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Posted: 17 Apr 2014 6:35 pm
by Lyle Clary
Looks like a wee wah for a smoke grinder
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 3:38 am
by Dave Grothusen
All I can say is, you got a lot of mileage out this one. lol
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 7:25 am
by Erv Niehaus
If I'm not mistaken, it's a genuine Henway.
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 9:21 am
by Lee Baucum
Erv, what's a Henway?
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 12:28 pm
by Sonny Jenkins
If I'm not mistaken, I sold the Excel that has slots in the pedal bar that look like they would fit that to a guy in Alaska named Larry Allen,,,,I think he is a member of the forum.
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 12:54 pm
by Erv Niehaus
Lee,
It depends on whether it's a Leghorn or a Rhode Island Red!
Posted: 18 Apr 2014 4:01 pm
by Martin Weenick
I have seen hundreds of those. It's a clutch depression fork for a 1938 Ford Coupe.
Posted: 19 Apr 2014 10:33 am
by Will Cowell
And the bullsh*t prize goes to... Ned McIntosh. With the accent firmly on "tosh" - excellent stuff, Ned.
Posted: 20 Apr 2014 5:40 pm
by Alan Brookes
Ned McIntosh wrote:It's part of a Thronomister...
Sounds good enough to me Ned.
I'll drink to that one. Thank you, I'll have another Fosters please, barman, but this time I'll have a whiskey chaser to go with it.
Posted: 23 Apr 2014 8:04 pm
by Ken Becker
ned,,,you have way too much time on your hands
Posted: 24 Apr 2014 1:48 am
by Ned McIntosh
Rest assured gentlemen it's a lot easier reading that stuff than writing it!
Posted: 10 May 2014 5:42 am
by Jason Walker
In our time-honoured Australian tradition, Ned has shown once more that 'bulldust baffles brains'. And to be honest, I was taken in by it. I'd heard that the turbo-entabulator was either a Nazi plot or an attempt to get the Queen's face off the five-dollar bill. Now I have egg on my face.
Hardware?
Posted: 10 May 2014 4:36 pm
by Frank Sprague
Everyone on the west coast of Oregon and Washington - plus all of Alaska knows exactly what that is - it's a poacher's crab gauge
Posted: 10 May 2014 6:44 pm
by Bob Hickish
Steve Lipsey wrote:Ned-
I am quite familiar with the turbo-encabulator, I suspect that the turbo-entabulator (with a "t", not a "c", see Wikipedia) is the more advanced version that also has lower duractance. Is this correct? I've been losing sleep over wondering about this thorny issue!
Steve is correct , its a tool used in setting up a Turbo-entabulator
this video should help
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXW0bx_Ooq4
Posted: 10 May 2014 9:00 pm
by Rick Nicklas
If you don't have any luck getting a reliable answer you can always use the tool to tighten the cleats on your golf shoes.
Posted: 11 May 2014 9:27 am
by Alan Brookes
Maybe it's a piece of waste metal left over when another shape was cut out.
When I worked in a factory with a steel-cutting laser machine we would end up with all sorts of shapes left over, which would be thrown into the scrap bin to be melted down. Anyone going through our scrap bin without knowing that it was scrap could puzzle for hours about what the pieces were for.