Jump to content

allan1010

Members
  • Posts

    278
  • Joined

  • Last visited

allan1010's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

0

Reputation

  1. Ziggy, there's no such thing as a dangerous vehicle (unroadworthy stuff aside); it's the driver or rider that makes the difference to the accident rates. If you're a good rider or driver you have a high likelihood of being safe because you're switched on and well aware of the others in traffic around you, then if THEY make a mistake you can compenate and stay out of trouble. Plus you'll know your own limits and those of your vehicle & the weather and you will be riding/driving within them. Sadly, you do have to compensate for the inability of others to be safe out on the roads today and even more so if you drive any kind of small vehicle. If I could give any new guy setting out on the roads for the first time some advice, I'd say "Always leave yourself a way out"
  2. I know what they are, I deal with them every day but I still don't understand what Antnee wants as he appears to have done exactly what they asked, printed it out and stuck it on the parcel. Confused..... c'mon Antnee spill the beans.....
  3. Sory Antnee I don't understand. Do you have a problem???
  4. I didn't say they were! LTZ's, Raptors, Big reds etc certainly aren't at the cheap end of the market. You took what I said, which was in regard to Ziggy's having a primary means of transport with a good transmission so he can out some reliable miles on it, and added in my second comment about my desire for a 4x4 with real diffs and got a conclusion that I didn't intend. Maybe I should have made myself clearer, sorry. The original comment still stands; buy a good quality quad even if you have to buy secondhand as it'll be better engineered for durability and of course with the huge amount of different far eastern imports available, parts are easier to come by (and often cheaper) for the established brands.
  5. Everybody's the same Ziggy. Just don't do what my mate did and got insured as a named driver on his parent's policy. When the time came that he needed insurance in his own name, they crucified him despite being older and wiser. My opinion, FWIW; No claims bonus is assessed as a percentage of the policy price so rack up a few years' NCD on whatever is relatively cheap to insure and then when you transfer it to something dafter (like my 2 american cars, group 16 and 17), your NCD will jump in value tremendously and make the policy bearable. Depends on the quad, mate. If it's going to be your primary transport keep away from the cheaper end and buy something used but with a proper drivetrain. That's one of the main reasons I'm going the 4x4 route with min, better cornering with real diffs. Take some vehicle details from the ones on sale on the 'bay or exchangeandmart.co.uk and plug them into the webpage I linked you to earliuer. Like i said, it costs now to ask.
  6. That's a bummer. An expensive lesson; ALWAYS pay extra for insured shipping! It's not just DHL. I used to drive the trunk run from Tyneside to Kidderminster for another huge parcel company every night. We used to stop and collect at M1 J28 every night, and one time the depot themselves had called in the police who were waiting when I arrived that night. They checked me & my trailerload of stuff out afgainst the manifest and let me go. Later I discovered that they'd arrested a local delivery driver for theft; he was collecting the parcels and logging them in but somehow the valuable ones weren't making it onto the trailer!
  7. Aye that would work!!!! I'm glad you got it sorted. At least as an M6 you'd have a decent shot of finding one in a hardware shop, some places don't stock much smaller than that.
  8. Probably because it's cool to pin out where you're going and where you've been both as a planning aid and as a reminder of happy times and big adventures once you're home. I used to drive as far afield as North Africa and I've been into Asia several times (including before the first gulf War into Iraq when we were friends witn Saddam!!) and I had a "Sunday Times" world map, about A1 size, on my office wall doitted with loads of coloured pins. each pin was an amazing story in itself.
  9. Ziggy, try Adrian Flux for insurance. They do both of my "specialist" vehicles (both American gas guzzlers and insured for business use) for about the same as a "normal" car, and they have a division that specialises in quads. http://www.adrianflux.co.uk/quads-detail-go.php It costs nowt to ask!!!! Me? I'm up for a quad for the summer, might even get a 4x4 one!!
  10. I couldn't tell you what size the screw is as i don't have my marder here. But if you don't have a spare that will fit & you'll have to buy some you might find it useful to have a complete screw kit. Long term it'll be chaper than buying the little packs of odd screws from the model shop, many of which you'll never use. JEspares does a couple of stainless and high tensile ones but the standard FG screw kit is pretty good value at £8 from modelsport. http://www.modelsport.co.uk/?CallFunction=...mp;ItemID=14875
  11. Oh, I'm not against that and I wouldn't call Eddie a wideboy. He's an entrepreneur who spotted an opportunity. I mentioned it so people would realise or remember that was what happened bac then, otherwise you don't get a real perspective. Eddie Jordan's was a real shoestring-budget operation for some time and I greatly respect his business sense. I'm in business myself and I fully applaud Jordan's efforts. If Eddie made more money for his team (and himself) by going that route then that was absolutely the right thing to do. In fact I'd go one step further than that; if any of the other teams had actually studied Schumacher when his dad knocked on THEIR doors they could have had hiim for free for the first year but THEY missed out. Not only did Jordan spot a potential superstar but he managed to persuade his family to PUT IN money. Now THAT's good business and a fair exchange of values: the Schumachers got a step on the ladder to Michael's ultimate goal which was to build his own team at Ferrari, and Eddie got a pot of extra money to buy a bigger bilgepump to keep his ship afloat another season. It was a brilliant move for both. I can never understand those who moan on about the truly great people in our world. Burning ambition and eager desire should be encouraged not moaned about. I guess it's the British disease. At the top of your field, whatever that is, there is only a small gap in talent between the also rans and those who truly stand out. The difference is burning desire, either you've got it or not. If you have it, failure isn't an end result, it's the start of the next step, to learning what went wrong and putting it right. If you don't have it, failure os an end in itself and the insecurity will lead on to looking for somebody else to blame. Those who have the burning desire will always be looking for the opportunity. When it arrives they might only have a couple of thousandths of a second to recognise it, weigh up risk & reward, then act upon it. Those who don't have the buring desire will not even see the opportunity, they'll just be another "also-ran" and come into the pits to b*tch about getting cut up into the first bend. It's F1 guys, this is the absolute pinnacle of motorsport, it's not a carnival procession!!!!! Schumacher or Senna? Oh that's a close one. They raced together for 2 years and Senna out-drove Schumacher over and again..... But Senna was in his mid 30s and at the peak of his career where Schumacher was an upcoming talent. It was obvious in Senna's last season that Michael would be his greatest ever rival. If only we had them together 1 or 2 more years. What would have happened if Senna hadn't lost it at Tamburello? Nobody will ever know. Remember there but for the grace of God and all that; Schumacher was the one directly behind Ayrton when he came off. That same weekend F1 lost Ratzenberger and Barichello had an almost fatal crash where he came off the track at a higher speed than Ayrton, launching himself over the tyre barrier but luckily survived with some broken bones IIRC. Burning desire!!
  12. I don't know. Eddie Jordan always sold his drives to the highest bidder and his cars fpr many years were a compilation of components from whichever supplier he could get for the best money! Schumacher's dad PAID Eddie Jordan to let his son drive the car that first season when he came out from Karting. The next few races will show how good or bad Hamilton is going to be. Burning desire is where it's at. Only 1 or 2 in F1 each season ever have it.
  13. The good news is that you won't damage anything if you get it the wrong way around. If you're not comfortable cutting pins off you can always just use a servo extension lead instead of the power switch. Plug it in when you want to play and unplug it when you're finished instead of switching on and off.
  14. Been working!! Got a nice little job, 4 nights at the Terminal 5 construction site at Heathrow, waiting around with trailerloads of bits of a big crawler crane. Total mileage, around 700 to get there and back and, erm, 30 on the job site; most of that was getting off site and driving across to the freight village to get some kip as the dayshift started and the planes started coming back in each morning! So now I'm home and I haven't slept properly for 5 days. I'm way past tired and wide awake again. D**n, airports are noisy places when you're trying to sleep!!
  15. It's not even a BBC IP addy. It belongs to qwest: Qwest Communications Corporation QWEST-INET-10 (NET-65-112-0-0-1) 65.112.0.0 - 65.127.255.255 Integral Corporation Q0725-65-127-124-0 (NET-65-127-124-0-1) 65.127.124.0 - 65.127.124.255
×
×
  • Create New...