I finally found that old Nintendo Power Final Fantasy III Player's Guide I misplaced. It was in a sack with some other guides and magazines behind the couch. That perplexed me for a while.
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AlazullYour body is not a temple, it's an amusement park.Enjoy the ride.Registered Userregular
@VishNub That looks really good, and even with an actual fryer it's hard to get a whole fish to come out completely intact.
User name Alazull on Steam, PSN, Nintenders, Epic, etc.
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Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
edited November 2020
I have a ratcheting screwdriver and I think I've found the ratcheting feature to be helpful 0.01% of the time and "oh god fucking damnit" *struggles not to drop tiny screw while rotating ratchet collar to locked position* 99.99% of the time.
Perhaps if I worked with chunkier, higher friction hardware with tons of threads more often I'd feel differently. But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
And on top of that, the ratcheting mechanism is always set to loosen when you want to tighten on initial use.
Donkey Kong on
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
I have a ratcheting screwdriver and I think I've found the ratcheting feature to be helpful 0.01% of the time and "oh god fucking damnit" *struggles not to drop tiny screw while rotating ratchet collar to locked position* 99.99% of the time.
Perhaps if I worked with chunkier, higher friction hardware with tons of threads more often I'd feel differently. But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
And on top of that, the ratcheting mechanism is always set to loosen when you want to tighten on initial use.
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
every person who doesn't like an acquired taste always seems to think everyone who likes it is faking it. it should be an official fallacy.
for electronics I have my "set of small pliers and small screwdrivers and other small stuff"
for screws into walls or ikea furniture I have a drill
for slightly tightening philips or flat head screws I've got way more screwdrivers than I need, considering how seldom they're actually the best tool.
doesn't stop me from spending ages using a philips screwdriver that's too small just because I can't be arsed to get the drill even though that would mean a tenth of the effort, total, though
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
Yes. I very frequently work with screws where, even when my ratcheting screwdriver is set to tighten, the screw will loosen and fall out when I rotate the screwdriver counterclockwise. Because even the very light force needed to spin the ratchet in the "open" direction is enough to turn the screw.
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
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Zavianuniversal peace sounds better than forever warRegistered Userregular
Pope Francis likes sexy "school girl" pic on Instagram
*googles pic*
oh, huh. all things considered, that could have been... worse?
Open Bionics have teamed up with Konami Digital Entertainment to release an official Metal Gear Solid “Venom Snake” bionic arm for below-elbow amputees. The striking new design clips onto Open Bionics’ ‘Hero Arm’, which is the world’s most affordable multi-grip bionic arm.
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
Yes. I very frequently work with screws where, even when my ratcheting screwdriver is set to tighten, the screw will loosen and fall out when I rotate the screwdriver counterclockwise. Because even the very light force needed to spin the ratchet in the "open" direction is enough to turn the screw.
electronics screws are bullshit though
they're too small and there's always two hidden ones
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
Yes. I very frequently work with screws where, even when my ratcheting screwdriver is set to tighten, the screw will loosen and fall out when I rotate the screwdriver counterclockwise. Because even the very light force needed to spin the ratchet in the "open" direction is enough to turn the screw.
Ah, I see. I understand now.
When I encounter that, I just hold the shaft with my free hand on the back stroke.
Feral on
every person who doesn't like an acquired taste always seems to think everyone who likes it is faking it. it should be an official fallacy.
But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
Yes. I very frequently work with screws where, even when my ratcheting screwdriver is set to tighten, the screw will loosen and fall out when I rotate the screwdriver counterclockwise. Because even the very light force needed to spin the ratchet in the "open" direction is enough to turn the screw.
Ah, I see. I understand now.
When I encounter that, I just hold the shaft with my free hand on the back stroke.
Open Bionics have teamed up with Konami Digital Entertainment to release an official Metal Gear Solid “Venom Snake” bionic arm for below-elbow amputees. The striking new design clips onto Open Bionics’ ‘Hero Arm’, which is the world’s most affordable multi-grip bionic arm.
Open Bionics have teamed up with Konami Digital Entertainment to release an official Metal Gear Solid “Venom Snake” bionic arm for below-elbow amputees. The striking new design clips onto Open Bionics’ ‘Hero Arm’, which is the world’s most affordable multi-grip bionic arm.
I was excited when the warning label cautioned that I could burn myself but it’s just.. pretty warm? Either way my toesies don’t feel like they’re about to fall off due to frostbite so that’s something
I was excited when the warning label cautioned that I could burn myself but it’s just.. pretty warm? Either way my toesies don’t feel like they’re about to fall off due to frostbite so that’s something
I was excited when the warning label cautioned that I could burn myself but it’s just.. pretty warm? Either way my toesies don’t feel like they’re about to fall off due to frostbite so that’s something
I thought you weren't single
It’s not a problem in bed!
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ChanusHarbinger of the Spicy Rooster ApocalypseThe Flames of a Thousand Collapsed StarsRegistered Userregular
Posts
This is essentially how I self-identify.
I used to think I was a grown up but now I’m pretty sure I’m nowhere close.
More like in-your-endo
Perhaps if I worked with chunkier, higher friction hardware with tons of threads more often I'd feel differently. But on electronics, twisting the ratcheting mechanism backwards usually doesn't cause the handle to freespin and instead turns the screw backwards because everything is so loose.
And on top of that, the ratcheting mechanism is always set to loosen when you want to tighten on initial use.
It's almost exactly like this one:
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
I want one of those ones with the spring so you just push forward and it drives the bit.
but they're listening to every word I say
Slagsabel actually
ratchet drivers are for ikea furniture
On the one that I linked above, it's physically impossible for that to happen. The ratchet direction is set by a dial, and turning the dial doesn't cause the shaft to rotate even if there's no resistance.
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
for screws into walls or ikea furniture I have a drill
for slightly tightening philips or flat head screws I've got way more screwdrivers than I need, considering how seldom they're actually the best tool.
doesn't stop me from spending ages using a philips screwdriver that's too small just because I can't be arsed to get the drill even though that would mean a tenth of the effort, total, though
all ratcheting everything is set by a dial or a switch yeah
what dk is talking about is turning the screwdriver
which, when you're using it on a screw so small and loose that it offers about the same amount of resistance as just waving it about in the air, won't, well, ratchet
often, it did do this perfectly well until that last bit and then the swearing starts
sable: sabre as a verb
Yes. I very frequently work with screws where, even when my ratcheting screwdriver is set to tighten, the screw will loosen and fall out when I rotate the screwdriver counterclockwise. Because even the very light force needed to spin the ratchet in the "open" direction is enough to turn the screw.
*googles pic*
oh, huh. all things considered, that could have been... worse?
very first scene is a lot more horrifying than i remember
motherfucker just grabs the ladle at the well and puts it right to his lips to take a drink
my god
electronics screws are bullshit though
they're too small and there's always two hidden ones
Ah, I see. I understand now.
When I encounter that, I just hold the shaft with my free hand on the back stroke.
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.
I just push down as hard as I can and twist
Wait, what are we talking about?
could have been better too
but not by that much since instagrams aren't that explicit
Rad! If I lost a limb I would want an option to make it badass
If I lost an arm I'd demand a fleshlight attachment
Come Overwatch with meeeee
but they're listening to every word I say
I was excited when the warning label cautioned that I could burn myself but it’s just.. pretty warm? Either way my toesies don’t feel like they’re about to fall off due to frostbite so that’s something
yeah but it's embarrassing to the pope and the vatican and fuck the pope and fuck them so we'll ignore that
probably
I thought you weren't single
It’s not a problem in bed!
brand loyalty is the dark side