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by Jacob Morgan » 5 Feb 2017 11:32
Thanks for the article, very informative. Looking at the picture of the lock, it looks like turning the guard key, pulling the renter nose, and fishing the bolt back would be the way to go if the bank needed it opened?
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by ratlock » 5 Feb 2017 13:02
Great article, and I liked your site.
was looking at the woodstaining article on your site, and may I suggest another way. I used to teach joinery, and when an old pattern maker told me about this, I thought he must be nuts.
potassium permanganate crystals mixed with water. Then the solution brushed , or applied with a cloth onto the wood.
When you first brush it on, as expected it all looks horrible purple, then slowly starts to oxidise brown. You can re apply as many times as you like, to get a darker colour.
Once its dry, flatten the grain with fine wire wool, then varnish, laquer, or wax over it.
Its cheap, easy to get a colour match, and dosent leave brush marks that oil based stains somtimes do.
I liked the article, and the site.
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ratlock
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by GWiens2001 » 5 Feb 2017 13:42
Jacob Morgan wrote:Thanks for the article, very informative. Looking at the picture of the lock, it looks like turning the guard key, pulling the renter nose, and fishing the bolt back would be the way to go if the bank needed it opened?
That is the usual way. Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
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by Tyler J. Thomas » 5 Feb 2017 13:55
ratlock wrote:Great article, and I liked your site.
was looking at the woodstaining article on your site, and may I suggest another way. I used to teach joinery, and when an old pattern maker told me about this, I thought he must be nuts.
potassium permanganate crystals mixed with water. Then the solution brushed , or applied with a cloth onto the wood.
When you first brush it on, as expected it all looks horrible purple, then slowly starts to oxidise brown. You can re apply as many times as you like, to get a darker colour.
Once its dry, flatten the grain with fine wire wool, then varnish, laquer, or wax over it.
Its cheap, easy to get a colour match, and dosent leave brush marks that oil based stains somtimes do.
I liked the article, and the site.
Wow. I am going to try that. Thank you. Jacob Morgan wrote:Looking at the picture of the lock, it looks like turning the guard key, pulling the renter nose, and fishing the bolt back would be the way to go if the bank needed it opened?
See GWiens2001's message.
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by GWiens2001 » 25 Feb 2017 1:12
Yeah, one of these ought to do it... Those things you pictured - are you looking to acquire those, or are you trying to prevent the use of that locking device? Gordon
Just when you finally think you have learned it all, that is when you learn that you don't know anything yet.
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by Tyler J. Thomas » 25 Feb 2017 10:41
Perhaps. Timemaster used to (maybe still does?) sell those. They're called "D-Blockers". They're intended for boxes sealed due to court order, IRS, etc.
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by Enerostar83 » 27 Feb 2017 22:00
Tyler J. Thomas wrote:Perhaps. Timemaster used to (maybe still does?) sell those. They're called "D-Blockers". They're intended for boxes sealed due to court order, IRS, etc.
I am looking to acquire them. I work in an accounting office where employees are issued house banks. If I find them it would be to lock them out so that they could be audited easier. One of my old jobs used them.
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by Mudman » 28 Feb 2017 0:56
Thanks for sharing, very interesting read. I'm going to have to read it a few times to fully understand. So much to learn
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