C-Mag wrote: ↑Thu May 09, 2019 11:59 amMan found with Thousands of guns, selling and manufacturing in wealthy LA neighborhood
https://patch.com/california/los-angele ... tty-family
Based and lead pilled
C-Mag wrote: ↑Thu May 09, 2019 11:59 amMan found with Thousands of guns, selling and manufacturing in wealthy LA neighborhood
https://patch.com/california/los-angele ... tty-family
It is right up my alley. I've watched some of his stuff before. He's pretty fucking sharp. He displays a wide body of knowledge in mechanical engineering...…………. Funny Too.Haumana wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 1:12 amHas AvE been posted here before? This channel strikes me as to being right up Cmag's alley. Dude does the most in depth tool and appliance reviews going. He does all kinds of other cool shit too, CNC, electronics, machining and troubleshooting. His knowledge and self reliance is worth tapping in to.
Super sharp. I've been deep diving on his channel as of late. He is hilarious, anyone can tell he has spent a large part of his time out in the field "doing". He isn't one to take no for an answer.
Agreed.
Honestly, I'd settle for a few people with common sense. I got a call from my visiting MiL yesterday saying the hose in my yard was leaking (bad quick connect) and she couldn't figure out how to turn it off. The hose bib has a basic long handle ball valve on it. How does someone get to their 70's, owning a home as a widow 1/3 of that time, and not know how to turn off a fucking valve? People don't bother to understand even the most basic shit, seeming to make no distinction between repairing a door lock and an iPhone. It's all beyond them.C-Mag wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 1:44 pmAgreed.
Guys like him with decades of experiencing 'doing' are Meta's compared to most of us. I have a brother that is a mechanical prodigy with mechanical things like vehicles and equipment. It's really amazing the depth of their knowledge and intelligence to just understand how things operate. These people see how components work together without a schematic.
If I have to rebuild the world I just want to be around one guy like that.
Did you have to explain clockwise and counterclockwise to her ?brewster wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 2:05 pmHonestly, I'd settle for a few people with common sense. I got a call from my visiting MiL yesterday saying the hose in my yard was leaking (bad quick connect) and she couldn't figure out how to turn it off. The hose bib has a basic long handle ball valve on it. How does someone get to their 70's, owning a home as a widow 1/3 of that time, and not know how to turn off a fucking valve? People don't bother to understand even the most basic shit, seeming to make no distinction between repairing a door lock and an iPhone. It's all beyond them.C-Mag wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 1:44 pmAgreed.
Guys like him with decades of experiencing 'doing' are Meta's compared to most of us. I have a brother that is a mechanical prodigy with mechanical things like vehicles and equipment. It's really amazing the depth of their knowledge and intelligence to just understand how things operate. These people see how components work together without a schematic.
If I have to rebuild the world I just want to be around one guy like that.
That's partly an artifact of an absurdly expensive replacement part supply for these machines we use. I can't recall if I've ranted about this here before, but I had an exchange with an appliance repair blogger about parts. He tried to convince me that $100 for a GE OEM oven igniter, a block of ceramic with some nichrome metal stuck in it, was totally worth it, even when aftermarket could be had for like $10-15. He deleted my posts when I pointed out that I could buy a smartphone for that, or a whole new low end range with 2 of these same igniters in it for $300.