You want detailed instructions? How about a download of the 150-page Disk Spring Engineering Handbook from Schnorr:SlowLane wrote: You would think . . . there would be some detailed instructions . . .
http://www.schnorr.com/downloads.html
You want detailed instructions? How about a download of the 150-page Disk Spring Engineering Handbook from Schnorr:SlowLane wrote: You would think . . . there would be some detailed instructions . . .
"Jivermo wrote:All of which brings me to this:
Schnorrer (שנאָרער; also spelled shnorrer) is a Yiddish term meaning "beggar" or "sponger".[1] The word Schnorrer also occurs in German to describe a freeloader who frequently asks for little things, like cigarettes or little sums of money, without offering a return. The English usage of the word denotes a sly chiseler who will get money out of his acquaintances any way he can, often through an air of entitlement. A schnorrer is distinguished from an ordinary beggar by dint of his boundless chutzpah. Like "moocher", "schnorrer" does not apply to direct begging or destitution, but rather a habit of getting things (food, tools) by politely or insistently borrowing them with no intention of return.
Schnorrers sometimes begged for the dowries of poor women (Hakhnasat Kallah); a practice which was allowed even when it disrupted the public study of the Torah.[3]
Additionally, the word is the origin of the modern Hebrew verb לשנורר (leshnorer), which can be roughly defined as "getting small things without offering return."
"Hey, Colin...got a smoke and a Diet Coke for me?"
a) It is with great pleasure that I bask in the inestimable satisfaction of helping to avoid an unnecessary engine drop by means of a careful and methodical progression of inquiry.Ronin10 wrote: A) Greta is back up and running and no horrific sounds are issuing from the engine compartment.
B) leak on the oil filler tube.