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N_Cook <diverse@tcp.co.uk>: Oct 23 02:42PM +0100 2 Canons, MP272 and MP495 Both unused for years, both the same total lack of yellow printing. , either m/c even swapping carts. Folded tissue dampened with cleaning fluid, pressed against the nozzle plate, suggestive of not being a lock-in "fault". 2 minutes in an ultrasonic bath ,canted over to the yellow side, in methylated spirits. Both now fine photo-grade output, with refilled carts. |
"pfjw@aol.com" <pfjw@aol.com>: Oct 23 07:22AM -0700 On Monday, October 23, 2017 at 9:42:45 AM UTC-4, N_Cook wrote: > 2 minutes in an ultrasonic bath ,canted over to the yellow side, in > methylated spirits. Both now fine photo-grade output, with refilled carts. Yes. Ultrasonic cleaners can be very close to magic if properly applied. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
Stephen Wolstenholme <steve@easynn.com>: Oct 23 03:31PM +0100 On Mon, 23 Oct 2017 07:22:11 -0700 (PDT), "pfjw@aol.com" >Yes. Ultrasonic cleaners can be very close to magic if properly applied. >Peter Wieck >Melrose Park, PA The only ultrasonic cleaner I have had experience with is used by my dentist! -- http://www.npsnn.com |
N_Cook <diverse@tcp.co.uk>: Oct 23 03:52PM +0100 > Yes. Ultrasonic cleaners can be very close to magic if properly applied. > Peter Wieck > Melrose Park, PA Mine gets very little use, but the top, conveniently glass for would-be viewing, is all crazed/micro-fractured? Is that common with such cleaners, partially self destructing? If I want to see whats going on, I have to find a piece of glass or perspex to cover over the dancing fluid fountains. I should have said , with the damp tissue test, showing yellow staining on the tissue. Also locked-in , meaning makers trying to defeat cart refilling, to force purchase from them. Another tip, I don't see with ink refill kits, they always seem to say drill in . That must leave plastic swarf inside. I use a conical soldering iron tip at the breather hole , to melt in. Then when closing , a short length of spaghetti tube inserted and then hot melt glue around it and marginally into the plastic of the cart, so easily pulled away the next time. |
"pfjw@aol.com" <pfjw@aol.com>: Oct 23 07:32AM -0700 > Amazon's New Echos Bring Alexa to the Bedroom and Beyond > Wall Street Journal - Sept. 27, 2017 7:55 p.m. ET > -- https://www.wsj.com/articles/amazons-new-echos-bring-alexa-to-the-bedroom-and-beyond-1506556523 Sure - something that can listen into our most intimate moments whether we like it or not. I want one in _EVERY_ room! Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
tabbypurr@gmail.com: Oct 22 01:53PM -0700 On Sunday, 22 October 2017 17:39:41 UTC+1, Allodoxaphobia wrote: > A google grooper's "Me Too" followup to a 3-year-old followup -- > which, itself, was yet another google grooper doing a followup > on a 13-year-old post from Sept. 2, 2001. fwliw, the first domestic nuke was the 1967 Radarange. It had a door that opened downwards and an unsafely basic interlock. A rather different animal to any 1987 thing. |
etpm@whidbey.com: Oct 22 02:31PM -0700 >> which, itself, was yet another google grooper doing a followup >> on a 13-year-old post from Sept. 2, 2001. >fwliw, the first domestic nuke was the 1967 Radarange. It had a door that opened downwards and an unsafely basic interlock. A rather different animal to any 1987 thing. In 1972 or thereabouts when I was 15 or 16 a friend of mine had me over for lunch in the new house his family had just moved into. It had a Radarange/conventional oven combo in the kitchen. We nuked hotdogs in the bun in the thing. I was duly impressed until about half way through the hot dog when the bun got pretty tough as it cooled. But we loved the thing so we nuked several more naked hot dogs and had them on un-nuked buns. I remember wondering why there was a thing that looked kinda like an antenna in the oven. We watched it rotate through the oven window and figured it probably bounced the microwaves inside the oven, kinda like stirring. And the oven window was weird too because it wasn't plain glass but had a screen in it. It took us a few days to realize why it had a screen. That thing was cool. Eric |
John-Del <ohger1s@gmail.com>: Oct 22 01:27PM -0700 On Saturday, October 21, 2017 at 4:14:48 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote: > just going to to insist it is high quality? > At best the ferrite rod will only be 4" long and probably only 3-1/2". > Mikek Did you read the whole description? That baby is sporting two (2!) transistors, which means it has twice as many transistors as a one transistor radio!! John Wolcott,CT |
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