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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Any sort of decent tech books is what I can't get where I live.
Christian Graus Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
GAMES! I have to go in to yonder city to buy any of my games. Of course I usually just order of the internet so y'know. We had a little games shop a while ago for about a year, but then they moved away :((
My current favourite word is: I'm starting to run out of fav. words!
-SK Genius
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
A SodaStream. No one does them any more. Nor the refills. Bastards.
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Any sort of decent tech books is what I can't get where I live.
Christian Graus Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
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Any sort of decent tech books is what I can't get where I live.
Christian Graus Please read this if you don't understand the answer I've given you "also I don't think "TranslateOneToTwoBillion OneHundredAndFortySevenMillion FourHundredAndEightyThreeThousand SixHundredAndFortySeven()" is a very good choice for a function name" - SpacixOne ( offering help to someone who really needed it ) ( spaces added for the benefit of people running at < 1280x1024 )
Gads!!! What I wouldn't do for a book store. We have a Hastings, but they carry crap. The local library has a reference section, but it consists of two shelves of old phone books and a Thomas Register from 1981. For tech books I order online; for steel I'm considering digging the ore myself and smelting it in the yard. A little silicon, a dash of carbon, and you're there... :sigh:
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
A SodaStream. No one does them any more. Nor the refills. Bastards.
martin_hughes wrote:
SodaStream
Color me clueless - what's that? Sounds tasty, though. Can I get mine with scotch?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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GAMES! I have to go in to yonder city to buy any of my games. Of course I usually just order of the internet so y'know. We had a little games shop a while ago for about a year, but then they moved away :((
My current favourite word is: I'm starting to run out of fav. words!
-SK Genius
We've got several game stores here, usually next door to the XXX book stores... Plenty of those, I'm sorry to report.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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martin_hughes wrote:
SodaStream
Color me clueless - what's that? Sounds tasty, though. Can I get mine with scotch?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
Can I get mine with scotch?
And much more besides! Any drink you want carbonated, SodaStream's the job for you. Except they don't do them any more. Or the refills. Bastards.
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
Large-pearl tapioca. Decent skates. Fresh cheese curds.
Citizen 20.1.01
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all.'
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
There's not a lot you cant find in Sydney but the question is usually more along the lines of...do I want to sit in traffic for 45mins, fight for a parking spot, wade through the masses at the shops and pay twice what somethings worth? Last weekend I wanted a few nails that were longer than 100mm which seemed like a pretty easy task as I walked out the the door. Took me about an hour to visit three local hardware shops and come home empty handed.
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
(besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
Don't like the midtwest? I've just been in the states for the first time in my life, in Wisconsin. (Elkhart Lake and Plymouth). It was business, så just had a couple of days, but I did enjoy it very much (Especially the Frozen Custard at Culvert) :-D :-D :-D
- Anders
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Welcome to Bullhead City, where we can build huge housing and commercial developments, but I can't buy a piece of steel. Unbelievable! Having a number of power tools that are better used when securely mounted, I designed a simple workbench two weeks ago requiring a few lengths of 16 ga (~.065") steel angle to support the shelves and 12 ga (.109") angles for legs. After calling and faxing every supplier in the area it turns out that none can provide it. They quote me 1/8" and larger in 20' lengths, but not one can take a sheet of thin steel (which they have in stock), shear it to width and bend it lengthwise to 90°. Ridiculous!:mad: So the only workaround I've found is to order square steel tubing, which I'll spend Saturday slitting lengthwise with a table saw to the sizes I need for the project. As a bonus, my 60 lb table will end up weighing about 120 lbs - nice for stability, but a little tough to move about. Grrrrr... Small towns are nice, but they lack certain conveniences. What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Ooooohhhh... road trip! Haven't been to Laughlin for just about a year. It's only 260 miles each way.
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Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
Large-pearl tapioca. Decent skates. Fresh cheese curds.
Citizen 20.1.01
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all.'
Shog9 wrote:
Decent skates.
What sort of skates? No matter what town (or even country) I've lived in, I always ordered mine from the internet, as good skates just don't exist in high-street stores at all.
Sunrise Wallpaper Project | The StartPage Randomizer | The Windows Cheerleader
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Roger Wright wrote:
Can I get mine with scotch?
And much more besides! Any drink you want carbonated, SodaStream's the job for you. Except they don't do them any more. Or the refills. Bastards.
You could always do it yourself[^], but the future Mrs may not be accommodating. (Also, SodaStream's website is here[^].)
DoEvents: Generating unexpected recursion since 1991
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Shog9 wrote:
Decent skates.
What sort of skates? No matter what town (or even country) I've lived in, I always ordered mine from the internet, as good skates just don't exist in high-street stores at all.
Sunrise Wallpaper Project | The StartPage Randomizer | The Windows Cheerleader
Rollerskates / inline skates. The little town i lived in previously had a good ski/bike/skate shop with helpful sales people and plenty of selection... The larger town i live in now has a couple of ski shops and some big chain "sports shops"... but no one selling quality skates or accessories. I recently ended up having to buy a brake off of the 'Net. $20, half of that shipping. Ridiculous.
Citizen 20.1.01
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all.'
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Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
Large-pearl tapioca. Decent skates. Fresh cheese curds.
Citizen 20.1.01
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all.'
Shog9 wrote:
Fresh cheese curds.
[Gasp!] Is nothing sacred??? :omg:
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Roger Wright wrote:
What can you not purchase in your town (besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
There's not a lot you cant find in Sydney but the question is usually more along the lines of...do I want to sit in traffic for 45mins, fight for a parking spot, wade through the masses at the shops and pay twice what somethings worth? Last weekend I wanted a few nails that were longer than 100mm which seemed like a pretty easy task as I walked out the the door. Took me about an hour to visit three local hardware shops and come home empty handed.
Josh Gray wrote:
I wanted a few nails that were longer than 100mm
Got somebody you want to crucify? Seriously, though, that's a hard one to fill. I found them at Ace Hardware in the rain gutter department. They sell 7" nails for hanging gutter on the eaves.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Roger Wright wrote:
(besides a bus ticket out, if you're in the midwest US)?
Don't like the midtwest? I've just been in the states for the first time in my life, in Wisconsin. (Elkhart Lake and Plymouth). It was business, så just had a couple of days, but I did enjoy it very much (Especially the Frozen Custard at Culvert) :-D :-D :-D
- Anders
Actually I rather liked Indianapolis when I was there a few years ago. But things are a bit soggy in that region these days, and I imagine it's a little tough to get a bus anywhere. ;)
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Ooooohhhh... road trip! Haven't been to Laughlin for just about a year. It's only 260 miles each way.
Better hurry! I wouldn't want you to miss the summer... ;)
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"