It's an interesting life; you learn to travel light and improvise. I don't understand why they're still using steel on any vehicle, Because its much cheaper than the alternatives and isnt hard to treat so it doesn't rust. Yet all cars rust. After the warranty period though. No rust on my Getz and it's a long way out of warranty now. But you live in a huge desert compared to the soggy island I'm stuck on. You'll find no rust on the 12 year old Getzs you find there too. I have rust on my 16 year old Renault. Although to be fair it's not significant. Why did it take them until now to work out how to stop steel rusting? Cars used to rust after 5 years. |
#814
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:20:02 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:05:25 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 23:06:34 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 27 Sep 2018 03:24:35 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/26/2018 12:47 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: You currently have no dollar coin?! Effectively, no. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar...(United_States) I probably have one around here someplace. I thought I'd found it but it turned out to be a token for the carousel. We also have a two dollar bill. I've got one that I'm using as a bookmark. They never took off either. We do not have a three dollar bill, leading to the expression 'as queer as a three dollar bill'. There is a 50 cent coin, again rarely seen. It's redundant since you can make any sum with 1, 5, 10, and 25. We have 1,2,5,10,20,50,100,200 pence coins. They're all equally used. Why use two 25 cent coins when you can use a 50? Because that's what you happen to have, stupid. Doesn't make the 50 redundant. We use 50s all the time, in fact I'd say all coins are used equally. You'd be wrong about that last. Incorrect, in my line of work I receive coins all the time, and get equal numbers of all of them. Don't believe that last. It's true. |
#815
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:19:19 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:07:37 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 22:59:20 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 27 Sep 2018 20:04:31 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "rbowman" wrote in message ... On 09/26/2018 09:02 PM, Rod Speed wrote: One of the chain self checkouts used to just dispense $20s here and I used that for that reason instead of an ATM but they have changed those now and they don't let you specify what you want, it works that out for you so you can still get $20s by specifying you want $40, but you get $50s if you say you want $50 or $100 etc. That chain has now closed their store in my town now so I have to use the other self checkouts. I'll have to pay more attention the next time. I think you can specify a number but the selection menu is in $20 increments. The max on the menu is $200, or sometimes $100 at the smaller kiosks in markets. I've got the feeling if you said you wanted $57 the machine would make impolite remarks. Maybe not, since the self service checkouts can make change with smaller bills. I never thought about it. I just grab $200 and go. Yeah, I'm about to try them all now because I have always preferred to have $20 notes for the garage/yard sales. $50s can be a real hassle, particularly given that we show up at the garage/yard sales before anyone else and hardly any ensure that they have lots of change. I prefer to use the self checkouts rather than ATMs just because you don't normally have to queue for the self checkouts and there is no chance of a skimmer on the self checkout. You must have a lot of criminals over there. Most of those skimming ATMs are tourists. The problem doesn't exist here, Wrong, as always. https://www.google.com/search?q=atm+skimming+uk you're doing something wrong. Nope. Never happened to me or anyone I know, Never happened to me or anyone I know either. I guess it's not that common here. Either that or you're overly paranoid. Or I have enough of a clue to have noticed the tourists caught doing it. But if it's never happened to you or anyone you know, then it isn't widespread enough to worry about. |
#816
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Cyclists waste petrol
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:17:45 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:09:14 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 22:57:44 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 22:45:11 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 20:59:41 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 15:29:04 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/26/2018 07:05 AM, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 04:20:42 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/25/2018 09:25 AM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: We just changed recently. Annoyingly they also changed one of the coins, so they're slightly bigger and no longer fit in any machines until they're all changed over at the shop's expense. Clueless Royal Mint, they do that every 5 years. At least you don't have Loonies... Who? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loonie We do in fact have both a gold colored $1 and $2 coins and they work fine except for the terminal stupidity that the $1 coin is bigger than the $2 coin. And the 50c coin is bigger again, but is silver colored and not gold colored. And we don't have 1c and 2c coins anymore, the lowest value is 5c. I misspoke. I was thinking of the toonie.. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toonie I don't know if it was just an urban legend but there was talk that the manufacturing process wasn't ironed out for the first runs and the core would fall out leaving you with a $2 washer. I liked going to Canada. In the '90s the exchange rate was unfavorable to the Canadians and they used different colors for their paper money with bears, penguins, or whatever in the designs. For $100 you got a wad of multicolored Canadian bills. It was like Monopoly money. What screwed me up was liters for gasoline. Between the exchange rate and trying to do liters to gallons in my head I always assumed I was getting screwed at the pump where the former Imperial gallons seemed like a bargain. Our Aldi supermarkets, being a German company, like to make everything metric, hence they sell litres of milk instead of the pints I get everywhere else, Ours are all metric, and that's the law. Do your lawmakers have nothing more sensible to do? They do them all. What? I asked why your lawmakers don't do more sensible things, other than making everything metric, which nobody gives a **** about. it makes price comparisons annoyingly difficult. They also do weird **** like putting the prices above the shelf instead of on it, I'm always looking at the price for the wrong thing. They don't do that here. In every supermarket but Aldi here, the price is on the shelf which the item is sitting on. In Aldi however, it's on the shelf above, or for the top shelf, way above it on a vertical bit. Like I said, Aldi does it the same way all the other supermarkets do it here. They do however have a nice tactic of speeding things up by letting you just put one of everything on the conveyor belt, then telling them how many you have left in the trolley. Sometimes I guess you might feel the need to er.... tell them the wrong number :-) Ours counts them even when you tell them. Try filling your trolley to the brim, they can't see them all then :-) I did that at one time, they required them to all be on the belt so they could count them. They did that to me a few times, then stopped again, it was slowing down the queue. It seems they'd rather take the risk of some cheats than have everyone take longer to get through the checkout and employ more staff. Our old silver dollars were large. The latest attempts to float out a dollar coin have been barely distinguishable from a quarter (25 cent piece). They never have taken off. You currently have no dollar coin?! Yes they do. But for some reason most don't use it presumably because they didn't crap all the paper $1 notes when they introduced it. Its now not even minted for general currency use, just for collectors. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar...(United_States) $1 US is worth even less than £1. Our £1 notes fell to bits through overuse, I dread to think what theirs look like. That comes down to how soon they pulp them, not how much use they get. But they can only pulp them when they are handed in to a bank. Commercial operations do that all the time. Do you seriously believe that they stuff the money they take under the mattress ? When we still had £1 notes, I saw them in a terrible state, and the date on them was well in hte past, like 10 years. If you're correct, then surely in that 10 years a bank must have seen them? Corse they did, and didn't bother to pulp them. Every single note I've ever had given to me by a bank was brand new. So I assume they ALWAYS pulp them. Cant see how that is even possible. The bulk of the notes must be handed to some shop or other in exchange for goods and the bulk of those must be deposited in a bank and not just stuffed under the mattress. It isnt even likely that the bigger stores like supermarkets hand a wad of notes to the truck drivers that show up with a truck full of stuff that goes on the shelves and they take that wad of notes back to the manufacturer of the stuff they delivered to the supermarket. Stores give smaller notes back in change, and larger ones in cashback for debit cards, so a lot of notes go back to a customer. But not enough do to ensure that the bank never sees the battered notes. Anyway, I've never had a used note from a bank. Of course that may be because I usually use a cash machine, and perhaps they always give those new notes to prevent jamming. |
#817
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Cyclists waste petrol
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 04:05:26 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 10/03/2018 04:45 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 23:38:38 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 03:49:03 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 10/02/2018 04:44 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:27:05 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 05:45:16 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/09/2018 01:08 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: I really ****ed off a horserider once. I was driving a very old Range Rover automatic which had a conversion to LPG. It very often misfired, made loud bangs, and changed gear without warning. I managed to cause a small explosion and a loud revving of the engine just as I passed a horserider coming the other way along a narrow country road. The horse **** itself, and so did the rider. I did better than that... I was coming down a narrow road that went past a dude ranch on my Harley. Coming the other was was a herd of dudes on their docile refugees from a canning factory led by a genuine wild west cowboy. ****head's horse had a nervous breakdown while the guests' nags barely roused from their stupor. it doesn't take much to set them off. I've worked with horses enough to know most of them are a neurotic bundle of nerves. If the horse can't handle public roads, trailer it to a nice quiet horse trail someplace. Indeed. Horses on roads were fine, before the invention of the motor car. They weren't actually, lots got killed by them bolting etc. They're not the brightest of animals. A common description around here is a cowboy is the third dumbest critter riding the second dumbest and chasing the first dumbest. I would agree with that statement. I wouldn't, sheep are a lot dumber than cattle. I'd say they were equally stupid. No, you can turn cattle out in the forest in the spring and expect to find most of them in the fall, minus the few that walk off cliffs etc. Try that with sheep and the first thing they will do is find something poisonous to eat. Then the survivors will find a fence line to pile up against and smother half of them. The remnant will then try to drown themselves in a creek. The hardy few survivors will get eaten by the bears, wolves, mountain lions, and coyotes. We do have wild bighorn sheep that can fend for themselves but centuries of breeding have dumbed down the domestic version. Besides, sheep are an excuse for blue heelers. Maybe they should let the stupid sheep all die off, Trouble is that with the current bred sheep, that is all of them. then the next generation will be more sensible. Fraid not when they are all dead. |
#818
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 21:08:23 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 04:05:26 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 10/03/2018 04:45 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 23:38:38 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 03:49:03 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 10/02/2018 04:44 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:27:05 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 05:45:16 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/09/2018 01:08 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: I really ****ed off a horserider once. I was driving a very old Range Rover automatic which had a conversion to LPG. It very often misfired, made loud bangs, and changed gear without warning. I managed to cause a small explosion and a loud revving of the engine just as I passed a horserider coming the other way along a narrow country road. The horse **** itself, and so did the rider. I did better than that... I was coming down a narrow road that went past a dude ranch on my Harley. Coming the other was was a herd of dudes on their docile refugees from a canning factory led by a genuine wild west cowboy. ****head's horse had a nervous breakdown while the guests' nags barely roused from their stupor. it doesn't take much to set them off. I've worked with horses enough to know most of them are a neurotic bundle of nerves. If the horse can't handle public roads, trailer it to a nice quiet horse trail someplace. Indeed. Horses on roads were fine, before the invention of the motor car. They weren't actually, lots got killed by them bolting etc. They're not the brightest of animals. A common description around here is a cowboy is the third dumbest critter riding the second dumbest and chasing the first dumbest. I would agree with that statement. I wouldn't, sheep are a lot dumber than cattle. I'd say they were equally stupid. No, you can turn cattle out in the forest in the spring and expect to find most of them in the fall, minus the few that walk off cliffs etc. Try that with sheep and the first thing they will do is find something poisonous to eat. Then the survivors will find a fence line to pile up against and smother half of them. The remnant will then try to drown themselves in a creek. The hardy few survivors will get eaten by the bears, wolves, mountain lions, and coyotes. We do have wild bighorn sheep that can fend for themselves but centuries of breeding have dumbed down the domestic version. Besides, sheep are an excuse for blue heelers. Maybe they should let the stupid sheep all die off, Trouble is that with the current bred sheep, that is all of them. then the next generation will be more sensible. Fraid not when they are all dead. Then give up on the species altogether. |
#819
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 21:06:25 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:17:45 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 00:09:14 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 22:57:44 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 22:45:11 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 20:59:41 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 15:29:04 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/26/2018 07:05 AM, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 04:20:42 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/25/2018 09:25 AM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: We just changed recently. Annoyingly they also changed one of the coins, so they're slightly bigger and no longer fit in any machines until they're all changed over at the shop's expense. Clueless Royal Mint, they do that every 5 years. At least you don't have Loonies... Who? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loonie We do in fact have both a gold colored $1 and $2 coins and they work fine except for the terminal stupidity that the $1 coin is bigger than the $2 coin. And the 50c coin is bigger again, but is silver colored and not gold colored. And we don't have 1c and 2c coins anymore, the lowest value is 5c. I misspoke. I was thinking of the toonie.. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toonie I don't know if it was just an urban legend but there was talk that the manufacturing process wasn't ironed out for the first runs and the core would fall out leaving you with a $2 washer. I liked going to Canada. In the '90s the exchange rate was unfavorable to the Canadians and they used different colors for their paper money with bears, penguins, or whatever in the designs. For $100 you got a wad of multicolored Canadian bills. It was like Monopoly money.. What screwed me up was liters for gasoline. Between the exchange rate and trying to do liters to gallons in my head I always assumed I was getting screwed at the pump where the former Imperial gallons seemed like a bargain. Our Aldi supermarkets, being a German company, like to make everything metric, hence they sell litres of milk instead of the pints I get everywhere else, Ours are all metric, and that's the law. Do your lawmakers have nothing more sensible to do? They do them all. What? I asked why your lawmakers don't do more sensible things, other than making everything metric, which nobody gives a **** about. it makes price comparisons annoyingly difficult. They also do weird **** like putting the prices above the shelf instead of on it, I'm always looking at the price for the wrong thing. They don't do that here. In every supermarket but Aldi here, the price is on the shelf which the item is sitting on. In Aldi however, it's on the shelf above, or for the top shelf, way above it on a vertical bit. Like I said, Aldi does it the same way all the other supermarkets do it here. They do however have a nice tactic of speeding things up by letting you just put one of everything on the conveyor belt, then telling them how many you have left in the trolley. Sometimes I guess you might feel the need to er.... tell them the wrong number :-) Ours counts them even when you tell them. Try filling your trolley to the brim, they can't see them all then :-) I did that at one time, they required them to all be on the belt so they could count them. They did that to me a few times, then stopped again, it was slowing down the queue. It seems they'd rather take the risk of some cheats than have everyone take longer to get through the checkout and employ more staff. Our old silver dollars were large. The latest attempts to float out a dollar coin have been barely distinguishable from a quarter (25 cent piece). They never have taken off. You currently have no dollar coin?! Yes they do. But for some reason most don't use it presumably because they didn't crap all the paper $1 notes when they introduced it. Its now not even minted for general currency use, just for collectors. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar...(United_States) $1 US is worth even less than £1. Our £1 notes fell to bits through overuse, I dread to think what theirs look like. That comes down to how soon they pulp them, not how much use they get. But they can only pulp them when they are handed in to a bank. Commercial operations do that all the time. Do you seriously believe that they stuff the money they take under the mattress ? When we still had £1 notes, I saw them in a terrible state, and the date on them was well in hte past, like 10 years. If you're correct, then surely in that 10 years a bank must have seen them? Corse they did, and didn't bother to pulp them. Every single note I've ever had given to me by a bank was brand new.. So I assume they ALWAYS pulp them. Cant see how that is even possible. The bulk of the notes must be handed to some shop or other in exchange for goods and the bulk of those must be deposited in a bank and not just stuffed under the mattress. It isnt even likely that the bigger stores like supermarkets hand a wad of notes to the truck drivers that show up with a truck full of stuff that goes on the shelves and they take that wad of notes back to the manufacturer of the stuff they delivered to the supermarket. Stores give smaller notes back in change, and larger ones in cashback for debit cards, so a lot of notes go back to a customer. But not enough do to ensure that the bank never sees the battered notes. You can't be sure of what you said above. How much cash goes from person to person at garage sales etc? Anyway, I've never had a used note from a bank. Of course that may be because I usually use a cash machine, and perhaps they always give those new notes to prevent jamming. |
#820
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Cyclists waste petrol
On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 00:06:11 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 03:46:57 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 10/02/2018 04:42 PM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Sun, 30 Sep 2018 20:37:49 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 09/30/2018 11:08 AM, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: Yes. Generally called spark plug wires in this country. They may be a thing of the past. My Toyota doesn't have any but I don't know how common that is. It will, but they're concealed in one tube. No concealment on the Toyota. It has Coil-on-Plug ignition. https://troubleshootmyvehicle.com/to...nition-coils-1 Why do they tend to put the coils on the plugs now instead of having one big coil? The last car I inspected may have had that, I'm not sure, all I know is there was a bar that clipped over all the plugs, with one thick wire leading to it. It eliminates the moving parts of the distributor and the high tension wires. Even without the old mechanical points, that is still a couple of areas of potential failure. The ECU is capable of delivering a timed pulse. The trouble is when the ECU goes wrong all hell breaks loose. It doesn't go wrong with the well designed ones. My current (French - as in ****ty electrics) car failed the annual safety test because it was reporting a failure of the antilock brakes. Luckily I use a garage where the mechanics have common sense. The computer reported a fault, but refused to specify what part was broken, so he just passed it anyway. Cars get bumped about, we can't build computers that can withstand that. |
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