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Reply to: test please delete

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Previously on "test please delete"

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    Oh FFS, the "Reply-To" address just sends an email back saying it won't be read

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    The lorry is now heading south on the M69

    I discovered that the email with all the details on has an actual reply address, albeit to a CRM system, so I've sent a snotty email explaining my observations and the postcode theory and demanding satisfaction

    And as I am clearly not getting a washer-dryer today, I'm going to move the furniture back to where it's in their way, and order dinner to be delivered because I'm not starting cooking at this time

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    I'm pretty certain they've cocked it up

    I was keeping a watch as they made various drops around the northeast of the city until I was next. Then map showed them on the next road, over by the park! So I headed downstairs and out to the road, ready to meet them… except then the site stopped showing me as next, and they were off delivering somewhere down near the station. Further investigation shows that the place they stopped nearby for a few minutes has the same postcode as my place except for one letter - and the differing letters are right next to each other on the keyboard

    So I'm now convinced, as I watch them making their fourth delivery since they came within two hundred yards of here, that they've fat-fingered the postcode, somehow failed to notice that the name of the road they were on was different, shrugged, and given up

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by malvolio View Post

    That's easier than you might think. Chock it underneath when it's open enough to reach the hinges. Take out two screws from each hinge, then remove the last three from the bottom hinge upwards. To put it back, put it back in the chocks, screw in one screw in the top hinge to support it in place, then one in the other two hinges, then the rest. It should be back where it started.

    For chocks I use three wedges along the width of the door (one to the left, two to the right) to keep it level.
    Cheers, mal! Only two hinges on my doors, though the same general method applies

    When looking on RightMove at other flats in the block, I've noticed that quite a few have had fancy doors installed, but I reckon my featureless white-painted ones are probably the originals from when the place was built in the early 1960s

    Back in the mid-1980s I got sent on a couple of training courses in Instructional Techniques as part of my short-lived work training the long-term unemployed in IT. One time we were split into groups with the exercise of preparing and presenting a detailed explanation of how to do some task. One group was all older tradesmen, and they gave an excellent presentation on how to hang a door! It was nearly forty years ago, but from what I recollect it was the same process as you describe

    I've just been back out there with the tape measure and I reckon they should be able to get it in, though it'll be a tight squeeze. Mind you, for the last hour or so they've been on delivery 19 in Melton Mowbray. I'm now supposed to expect them between 16:30 and 18:30, but I'm pretty sure they won't manage five more jobs plus the journey down the A607 in the next half hour. I'm starting to worry that I'll be getting a message saying "Sorry, ran out of time, got to reschedule"

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  • malvolio
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    snip...

    If the whole kitchen door needs to come off…
    That's easier than you might think. Chock it underneath when it's open enough to reach the hinges. Take out two screws from each hinge, then remove the last three from the bottom hinge upwards. To put it back, put it back in the chocks, screw in one screw in the top hinge to support it in place, then one in the other two hinges, then the rest. It should be back where it started.

    For chocks I use three wedges along the width of the door (one to the left, two to the right) to keep it level.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    The delivery folk are currently on stop 10, with mine being 26. The estimated time of arrival is now between 15:52 and 19:52

    But I've no idea how reliable their time estimation algorithm is, of course

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  • ladymuck
    replied


    Morning all

    There was sunshine when I got up but that's been replaced by cloud. Currently 18 degrees with a high of 23 expected. The sun may reappear occasionally. Barometer up to 1022 mBar.

    Sunrise 05:58; Sunset 20:09 BST

    The day started with me realising, while being incensed by an interview on R4, that I had a meeting at 9 am. I was up and logged on in plenty of time, with a coffee. Two meetings now done and I'm having some toast.

    The quote for the repairs to my car came in at north of £6k incl VAT. That's more than the car is worth but my brother says the cost doesn't really matter if I have no intention of selling it. The rust on the rear wheel arch is worse than I'd deluded myself into thinking, seeing as I've known it's needed attention for several years now. I'll think on it for a few days. The quote is good for three months, which gives me time to plan how to pay for it should I go ahead.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    The flat's hallway has now been cleared of clutter, providing all the access they're going to get for delivering the washer-dryer short of taking a few walls out, which is forbidden by the terms of the lease. I even vacuumed it! Surprising how much dust gathers in a wholly interior space

    And Amazon have just delivered some cheap runners which I'll put down to protect my lovely 1960s parquet floor

    The tricky bit is going to be the kitchen door, where they'll have to sort of pivot it to get between the units within and the doorframe. There's a corner cupboard whose door I could remove, which would give them an extra couple of inches. But I won't bother with anything like that unless the situation demands it; it'll only take a minute to remove it if it's needed, but then I'd have the tricky business of putting it back on

    If the whole kitchen door needs to come off…

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Back from hotel stay after nephew wedding. As usual it was me got the loony dancing going.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Morning denizens

    Sunny start here, though there's also cloud around and it'll get cloudier by lunchtime. It's still warm enough but not too warm, being 16°C with a goal of 20° this afternoon. The barometers are back up a bit, at 1010/1018mB

    Leave a comment:


  • DoctorStrangelove
    replied
    Morning.

    Friday?

    Dry.

    Sunny.

    Blue sky.

    Cooler in here at 19.3 deg, 19.5 in the kitchen, 17.5 in the leanto.

    1016 mBar, 30 in Hg, 762.1 Torr, 14.74 psi, (up from 1015 last night), 61% RH (Lidl electric).

    Meanwhile on the 10th of February 2020 NF was unimpressed with the pace of the first eps of "Picard", WTFH was wondering if he could finesse another trip to Memphis, Brillo was railing at the lack of trains, BR14 popped in, opm declared it was raining in Manchester (quelle surprise), and it was equally fine around here (ditto).

    Walk (towpath) walked in the sunshine. Quite warm in places.

    Lunch: brunch. Entertainment: R4 green bollox <click> 13 o'clock news: <click> when the Zionist apologist started spouting lies.
    Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; Today, 12:22.

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    I read some more of The Rewind Files tonight, in which confusion grows around who exactly is responsible for Watergate, and whether it's supposed to have been stopped or not

    Early night now as I'll need to make sure everything's ready for the washer-dryer stuff tomorrow morning. This will include moving some stuff in the hall, which is really an L-shaped corridor running through the flat to the kitchen.

    Goodnight all

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

    Ah! That all connects up rather nicely.
    The plot thickens! There's also Goose Bay Airport which is probably the one Shute was referring to, built during the war and now largely a military airfield, though it does have some commercial flights as well. According to that Wikipedia article, it was named Goose because they already had an airfield named Gander

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  • ladymuck
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post

    I didn't know that specific fact, but thanks to Nevil Shute I did know that Gander is the location of an airport that was part of the transatlantic air routes in the days before planes could make it across in one go. And there's also a water aerodrome for seaplanes called Goose
    Ah! That all connects up rather nicely.

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  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post
    As an aside, did you know that Gander is the name for the oceanic airspace between the east coast of Canada and roughly halfway across the Atlantic?
    I didn't know that specific fact, but thanks to Nevil Shute I did know that Gander is the location of an airport that was part of the transatlantic air routes in the days before planes could make it across in one go. And there's also a water aerodrome for seaplanes called Goose

    Leave a comment:

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