- Joined
- Dec 8, 2013
- Messages
- 2,651
Fortunately electric fences are driven with a once-per-second pulse.The trouble with peeing on the electric fence might be that you would not be able to STOP!!!!
Fortunately electric fences are driven with a once-per-second pulse.The trouble with peeing on the electric fence might be that you would not be able to STOP!!!!
The trouble with peeing on the electric fence might be that you would not be able to STOP!!!!
When I was about 7 years old,on the way home from school,I used to stop and look at the cows in a pasture. Leaned on the electric fence TWO times before I got it through my thick head NOT to do that! Gave me quite a jolt,too!!
There was a bull penned up across the street. I used to pull up grass and feed him every day. He was quite gentle,and glad to get the grass,as there was none in his pen. One day that bull got loose,and the men were running all over the place,yelling about that DANGEROUS bull being free!! I had had a very friendly relationship with that bull as far as I was concerned,though I had NOT tried getting in the pen with him.
The trouble with peeing on the electric fence might be that you would not be able to STOP!!!!
When I was about 7 years old,on the way home from school,I used to stop and look at the cows in a pasture. Leaned on the electric fence TWO times before I got it through my thick head NOT to do that! Gave me quite a jolt,too!!
There was a bull penned up across the street. I used to pull up grass and feed him every day. He was quite gentle,and glad to get the grass,as there was none in his pen. One day that bull got loose,and the men were running all over the place,yelling about that DANGEROUS bull being free!! I had had a very friendly relationship with that bull as far as I was concerned,though I had NOT tried getting in the pen with him.
I always tighten the chuck well for several reasons: 1. If the chuck isn't tightened, you will not get proper registration with the face of the spindle and runout will suffer. and 2. not fully tightening a threaded chuck will actually tighten it more. When you start to encounter some resistance, the chuck will spin slightly and the inertia will overtighten. Kind of like the way an impact wrench works. Finally, as has been observed, the chuck can unscrew during use and it doesn't necessarily mean running in reverse. If you have a large workpiece in the chuck, simply stopping the lathe can unscrew the chuck.I have had a chuck start to come off when i turned on the lathe. This was on a Taig and I had just put the chuck on. I do not put them on very tight because they tend to get tighter and are sometimes hard to get off. don