A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
Can anyone shed light on this?
Thomas G. Marshall wrote:
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses
> olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's
> job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
> friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
> impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
----------------------------------------------
"oil" provides a means of carrying away heat and "sloth" from the
teeth of the blade.
Check out "cutting fluid", "cutting oil", etc.
Makes cutting metal a whole lot easier.
Lew
On Dec 19, 7:35=A0pm, "Thomas G. Marshall" <[email protected]> wrote:
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. =A0He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. =A0I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Can anyone shed light on this?
Waxing the blade works, too. Doesn't make as
much mess. Candles or sticks of canning wax
won't leak all over your toolbox.
On Dec 19, 7:35=A0pm, "Thomas G. Marshall" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Can anyone shed light on this?
Light? You want Light and Oil?
I use both when cutting and drilling and they make the work go better
and the cut straight(er).
Try it, you'll like it.
On Dec 21, 11:20=A0am, Swingman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Larry Jaques wrote:
> > So, I still say "Put a new, sharp blade on that damned thing,
> > phorbin."
>
> Come now, C-less ... that's not the point!
>
> A 'caviler in the usenet wild' MUST take exception to ANY minute detail
> not specifically in lock step with a Google/Wikipedia source so that you
> can be publicly corrected whilst showcasing said caviler's 'superior
> than thou', hard won, Google expertise/knowledge.
>
> You may also want to make a note of that other noted 'caviler in the
> wild' characteristic: never showing photographic evidence of anything
> personally accomplished.
....................................yeah! What he said.
On Dec 29, 10:12=A0pm, mac davis <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 16:35:48 -0800 (PST), "Thomas G. Marshall"
>
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> >oil) when using a hacksaw. =A0He says that it keeps the blade from
> >wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> >I just can't quite understand this. =A0I understand that the blade's job
> >is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> >heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> >for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> >Can anyone shed light on this?
>
> My guess is that as in a power hacksaw, the oil would help carry chips/sh=
avings
> away from the blade and make a smoother cut with less chance of jamming?
>
> mac
>
> Please remove splinters before emailing
MAC!!!!! Happy New Year!
Thomas G. Marshall wrote:
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Can anyone shed light on this?
>
Metal cutting tools such as lathes, bandsaws etc. have cutting fluid
circulating systems. Metalworking, woodworking, two separate worlds.
Ldb
On Dec 21, 7:53=A0am, phorbin <[email protected]> wrote:
> In article <e9d8aaa3-b2fa-41f7-9514-
> [email protected]>, [email protected] says...
>
> > Because something is hot to touch does not make it too hot for the
> > metal. =A0We as humans have a very limited range of comfortable
> > temperatures. =A0A metal hacksaw can go quite a bit farther without
> > damage.
>
> I've had them 'blue' and be hot enough to burn wood when I set them
> down.
Same answer. The thermal tolerance of wood is in no way related to
the that of steel.
On 12/19/2009 4:35 PM Thomas G. Marshall spake thus:
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
Well, by your reasoning, no cutting tool--drill bit, milling cutter,
broach--should cut if immersed in oil. But they all are when used in
industrial cutting machines, so I guess the oil is good for the tool and
good for the cutting operation.
For one thing, it helps flush chips away, as well as cooling things down.
--
I am a Canadian who was born and raised in The Netherlands. I live on
Planet Earth on a spot of land called Canada. We have noisy neighbours.
- harvested from Usenet
On Tue, 29 Dec 2009 19:12:25 -0800, the infamous mac davis
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 16:35:48 -0800 (PST), "Thomas G. Marshall"
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>>oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>>wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>>
>>I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
>>is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
>>heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
>>for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>>
>>Can anyone shed light on this?
>
>My guess is that as in a power hacksaw, the oil would help carry chips/shavings
>away from the blade and make a smoother cut with less chance of jamming?
In power hacksaws, speed is an issue and oil becomes a coolant as
well.
--
It's a shallow life that doesn't give a person a few scars.
-- Garrison Keillor
On Dec 19, 6:35=A0pm, "Thomas G. Marshall" <[email protected]> wrote:
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. =A0He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. =A0I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Can anyone shed light on this?
You are machining the metal. A lot of metalworking machines spray oil
or an oil/water mixture onto the cutting tool during machining.
Oiling the blade is a simplified version of that with the hacksaw.
With that said, I'll admit I seldom use oil unless I am cutting a very
large or thick piece of stock. Then it does seem to speed up and
smoot the process.
RonB
On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 17:46:51 -0800 (PST), the infamous
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>
>> Can anyone shed light on this?
>
>I've used WD-40. Cools the blade, cuts faster.
Smokes, does it? Do you feed your arm Viagra before cutting?
HINT: If you use a sharp blade to start, it won't get very hot in the
first place.
Unfortunately, I went 54 years before learning that simple lesson.
--
This episode raises disturbing questions about scientific standards,
at least in highly political areas such as global warming. Still,
it's remarkable to see how quickly corrective information can now
spread. After years of ignored freedom-of-information requests and
stonewalling, all it took was disclosure to change the debate. Even
the most influential scientists must prove their case in the court
of public opiniona court that, thanks to the Web, is one where
eventually all views get a hearing. --Gordon Crovitz, WSJ 12/9/09
mac davis <[email protected]> writes:
> My guess is that as in a power hacksaw, the oil would help carry
> chips/shavings away from the blade and make a smoother cut with less
> chance of jamming?
I have a lubricant used for bandsaws. I got it from a woodworking
supply, but it's made for metal-cutting bandsaws.
"Thomas G. Marshall" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:b182bf3c-ebeb-431e-b4c1-a346e45b8fec@d10g2000yqh.googlegroups.com...
>
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Can anyone shed light on this?
>
IMHO the lube is going to cut down on friction between the side of the blade
and the material being cut. When first starting the cut you probably will
not notice any appreciable difference when using a lubricant.
Will the lube keep the blade sharp? No, probably not but it will probably
aid in keeping the teeth clean and that will in turn give the effect of the
blade staying sharp longer.
On 11/17/2016 8:41 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> They make POWER hacksaws?!?
>
You want electric of pneumatic?
The one we have at work has a 14" blade. I've seen much larger though.
http://www.ebay.com/bhp/power-hacksaw
In article <b182bf3c-ebeb-431e-b4c1-
[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
>
> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
> is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
> heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
> for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Can anyone shed light on this?
I don't use oil, I use something called 'cutting fluid' as sold by
engineering supplies. Sure makes the drillpress bite better in
hard/slick metals, I'm not going to give page-long testimonials for the
efficacy with a hacksaw, but it seems to help. It also acts as a coolant
for the cutting edge.
It does contain some light oil, not sure what else, I haven't looked at
the blurb for a couple of decades. Also heard of people using kerosene
for the purpose.
-P.
In article <e9d8aaa3-b2fa-41f7-9514-
[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
> Because something is hot to touch does not make it too hot for the
> metal. We as humans have a very limited range of comfortable
> temperatures. A metal hacksaw can go quite a bit farther without
> damage.
I've had them 'blue' and be hot enough to burn wood when I set them
down.
In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> You may also want to make a note of that other noted 'caviler in the
> wild' characteristic: never showing photographic evidence of anything
> personally accomplished.
I can't count the number of times I've not had a camera around to prove
that I've done something a bit unusual or stupid.
I'm sure the same applies to just about everyone.
Shrug...
You either believe me or you don't.
I have a 'blue max' - maybe different in spelling - hacksaw that
is a 4" 'tall and about 24" long. Thick. I was in the process of
making a wood saw - like a bow saw - from it - for really nasty wood.
I just got out my 1 man buck saw that cuts down a tree and used it.
It has a standard looking hand saw and a post for the far end if needed.
Martin
On 11/17/2016 7:56 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 11/17/2016 8:41 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> They make POWER hacksaws?!?
>>
>
> You want electric of pneumatic?
>
> The one we have at work has a 14" blade. I've seen much larger though.
> http://www.ebay.com/bhp/power-hacksaw
On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 16:35:48 -0800 (PST), "Thomas G. Marshall"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
>I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
>is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
>heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
>for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
>Can anyone shed light on this?
My guess is that as in a power hacksaw, the oil would help carry chips/shavings
away from the blade and make a smoother cut with less chance of jamming?
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
On Dec 20, 12:40=A0pm, krw <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sun, 20 Dec 2009 07:49:47 -0800, Larry Jaques
>
>
>
> <novalidaddress@di\/ersify.com> wrote:
> >On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 22:29:05 -0500, the infamous "J. Clarke"
> ><[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>
> >>David Nebenzahl wrote:
> >>> On 12/19/2009 4:35 PM Thomas G. Marshall spake thus:
>
> >>>> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses oliv=
e
> >>>> oil) when using a hacksaw. =A0He says that it keeps the blade from
> >>>> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
> >>>> I just can't quite understand this. =A0I understand that the blade's
> >>>> job is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
> >>>> friction heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
> >>>> impossible for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> >>> Well, by your reasoning, no cutting tool--drill bit, milling cutter,
> >>> broach--should cut if immersed in oil. But they all are when used in
> >>> industrial cutting machines, so I guess the oil is good for the tool
> >>> and good for the cutting operation.
>
> >>> For one thing, it helps flush chips away, as well as cooling things
> >>> down.
>
> >>A cutting edge is basically a wedge--the lubricant keeps the pieces it'=
s
> >>wedging into from seizing to it and lets them slide more freely against=
it,
> >>not to mention the cooling effect, which is important with metals.
>
> >C'mon, guys. Cutting speed with a hacksaw is too slow to require
> >coolant.
>
> Ever touch one just after a cut?
Because something is hot to touch does not make it too hot for the
metal. We as humans have a very limited range of comfortable
temperatures. A metal hacksaw can go quite a bit farther without
damage.
On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 16:35:48 -0800 (PST), the infamous "Thomas G.
Marshall" <[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>
>A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
>I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
>is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
>heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
>for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
>Can anyone shed light on this?
Oil with a hacksaw? Where's he trying to PUT it? <gasp!>
--
This episode raises disturbing questions about scientific standards,
at least in highly political areas such as global warming. Still,
it's remarkable to see how quickly corrective information can now
spread. After years of ignored freedom-of-information requests and
stonewalling, all it took was disclosure to change the debate. Even
the most influential scientists must prove their case in the court
of public opiniona court that, thanks to the Web, is one where
eventually all views get a hearing. --Gordon Crovitz, WSJ 12/9/09
On Tue, 29 Dec 2009 20:41:07 -0800 (PST), Robatoy <[email protected]>
wrote:
>> My guess is that as in a power hacksaw, the oil would help carry chips/shavings
>> away from the blade and make a smoother cut with less chance of jamming?
>>
>> mac
>>
>MAC!!!!! Happy New Year!
Thank you, sir... back at ya...
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 22:29:05 -0500, the infamous "J. Clarke"
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>David Nebenzahl wrote:
>> On 12/19/2009 4:35 PM Thomas G. Marshall spake thus:
>>
>>> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>>> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>>> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>>>
>>> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's
>>> job is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
>>> friction heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
>>> impossible for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>>
>> Well, by your reasoning, no cutting tool--drill bit, milling cutter,
>> broach--should cut if immersed in oil. But they all are when used in
>> industrial cutting machines, so I guess the oil is good for the tool
>> and good for the cutting operation.
>>
>> For one thing, it helps flush chips away, as well as cooling things
>> down.
>
>A cutting edge is basically a wedge--the lubricant keeps the pieces it's
>wedging into from seizing to it and lets them slide more freely against it,
>not to mention the cooling effect, which is important with metals.
C'mon, guys. Cutting speed with a hacksaw is too slow to require
coolant.
--
This episode raises disturbing questions about scientific standards,
at least in highly political areas such as global warming. Still,
it's remarkable to see how quickly corrective information can now
spread. After years of ignored freedom-of-information requests and
stonewalling, all it took was disclosure to change the debate. Even
the most influential scientists must prove their case in the court
of public opiniona court that, thanks to the Web, is one where
eventually all views get a hearing. --Gordon Crovitz, WSJ 12/9/09
Larry Jaques wrote:
> So, I still say "Put a new, sharp blade on that damned thing,
> phorbin."
Come now, C-less ... that's not the point!
A 'caviler in the usenet wild' MUST take exception to ANY minute detail
not specifically in lock step with a Google/Wikipedia source so that you
can be publicly corrected whilst showcasing said caviler's 'superior
than thou', hard won, Google expertise/knowledge.
You may also want to make a note of that other noted 'caviler in the
wild' characteristic: never showing photographic evidence of anything
personally accomplished.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)
On Sun, 20 Dec 2009 07:49:47 -0800, Larry Jaques
<novalidaddress@di\/ersify.com> wrote:
>On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 22:29:05 -0500, the infamous "J. Clarke"
><[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>
>>David Nebenzahl wrote:
>>> On 12/19/2009 4:35 PM Thomas G. Marshall spake thus:
>>>
>>>> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>>>> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>>>> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>>>>
>>>> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's
>>>> job is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
>>>> friction heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
>>>> impossible for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>>>
>>> Well, by your reasoning, no cutting tool--drill bit, milling cutter,
>>> broach--should cut if immersed in oil. But they all are when used in
>>> industrial cutting machines, so I guess the oil is good for the tool
>>> and good for the cutting operation.
>>>
>>> For one thing, it helps flush chips away, as well as cooling things
>>> down.
>>
>>A cutting edge is basically a wedge--the lubricant keeps the pieces it's
>>wedging into from seizing to it and lets them slide more freely against it,
>>not to mention the cooling effect, which is important with metals.
>
>C'mon, guys. Cutting speed with a hacksaw is too slow to require
>coolant.
Ever touch one just after a cut?
In article <b182bf3c-ebeb-431e-b4c1-a346e45b8fec@d10g2000yqh.googlegroups.com>, "Thomas G. Marshall" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>
>I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's job
>is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via friction
>heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly impossible
>for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
>Can anyone shed light on this?
Hacksaw teeth will bite into metal just fine even if the cut is saturated with
oil. The purpose of the oil is to keep from wearing the teeth out, and to
reduce friction so that the blade doesn't heat up so much it loses its temper
(toughness and hardness).
Try it sometime on a piece of scrap steel, say about 1/8" thick. Make one cut
without oiling the blade, then another cut with oil on the blade. You'll find
that with oil, it cuts faster and smoother with less pressure, less noice, and
less heat.
>
David Nebenzahl wrote:
> On 12/19/2009 4:35 PM Thomas G. Marshall spake thus:
>
>> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>>
>> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's
>> job is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
>> friction heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
>> impossible for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>
> Well, by your reasoning, no cutting tool--drill bit, milling cutter,
> broach--should cut if immersed in oil. But they all are when used in
> industrial cutting machines, so I guess the oil is good for the tool
> and good for the cutting operation.
>
> For one thing, it helps flush chips away, as well as cooling things
> down.
A cutting edge is basically a wedge--the lubricant keeps the pieces it's
wedging into from seizing to it and lets them slide more freely against it,
not to mention the cooling effect, which is important with metals.
"Peter Huebner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> It does contain some light oil, not sure what else, I haven't looked at
> the blurb for a couple of decades. Also heard of people using kerosene
> for the purpose.
My dad taught me to use kerosene to rinse glass cutters and lubricate and
clean the surface when cutting glass. We cut a lot of glass in our hardware
store during the many years we had it open.
LdB wrote:
> Thomas G. Marshall wrote:
>> A friend of mine insists that you should use [any] oil (he uses olive
>> oil) when using a hacksaw. He says that it keeps the blade from
>> wearing out but does not impede the cutting.
>>
>> I just can't quite understand this. I understand that the blade's
>> job is to have the teeth bite (and not wear through the item via
>> friction heat) but it just seems to me that oil will make it nearly
>> impossible for the teeth to grab hold of the item.
>>
>> Can anyone shed light on this?
>>
>
>
> Metal cutting tools such as lathes, bandsaws etc. have cutting fluid
> circulating systems. Metalworking, woodworking, two separate worlds.
Wood cutting benefits from oil too. The trouble is that the oil soaks into
the wood and can't be cleaned off, so there's a downside that outweighs the
benefits.
FWIW, Bosch used to sell a blade oiler for their jigsaws, intended for metal
cutting.
On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 05:44:03 -0800 (PST), "Thomas G. Marshall"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On Dec 21, 7:53Â am, phorbin <[email protected]> wrote:
>> In article <e9d8aaa3-b2fa-41f7-9514-
>> [email protected]>, [email protected] says...
>>
>> > Because something is hot to touch does not make it too hot for the
>> > metal. Â We as humans have a very limited range of comfortable
>> > temperatures. Â A metal hacksaw can go quite a bit farther without
>> > damage.
>>
>> I've had them 'blue' and be hot enough to burn wood when I set them
>> down.
>
>Same answer. The thermal tolerance of wood is in no way related to
>the that of steel.
But "blue" is temper colopur. If you get steel hot enough to "blue"
you have affected hardness/temper and damaged the blade. Absolutely
NOTHING wrong with using coolant/lubricant on a hack-saw - and if you
are attempting to cut aluminum it is a EXCELLENT idea as it keeps the
teeth from "loading up"
On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 07:53:47 -0500, the infamous phorbin
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>In article <e9d8aaa3-b2fa-41f7-9514-
>[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
>
>
>> Because something is hot to touch does not make it too hot for the
>> metal. We as humans have a very limited range of comfortable
>> temperatures. A metal hacksaw can go quite a bit farther without
>> damage.
>
>I've had them 'blue' and be hot enough to burn wood when I set them
>down.
If you can blue a manual hacksaw by hand, you're our hero. More often,
good blades have enough set to keep from binding in the cut and cool
considerably during the stroke and the backstroke. Since I started
using Starrett blades (the only Starrett thangs I can afford) I
haven't noticed a blade hot enough to burn me after cutting angle
iron. The stock itself is a heatsink, ferchrissake.
So, I still say "Put a new, sharp blade on that damned thing,
phorbin."
--------------------------------------------
-- I'm in touch with my Inner Curmudgeon. --
============================================
On Mon, 21 Dec 2009 10:20:27 -0600, the infamous Swingman
<[email protected]> scrawled the following:
>Larry Jaques wrote:
>
>> So, I still say "Put a new, sharp blade on that damned thing,
>> phorbin."
>
>Come now, C-less ... that's not the point!
Erm, OK.
>A 'caviler in the usenet wild' MUST take exception to ANY minute detail
>not specifically in lock step with a Google/Wikipedia source so that you
>can be publicly corrected whilst showcasing said caviler's 'superior
>than thou', hard won, Google expertise/knowledge.
>
>You may also want to make a note of that other noted 'caviler in the
>wild' characteristic: never showing photographic evidence of anything
>personally accomplished.
Ah, got it. Oh, all this revelling (or is it reviling?) with those
pesky cavilers has me tired. G'night, Chet.
--
REMEMBER: The sooner you fall behind,
the more time you'll have to catch up!