Workplace Injury

On Wed, 22 Apr 2020 14:50:27 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 4/22/2020 7:43 AM, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Wed, 22 Apr 2020 11:57:35 +0100, Mike Coon
gravity@mjcoon.plus.com> wrote:

In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

Mike.

Once I knocked a soldering iron off a table and caught it in mid-air.
Only once.




WARNING: HOT IRON. HOLD ONLY BY NON-HOT END

The classic:

https://www.thepoke.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/stock-photo-beautiful-woman-repair-soldering-a-printed-circuit-board-205937137.jpg



--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing precision measurement

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
On 22/04/2020 3:18 pm, Pimpom wrote:
On 4/22/2020 7:48 AM, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Tue, 21 Apr 2020 21:03:32 -0400, bitrex <user@example.net> wrote:

On 4/21/2020 7:56 PM, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 2020-04-21 19:48, bitrex wrote:
On 4/21/2020 7:23 PM, John Larkin wrote:


I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an
SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.


Never ice a burn injury.

Bad advice.

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

"Minor burn injury, step 1: Buy a 1994 V12 BMW 830Ci and leave your wife
immediately for a 23 y/o goth stripper from Las Vegas of questionable
emotional stability"


Sounds like a good way to get a secondary infection.


LOL That was a good one.

Yesterday my son burned his hand by dropping hot glue on it while
repairing his game pad. He ran cold water on the hand and then applied
toothpaste. Worked well.
I've always found aloe vera gel (or squeezed from a chunk from the plant
if you have) one soothes it and heals.
 
On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron /eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering iron tip can most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially the
typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed, putz. A third
degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle exhaust, and they are not
even as hot as the iron. Just more surface area.

Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it takes
someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their hand away after
it brushes up on it
 
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:Qa4oG.86666$FY5.71267@fx39.iad:

On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron
/eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering iron tip can
most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially the
typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed, putz. A
third degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle exhaust, and
they are not even as hot as the iron. Just more surface area.


Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it takes
someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their hand away
after it brushes up on it

Oh so now you know how long the event lasts.

Sorry, but YOU DO NOT.

It is not about "reflexes". It is about neural response.

The speed of a nerve impulse varies with the type of nerve impulse
the nervous system is sending. Some signals such as those for muscle
position, travel at speeds up to 119m/s. Nerve impulses such as pain
signals travel slower at 0.61m/s. Touch signals travel at speeds of
76.2m/s.

That alone proves you are guessing as you go. It takes over a
second for the pain impulse alone to make it up to the brain (from
the finger tip), and then more time for the motor impulse to make it
back to the muscle.

The amount of time it takes to render a third degree burn on your
skin depends on the skin for one thing, there are four types on the
human body, the area AND pressure of the contact, the thermal mass of
the object, and its temperature.
 
On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!
 
On 23/4/20 5:35 am, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org wrote:
Michael Terrell <terrell.michael.a@gmail.com> wrote in
news:6efaab58-6eaf-4d18-a22a-6a19ea592486@googlegroups.com:

On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 7:23:58 PM UTC-4, John Larkin wrote:
I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an
SC79 varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my
finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might
need another one.

I heard that Nancy Pelosi has two $12,000 freezers full of ice
cream.:)


She also has a pearl collection larger than your entire, pathetic net
worth, putz! You have something against Americans being successful,
you commie putz motherfucker?

Only if they benefited from his military service, but don't support his
health needs. Terrell has reasons to be bitter.
 
On Wed, 22 Apr 2020 12:35:25 -0700 (PDT),
bloggs.fredbloggs.fred@gmail.com wrote:

On Tuesday, April 21, 2020 at 7:23:58 PM UTC-4, John Larkin wrote:
I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing precision measurement

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com

Scraping the bottom of the barrel for conversation with that one. Is someone holding you prisoner?

Hey "Fred", it's a discussion group. It could thread-drift to a
valuable discussion about soldering, or varicaps, or ice cream.

And yes, the city of San Francisco is holding us all prisoners.

One good if temporary outcome is that the meter maids are giving
courtesy tickets on street cleaning days, not the usual $75 ones.

Do you still solder?




--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

Science teaches us to doubt.

Claude Bernard
 
On 4/22/2020 9:44 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:Qa4oG.86666$FY5.71267@fx39.iad:

On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron
/eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering iron tip can
most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially the
typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed, putz. A
third degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle exhaust, and
they are not even as hot as the iron. Just more surface area.


Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it takes
someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their hand away
after it brushes up on it

Oh so now you know how long the event lasts.

Sorry, but YOU DO NOT.

It is not about "reflexes". It is about neural response.

The speed of a nerve impulse varies with the type of nerve impulse
the nervous system is sending. Some signals such as those for muscle
position, travel at speeds up to 119m/s. Nerve impulses such as pain
signals travel slower at 0.61m/s. Touch signals travel at speeds of
76.2m/s.

That alone proves you are guessing as you go. It takes over a
second for the pain impulse alone to make it up to the brain (from
the finger tip), and then more time for the motor impulse to make it
back to the muscle.

The amount of time it takes to render a third degree burn on your
skin depends on the skin for one thing, there are four types on the
human body, the area AND pressure of the contact, the thermal mass of
the object, and its temperature.

the withdrawal reflex is a spinal reflex, by the time the brain gets the
memo the hand is already in motion away. it's why it's called a REFLEX.

Even full conscious actions clock in at well under a second; to hit a
100 mph fastball the decision to swing made and the bat has to be in
motion by 200 ms after the pitch leaves the pitcher's hand the total
flight time to the catcher's mitt is under half a second
 
In article <rG6oG.180809$yo4.88853@fx48.iad>, no.spam@please.net says...
On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

Very good! Pity everything has gone digital...
 
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:roaoG.47923$AE7.13047@fx41.iad:

On 4/22/2020 9:44 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:Qa4oG.86666$FY5.71267@fx39.iad:

On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron
/eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering iron tip
can most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially
the typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed,
putz. A third degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle
exhaust, and they are not even as hot as the iron. Just more
surface area.


Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it
takes someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their
hand away after it brushes up on it

Oh so now you know how long the event lasts.

Sorry, but YOU DO NOT.

It is not about "reflexes". It is about neural response.

The speed of a nerve impulse varies with the type of nerve
impulse
the nervous system is sending. Some signals such as those for
muscle position, travel at speeds up to 119m/s. Nerve impulses
such as pain signals travel slower at 0.61m/s. Touch signals
travel at speeds of 76.2m/s.

That alone proves you are guessing as you go. It takes over a
second for the pain impulse alone to make it up to the brain
(from the finger tip), and then more time for the motor impulse
to make it back to the muscle.

The amount of time it takes to render a third degree burn on
your
skin depends on the skin for one thing, there are four types on
the human body, the area AND pressure of the contact, the thermal
mass of the object, and its temperature.


the withdrawal reflex is a spinal reflex, by the time the brain
gets the memo the hand is already in motion away. it's why it's
called a REFLEX.

Damn you are thick, boy. There is NO "reflex" UNTIL the signal
makes it to the brain. There is no "already pulling away" either.

Read the statement. It takes over a second just from your
fingertip for the pain signal to make it to your brain. YOUR BRAIN
THEN sends the motor "reflex" signal back down.

NOTHING that spews forth from your zero knowledge upper anus will
change that FACT.

"is a spinal reflex" Has to rank up there with some of the stupid
shit Trump and Larkin has said.

> Even full conscious actions clock in at well under a second;

You cannot even respond that fast even if you are looking right at
the event (being burned). You can pull it before the burn, but that
is different. The only thing faster is an eye blink, because of its
proximity to the brain. The ocular muscles are the fastest
responders we have.

So your "fool conscious action" is another fail at making shit up.

to
hit a 100 mph fastball the decision to swing made and the bat has
to be in motion by 200 ms after the pitch leaves the pitcher's
hand the total flight time to the catcher's mitt is under half a
second

A 100 mph fastball takes nearly half a second to reach the plate.

The batter is in full control of his arms and not responding to
external input from a pain transmission event.

You seem to be confusing reality with trying to exit the corner you
have painted yourself into.

A: neural response time.

And

B: Solder irons can cause third degree burns quite easily.
 
mjb@signal11.invalid (Mike) wrote in news:r7s2n9$69s$1
@posie.signal11.org.uk:

In article <S2ZnG.86416$fD4.66988@fx09.am4>,
Tom Gardner <spamjunk@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:

I then put a piece of fabric /sticking/[1] plaster over

[1] surprisingly difficult to get nowadays. Most
plasters are non-sticking plasters that fall off
after a couple of hours. I imagine that increases
the demand for plasters and stops wimps whining.

Manly solution :-

Lint free cotton pad, cut a small square out.

Duct tape.

Not coming off any time soon :)

Here is the right thing to use for face masks...

Until there is a run on them because I opened up y'all's eyes.

Easy choice. A furnace filter. One gets a pretty big sheet from
that. Cut as required to whatever shape required. Not certified
sterile but you can bet they are before you lay your hands on them.

Far better than ANY solution anyone has offered yet. I saw the
fiters the other day looking for my water filters, and that was the
first thing that popped into my head.

Now watch those run out everywhere. They are not cheap though, but
still way better than a vacuum cleaner bag. The price might keep
them from going too soon.
 
In article <S2ZnG.86416$fD4.66988@fx09.am4>,
Tom Gardner <spamjunk@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote:

plaster over

[1] surprisingly difficult to get nowadays. Most
plasters are non-sticking plasters that fall off
after a couple of hours. I imagine that increases
the demand for plasters and stops wimps whining.

Manly solution :-

Lint free cotton pad, cut a small square out.

Duct tape.

Not coming off any time soon :)

--
--------------------------------------+------------------------------------
Mike Brown: mjb[-at-]signal11.org.uk | http://www.signal11.org.uk
 
On 4/23/2020 8:07 AM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:roaoG.47923$AE7.13047@fx41.iad:

On 4/22/2020 9:44 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:Qa4oG.86666$FY5.71267@fx39.iad:

On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron
/eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering iron tip
can most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially
the typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed,
putz. A third degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle
exhaust, and they are not even as hot as the iron. Just more
surface area.


Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it
takes someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their
hand away after it brushes up on it

Oh so now you know how long the event lasts.

Sorry, but YOU DO NOT.

It is not about "reflexes". It is about neural response.

The speed of a nerve impulse varies with the type of nerve
impulse
the nervous system is sending. Some signals such as those for
muscle position, travel at speeds up to 119m/s. Nerve impulses
such as pain signals travel slower at 0.61m/s. Touch signals
travel at speeds of 76.2m/s.

That alone proves you are guessing as you go. It takes over a
second for the pain impulse alone to make it up to the brain
(from the finger tip), and then more time for the motor impulse
to make it back to the muscle.

The amount of time it takes to render a third degree burn on
your
skin depends on the skin for one thing, there are four types on
the human body, the area AND pressure of the contact, the thermal
mass of the object, and its temperature.


the withdrawal reflex is a spinal reflex, by the time the brain
gets the memo the hand is already in motion away. it's why it's
called a REFLEX.

Damn you are thick, boy. There is NO "reflex" UNTIL the signal
makes it to the brain. There is no "already pulling away" either.

Read the statement. It takes over a second just from your
fingertip for the pain signal to make it to your brain. YOUR BRAIN
THEN sends the motor "reflex" signal back down.

NOTHING that spews forth from your zero knowledge upper anus will
change that FACT.

"is a spinal reflex" Has to rank up there with some of the stupid
shit Trump and Larkin has said.

Please look at the animation under the section "Flexor Reflex" here:

<https://nba.uth.tmc.edu/neuroscience/m/s3/chapter02.html>

Notice: there is no brain in the diagram!

"An important reflex initiated by cutaneous receptors and pain receptors
is the flexor reflex. We have all experienced this reflex after
accidentally touching a hot stove or a sharp object, as we withdraw our
hand even before we consciously experience the sensation of pain. This
quick reflex removes the limb from the damaging stimulus more quickly
than if the pain signal had to travel up to the brain, be brought to
conscious awareness, and then trigger a decision to withdraw the limb."


Even full conscious actions clock in at well under a second;

You cannot even respond that fast even if you are looking right at
the event (being burned). You can pull it before the burn, but that
is different. The only thing faster is an eye blink, because of its
proximity to the brain. The ocular muscles are the fastest
responders we have.

So your "fool conscious action" is another fail at making shit up.

to
hit a 100 mph fastball the decision to swing made and the bat has
to be in motion by 200 ms after the pitch leaves the pitcher's
hand the total flight time to the catcher's mitt is under half a
second


A 100 mph fastball takes nearly half a second to reach the plate.

The batter is in full control of his arms and not responding to
external input from a pain transmission event.

You seem to be confusing reality with trying to exit the corner you
have painted yourself into.

A: neural response time.

And

B: Solder irons can cause third degree burns quite easily.

Bro the human race would've been done for if the motor activity "loop
response", conscious or unconscious, were as slow as you're talking
about. We'd all have been eaten by lions long ago.
 
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:3vioG.86669$FY5.86462@fx39.iad:

On 4/23/2020 8:07 AM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:roaoG.47923$AE7.13047@fx41.iad:

On 4/22/2020 9:44 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:Qa4oG.86666$FY5.71267@fx39.iad:

On 4/22/2020 3:03 PM, DecadentLinuxUserNumeroUno@decadence.org
wrote:
bitrex <user@example.net> wrote in
news:7C%nG.42508$AE7.17897@fx41.iad:
snip

He never got a "third-degree burn" from a soldering iron
/eyeroll

You must be ill educated. A 700° F soldering
iron tip can most
certainly inflict third degree burn level damage. Especially
the typically even hotter than that shaft! Eyeroll indeed,
putz. A third degree burn can also be had from a motorcycle
exhaust, and they are not even as hot as the iron. Just more
surface area.


Not hot enough to give a third-degree burn in the ~250 ms it
takes someone with normally-functioning reflexes to pull their
hand away after it brushes up on it

Oh so now you know how long the event lasts.

Sorry, but YOU DO NOT.

It is not about "reflexes". It is about neural response.

The speed of a nerve impulse varies with the type of nerve
impulse
the nervous system is sending. Some signals such as those for
muscle position, travel at speeds up to 119m/s. Nerve impulses
such as pain signals travel slower at 0.61m/s. Touch signals
travel at speeds of 76.2m/s.

That alone proves you are guessing as you go. It takes
over a
second for the pain impulse alone to make it up to the brain
(from the finger tip), and then more time for the motor impulse
to make it back to the muscle.

The amount of time it takes to render a third degree burn
on your
skin depends on the skin for one thing, there are four types on
the human body, the area AND pressure of the contact, the
thermal mass of the object, and its temperature.


the withdrawal reflex is a spinal reflex, by the time the brain
gets the memo the hand is already in motion away. it's why it's
called a REFLEX.

Damn you are thick, boy. There is NO "reflex" UNTIL the
signal
makes it to the brain. There is no "already pulling away"
either.

Read the statement. It takes over a second just from your
fingertip for the pain signal to make it to your brain. YOUR
BRAIN THEN sends the motor "reflex" signal back down.

NOTHING that spews forth from your zero knowledge upper anus
will
change that FACT.

"is a spinal reflex" Has to rank up there with some of the
stupid
shit Trump and Larkin has said.

Please look at the animation under the section "Flexor Reflex"
here:

https://nba.uth.tmc.edu/neuroscience/m/s3/chapter02.html

Notice: there is no brain in the diagram!

"An important reflex initiated by cutaneous receptors and pain
receptors is the flexor reflex. We have all experienced this
reflex after accidentally touching a hot stove or a sharp object,
as we withdraw our hand even before we consciously experience the
sensation of pain. This quick reflex removes the limb from the
damaging stimulus more quickly than if the pain signal had to
travel up to the brain, be brought to conscious awareness, and
then trigger a decision to withdraw the limb."


Even full conscious actions clock in at well under a second;

You cannot even respond that fast even if you are looking
right at
the event (being burned). You can pull it before the burn, but
that is different. The only thing faster is an eye blink,
because of its proximity to the brain. The ocular muscles are
the fastest responders we have.

So your "fool conscious action" is another fail at making shit
up.

to
hit a 100 mph fastball the decision to swing made and the bat
has to be in motion by 200 ms after the pitch leaves the
pitcher's hand the total flight time to the catcher's mitt is
under half a second


A 100 mph fastball takes nearly half a second to reach the
plate.

The batter is in full control of his arms and not responding
to
external input from a pain transmission event.

You seem to be confusing reality with trying to exit the
corner you
have painted yourself into.

A: neural response time.

And

B: Solder irons can cause third degree burns quite easily.



Bro the human race would've been done for if the motor activity
"loop response", conscious or unconscious, were as slow as you're
talking about. We'd all have been eaten by lions long ago.

One does not feel the sting of the mosquito until after it has
already pulled out and flown off. Even then the slap it response is
slow. Even gnats are faster, usually.

What you speak of is like the reason frog legs jump around when you
throw salt on them and in the skillet a bit too. "Retraction
triggers"? Maybe instilled right into the muscle cells (and nerves)
via DNA.
 
On Wednesday, April 22, 2020 at 10:02:03 PM UTC-4, Clifford Heath wrote:
On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

Post of the day!

Cheers,
James Arthur
 
On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:01:59 +1000, Clifford Heath
<no.spam@please.net> wrote:

On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

You are suspended for 30 days. I recommend bungee cords.



--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

Science teaches us to doubt.

Claude Bernard
 
jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote in
news:v9i3afdg5kd619b34a7rovkdt4rhneu5t0@4ax.com:

On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:01:59 +1000, Clifford Heath
no.spam@please.net> wrote:

On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down
an SC79 varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my
finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I
might need another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

You are suspended for 30 days. I recommend bungee cords.

I recommend "Jack Kervorkian's Cordless Bungee JumpŠ"

Guaranteed to end your depression over everything.
 
On 2020-04-23 12:59, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:01:59 +1000, Clifford Heath
no.spam@please.net> wrote:

On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

You are suspended for 30 days. I recommend bungee cords.

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5s433aTy98>

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

http://electrooptical.net
http://hobbs-eo.com
 
On 2020-04-23 13:37, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 2020-04-23 12:59, jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2020 12:01:59 +1000, Clifford Heath
no.spam@please.net> wrote:

On 22/4/20 8:57 pm, Mike Coon wrote:
In article <frvu9fdi6dqv0k5pnbh6ql5di9savm89v5@4ax.com>,
jlarkin@highland_atwork_technology.com says...

I burned my finger on my soldering iron, trying to solder down an SC79
varicap. Haven't done that in decades. I mean, burn my finger.

I put an ice cream sandwich on it, but that didn't last. I might need
another one.

Do you mean another finger? Where can you get those?

At the second hand shop.

Boom boom!

You are suspended for 30 days. I recommend bungee cords.
Better resolution:
<https://youtu.be/UOz-v06zb_c>

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

http://electrooptical.net
http://hobbs-eo.com
 

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