Guess I'm a curator as well: Tube amps, B-3s and Leslies, Rhodes, Whirly 200s, Clavinets, and even a dang Mellotron.
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Originally posted by Mackin View PostI don't know where to start...
This is all very true and equally heartbreaking to read for me.
Sometimes I wish I was born a couple of decades earlier.Drewline
When was the last time you did something for the first time?
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One recent (likely temporary) "repair salmon" managing to swim upstream is mechanical watch repair, as has been noted in many recent articles. Rich guys still wear ridiculously expensive mechanical watches utilizing 19th century technology, so there is some small market for their repair.
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I'd like to learn to fix the big clock tower clocks. I'd suppose learning watches would give a leg up on the principles.
Big bucks & travel with clock towers. Pipe organs too I'd guess.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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whilst it's true that modern equipment is less and less repairable, the classic beloved repairable old stuff ain't going nowhere. I will have crack at anything musical and electronic (given up on non-tube hifi though), and do you know I think the single amp model I see most of are early 60s AC30s. There are so many of them out there, I'm amazed the price holds up. So till they lose their cachet I'm still in business. And there aren't very many repair shops in the UK. Maybe I shouldn't have said that, don;t go moving over here guys, you're too good.
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Man I just dumped a butt load of likes on this thread!!! Great follow up to my simple recycle statement and industry prediction. I can't begin to respond to much of it. Beyond my pay grade (so to speak). So much insight here... I wonder how much of it will prove itself Thanks guys! I love this forum!
Incidentally... We're all at the mercy of what's spoon fed to us to some degree (though Mick get's a nod for rising above even that!). I do recycle at all levels that are offered (but remember I live on Whidbey Island?!?) I can recycle used motor oil (and I do), I can recycle bottles and cans (and I do), I can recycle metal objects like refrigerators and lawn mowers (and I do). It's important to do what you can when you can. We all have lives to get back to and recycling is very often a futile effort, but not always. I know that a lot of recycling isn't maximized to avoid down purposing or done to achieve maximum recovery. But consider the alternative of doing NOTHING.?.
Always do what you can when you can otherwise doing what you have to once you have to may prove impossible.Last edited by Chuck H; 12-13-2015, 03:52 AM."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Huh.?. Double post. And I didn't even punch anything twice!?! It's happening on it's own now!"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Walk around any old town or village in the British Isles and you'll notice where once there were railings there are stumps set in lead, where they were cut off. Churches, homes, walls, public buildings and much more. The reason for this was a wartime initiative to make the people stuck back home think they were contributing to the war effort. In the main it was a propaganda excercise. Railings to tanks, pots and pans to Spitfires.
Much of the metal was stockpiled out of sight and eventually dumped either at sea or, as my Father recollects, used to fill a disused coal mine shaft.
So, if a government will do that and get rid of our architectural heritage, have things really changed so much that a similar move wouldn't be used to lull people into a sense of doing good by recycling?
I wonder how many local authorities in the UK are still incinerating electrical/electronic waste - mainly plastics - despite separation at the point of collection?
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A federally funded program that troubles to separate waste, and then burn it all in the same furnace OR just dump the toxic stuff where it will be just as toxic, but somewhere else...
How practical! Your tax dollars at work."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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Originally posted by Chuck H View PostA federally funded program that troubles to separate waste, and then burn it all in the same furnace OR just dump the toxic stuff where it will be just as toxic, but somewhere else...
How practical! Your tax dollars at work.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/12/ny...ion-trial.html
Don't worry, Donny Trump will fix it all!This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Originally posted by Mick Bailey View PostWalk around any old town or village in the British Isles and you'll notice where once there were railings there are stumps set in lead, where they were cut off. Churches, homes, walls, public buildings and much more. The reason for this was a wartime initiative to make the people stuck back home think they were contributing to the war effort. In the main it was a propaganda excercise. Railings to tanks, pots and pans to Spitfires.
Much of the metal was stockpiled out of sight and eventually dumped either at sea or, as my Father recollects, used to fill a disused coal mine shaft.
So, if a government will do that and get rid of our architectural heritage, have things really changed so much that a similar move wouldn't be used to lull people into a sense of doing good by recycling?
I wonder how many local authorities in the UK are still incinerating electrical/electronic waste - mainly plastics - despite separation at the point of collection?
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