From: Chris Whelan on
On Wed, 28 Jul 2010 13:47:12 -0700, Jim K wrote:

[...]

> I already told him! and you go on about people wasting bandwidth!?

LOL!

I think Grimly might be more concerned with the annoyance of having to
scroll down through lots of posts he's already read.

Chris

--
Remove prejudice to reply.
From: Jim K on
On 28 July, 22:04, Chris Whelan <cawhe...(a)prejudicentlworld.com>
wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Jul 2010 13:47:12 -0700, Jim K wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > I already told him! and you go on about people wasting bandwidth!?
>
> LOL!
>
> I think Grimly might be more concerned with the annoyance of having to
> scroll down through lots of posts he's already read.

I imagine he's printing them out on itsy paper with holes down each
side a la "grandstand teleprinter" ......
if so



W I P E A R S E H E R E




should bring back a sense of purpose (if not reality - ouch)

Cheers
Jim K
From: Mark on
Rob Graham wrote:

>. I simply went to the pub, they
> gave me one, and I re-cycled it when empty (paid for the gas itself,
> tho'). Then breweries got wise to this sort of thing and started putting
> nitrogen into the gas. OK for beer but not for welding.

Not strictly true, the are four gas mixes supplied to the pub trade,
one is food grade pure Co2 for soft drinks,�and some Lagers.
then you have 30 50 and 70% N2 mixes for different ales and stouts.
How do i know this as fact and not an OWT, i own a pub.
A 14lb refill should cost no more then �10, don't know how much you are
paying for fire extinguisher refills but i bet it's more then that.��
From: asahartz on
On Wed, 28 Jul 2010 13:04:05 +0100, Rob Graham
<rttgraham(a)btinternet.com> wrote:

>On 28/07/2010 12:39, Duncan Wood wrote:
>> On Wed, 28 Jul 2010 11:02:05 +0100, Rob Graham
>> <rttgraham(a)btinternet.com> wrote:

>> Most pubs still have pure CO2 for the coke machine, mixed gas makes your
>> beer less fizzy whilst still preserving it reliably.
>
>Interesting. Maybe I could go back to the pub bottle. I wouldn't have
>the problem with pressure testing then.
>
You don't have to get it from the pub. I just call my local gas stockist
"Gas & Hire" - they keep a hundred or so CO2 cylinders in stock.
--
asahartz woz ere
From: Jim K on
On 29 July, 14:47, Grim Cludg wrote:

<predictable obscenities>

;>)))