intumescant? Has to be the word of the day...if it was spelt right had to look it up... intumescent I think.
Can’t wait for an opportunity to drop that into a diner table conversation.
It is currently 28 Mar 2024, 10:33
Andyp wrote:intumescant? Has to be the word of the day...if it as spelt right had to look it... intumescent I think.
Can’t wait for an opportunity to drop that into a diner table conversation.
pitch pine wrote:So Steve I had a look in the shed and my magic saw blade cleaner is also marketed in Lidl as W5 sink and plughole unblocker. (in an orange bottle). I can't remember what possessed me to try it.....something along the lines of what nasty chemicals have I got that might work. Any way it does!
Cabinetman wrote:Just to lower the tone again, intumescent is often followed by the word strip ha ha
novocaine wrote:pitch pine wrote:So Steve I had a look in the shed and my magic saw blade cleaner is also marketed in Lidl as W5 sink and plughole unblocker. (in an orange bottle). I can't remember what possessed me to try it.....something along the lines of what nasty chemicals have I got that might work. Any way it does!
and here in is the basics of the reason why dounray clean up used cillet bang to clean up plutonium stains.
and to prove I'm not taking the pee
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/hig ... 217772.stm
Andyp wrote:intumescant? Has to be the word of the day...if it was spelt right had to look it up... intumescent I think.
Can’t wait for an opportunity to drop that into a diner table conversation.
Steve Maskery wrote:I did buy one of those rubber blocks once, and while they do a decent job, they are expensive and don't least very long.
Steve Maskery wrote:The anguish is not induced by Lidl, pitch pine. the anguish is knowing that there is a "fantastic" product out there but you can't remember what it is!
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