1065:? I'm inclined to trust the Fairchild given that it is considered an industry standard text and is edited by two established experts/academics in the field. Of course, experts make mistakes too, but they are certainly very specific on the question. They even use an illustration of a man's cotton shirt as the leading image under broadcloth, which does make me raise an eyebrow, but if the "industry standard for textile terminology" is so explicit, then I guess they've a reason for that. We may disagree with them (I certainly think they should have wool broadcloth as the primary definition, not definition no.4(!)) but it's not a source we can justifiably discredit/ignore even if we know better.
1080:
hailed from
Scotland, just to compound the mess) was a very heavily callendered cloth, that came close to a uniform, threadless appearance in the way that the broadcloths do. Note the plural; a big part of the reason why broadcloth shows up less in later years is that specific variants of the technique were beginning to be seen more as their own selves. Melton, duffel, mackinac, or brushed wool serge (as opposed to woolen or unbrushed worsted serge) would be described as such, and woolen and brushed wool serge had pretty well taken over the old broadcloth turf, except for the areas where weather resistance was paramount, and then the cloth was more likely to be called melton.
4155:
boost system, and the current choices are mechanical, electrical or exhaust gas turbine. Just because general (street) usage only has dropped the term does not change the reality. It is stated in the article that turbochargers used to be referred to as turbo superchargers, in the same way mechanically driven systems used to be known as mechanical superchargers. I recognise that things have moved on to the point where they have need of their own article, but I carefully worded my edit to accomodate all this i.e. acknowledge the fact that a turbocharger is, technically, a form of supercharger but further info is available on 'turbocharger's own page.
5577:
386:) that wiki guidelines prefer "World War II" over "Second World War", could you please point to the relevant policy (as I have not been aware of such a policy in over ten years of editing, is it new?)? In addition, you may note (on the aforementioned diff) I edited the article for consistency. You will note that both terms are used within the article; I would suggest editing the article for consistency rather than just reverting edits. Kind regards,
1161:
4151:
cannot provide sufficient air, the electrical superchargers are run up to provide the boost. In this situation they are known as auxiliary superchargers, or in general usage 'auxyblowers', but I'm sure this is not their only use. Again I do not know enough to expand the article properly and thought that best left to someone who does. But they are superchargers, so need to be included if the erticle on superchargers is to be comprehensive.
3854:
2337:
1270:
842:
3999:. 3M still make emery cloth sheets (dark grey, 9064NA) for the US and Australia market, but you can't even buy it in Europe. The roll of 1" tape that, yes every plumber has in the van, will be brick red 314D "emery", and (being brick red) that's synthetic aluminium oxide, not emery. The USGS don't list emery as an abrasive material in their annual surveys of abrasive materials, just aluminium oxide and silicon carbide.
5421:
2717:, the latter named Commonwealth classification for lack of an existing (known to me) name and covering the British (and SA and the rest of the old Empire's) way of describing electric and diesel-electric loco wheel arrangements. The idea is to create some order while also covering the other three widely-used arrangements. Present Whyte-type wheel arrangements will eventually all be categorised under
1209:
5048:
5395:
1710:
is that this keeps getting mis-read as "If there is some minor formatting issue, such as a dangling RHS of boxes, then completely change the format used for linking to
Commons to make it unfamiliar, unrecognised and too small to even notice." Some editors insist on this, but it's still deeply unhelpful to our readers to flip formats.
870:
middle of a sentence that tends to pass unnoticed for months/years. The note/definition is REALLY helpful, thanks - I couldn't find anything on quick searches for blind cloth (apart from fabric for roller blinds). Am more of a fashion historian than a textiles specialist, so sometimes these fine distinctions are alien to me....
1896:
ones that frequent the DU talk page) In fact I would expect any method statement to note in large bold type that vacuum cleaners must not be used. Best practice would be to immobilise the activity and then shovel it up (although once it's immobilised a JCB is probably quicker and cheaper than two women with
Marigolds).
4014:" cloth, as a specific type of abrasive? In which case it has to recognise that emery is now scarce, largely obsolete and has been supplanted by aluminium oxide. I don't believe it can claim "remains popular" when it has a tiny market share, especially compared to what it was in the 1970s. Nor has emery
5376:
The
Wikimedia Foundation Community health initiative (led by the Safety and Support and Anti-Harassment Tools team) is conducting a survey for en.wikipedia contributors on their experience and satisfaction level with the Administrator’s Noticeboard/Incidents. This survey will be integral to gathering
4701:
For the
Ababeel, it has been demonstrated as a launcher (a missile took off). However it has yet to demonstrate the MIRV feature of the multiple returning warheads achieving their targets. That is a lot harder than simply being an enlarged launcher intended to be used for MIRV. We cannot take a claim
4282:
Hi Andy
Dingley. This is just a friendly notice that serves to remind you that Discretionary Sanctions are in place for BLP articles. I see you were notified, most recently in January, about DS in another area, so I won't send you the boilerplate notice. I will however assume that you understand what
4150:
My only experience with electrically powered systems in on ships main diesel engines. These engines are designed with fuel efficiency as the no.1 criteria and to this end are optimised to run with a turbocharger, so much so that they cannot run properly without boost. When manouevring, when the turbo
3264:
Hi Andy Thanks for your thoughtful and helpful comments on the Talk page on the AWS Knowledge (XXG) page. I would appreciate any help you can provide. Would it be possible for you to email me (I'm assuming that's okay to ask)? Our corporate VPN is blocked for editing Wiki pages. I also want more info
3072:
for a 32 bit Gray code, at least not out in the physical world of encoders. I once had a very expensive problem where a machine had been fitted with a 7 bit Gray code encoder when it needed a 9 bit encoder. We couldn't afford this (we could, but I was told we couldn't, after wasting far more chasing
3019:
Your change is both unencyclopedic, and it misses the point of that whole example. This is not a coding cookbook of examples, it's not a coding tutorial. We're not looking for good coding here, we're looking for good explanations of Gray code itself. The version without the explicit stated shifts is
2866:
On the talk page, you asked for supporting evidence that the Char B2 was the origin of the development of gun-laying suspension, which I gave without further comment from you. After close to a year without any objections I made the changes, then you come and revert the changes without any discussion,
2621:
Hi Andy, I noticed that you removed my addition on recycled carpentry as self-promotion. Assuming this is understood that way by others, I appreciate your fixing that. I still need to learn what is acceptable and what not. In this specific case, had someone else done that, would that be fine? And if
2176:
Adding a list of files with a related problem is certainly a recognised response, when the problem is broader than a single image. As to the efficacy of
Commons debate, it really depends on how many people show up from the small pool there. And being such a small pool, it does tend to be dominated by
795:
which appears to have had just one hammer. I haven't got time to research further this week, but it seems, therefore, that "hammer mill" can also be a forge using a trip hammer. Let's not make any more changes until further research has been done and we can agree a way to handle the different usages.
540:
Was "Such limitations, however, achieved
Sinclair's objective of keeping the cost of the machine as low as possible. Its distinctive design brought its designer, Rick Dickinson, a Design Council award." Design-designer-design...ah, design of what - circuitry...software...oh, the case, how obvious :-)
183:
Speaking of the ALU. The Z80 was implemented with a 4-bit wide ALU (making it different enough from the 8080 in order to avoid a lawsuit from Intel). As you may know we now have a very deep technical reference for this (more so than my 1980s engineer hearsay and the Faggin/Shima Z80 oral history), so
163:
The HL register was actually a rudimentary 16-bit accumulator already in the 8080 (not in the 8008). But it was intended for address calculations and therefore did not affected the sign-, zero- or the (non existent) overflow flag. The 8080 also had 16-bit addition only, no subtraction, and no support
5244:
amount as a gesture of your individuality. It is not here to demonstrate CSS virtuosity. It is not here to hide the link between those two identities. It is also here to give a functioning link to a talk: page, which is both mandatory, useful to editors and also essential for keeping Talk: archiving
4154:
Also, you removed my edit that corrected an implied assumption that turbocharger are not superchargers. Supercharging is the process of boosting the air to the engine, not one particular type of kit to do it. Engineers recognise this fact before they choose the most appropriate means of powering the
4045:
colloquially here in the States. Perhaps the article just, at least, needs a statement to the effect that while traditional emery cloth and paper are still available, they have been generally displaced not merely by the changes in technology already stated but synthetic abrasives such as the above.
4006:
Emery still has its uses. It's softer than synthetic aluminium oxide. It's good for cleaning steam trains, because it's such a lousy abrasive - it blunts in no time so it polishes without scratching or by causing too much wear. Famously it's also "non-embedding", although what that means to post-war
3960:
Just to be clear, Andy (and I do admire the heck out your what, a couple hundred thousand contributions to the encylopedia), you will find a roll of 1" wide emery cloth in any working plumber's kit in the U.S., as well as a roll of 1" sandcloth, as they are still the go-to's for cleaning up the ends
3044:
the shift each time. To me, that is the defining difference between these two examples, rather than that one is a loop and that the other is an unrolled loop. Unfortunately, the existing grayToBinary32 has a shortfall, in that it assumes sizeof(unsigned int) == 4, which can silently change if code
2650:
Finally, do you think you could edit your comment in "Articles for deletion/Boaz Tsaban" to be more precise/factual? The article was not self-written but self-edited, and the author was not "busy spamming" but rather added links to a website of his in this article and in another (which BTW I removed
2291:
This section should be expanded to indicate that lead is certainly shrinking, but that it went from potable water first, and its withdrawal generally is not internationally consistent. Whenever the US did fully withdraw leaded solder (if indeed it has yet), that doesn't mean it no longer needs to be
1079:
Yeah, if no one (I guess that would be
Brother Dingley, in this case) objects, xfering it intact to broadcloth makes good sense. To add a little more to be transferred over, one thing which the Fairchild cite does not make clear is that the so-called "English Broadcloth" (which appears to often have
869:
Thanks for clarifying, I was trying to work out what it was and didn't think it looked much like a facecloth, but thought maybe that was what was meant, (as I was reading the two words together) and thought maybe it was one of those stealth anonymous edits where someone sneaks a random word into the
5858:
they demonstrate only that some people held a view, not that it was generally accepted), and have duly been supplied: I feel a more convincing demonstration is that Jane Austen , far from 'describing the charms of the estate', assumed that her readers would know what they were. Anyway, a Happy New
5318:
So for the United States subsection under
Production, what do you think we should name it? I believe we should keep it short and clear, maybe something like "United States" or "Production in the United States" will do. I don't think we need to specify that the production was attempted or failed, or
4861:
Well, be careful. Certainly railways used their traction power for extensive auxiliary applications we would think of as conventionally commercial or residential (stations, hotels, employee housing) so I'm not sure that saying "16 2/3 was never used for mains" is really justified. As Sbalfour says,
4048:
On a personal note, I was stunned when I looked it up after leaving my initial note to discover you have "only" made some 75-80,000 edits at Knowledge (XXG), not the "hundreds of thousands" I had assumed. It seems I must have seen every one of them on a history page of some article I was at. Keep
3161:
SUBCAT is regularly harmful when over-used by those who don't understand its limitations, MediaWiki's limitations, or the limitations of over-trusting a simplistic tree-based taxonomy and confusing it with ontology. The inappropriate subcat relationship between robotic animals and biomorphic robots
2475:
The inconsistency is quite undesirable (which is what prompted my edit), and I think the simplest way to fix it is to just use the term "universal joint". Otherwise, the universal joint page should be updated to describe the distinction, and there should be a reference supporting the use of a Hooke
1709:
The MOS guidelines (there are several overlapping, many of which contradict) are poorly written and are often misinterpreted. It states, and should be read as, "Use the box format to link to Commons. Place this box in the last section, don't create a new empty section just for the box." The problem
1316:
You really ought look at the help and the many times used before nominating someone's tool for deletion. What kind of person takes away another persons tools? They'll kill you if you try that on a blue collar work site! I will state categorically, if you win this, my 13 years wading through poorly
5380:
The survey should take 10-20 minutes to answer, and your individual responses will not be made public. The survey is delivered through Google Forms. The privacy policy for the survey describes how and when Wikimedia collects, uses, and shares the information we receive from survey participants and
5206:
I'm responding here because your comment at AN didn't contain a question and I have stated there I wouldn't comment further unless a question was asked. My signature is now what it was when my 3-month block and the 0RR restriction were both imposed. What it had been for a year or more and no one
3773:
So do you still claim that shrapnel wasn't used in WWI? "shrapnel was not, rpt not, in current use in WW1" and "Shrapnel long since gone," ? What's going on here? Are you edit-warring in a falsehood because you don't know, because you disbelieve the sources, or that you know it's wrong and you're
2523:
also happens to describe "Cardan joints" which is not a term I've heard before. Famously Cardano didn't invent any sort of shaft joint, but invented the basic mechanism as a gimbal. Then Hooke applied it to a shaft, as a universal joint. Hooke also realised that a pair of them could address the CV
2282:
Your first change was to remove a qualification to potable water that had been added by an IP. A correct and useful qualification - we need more of that. Your reason was, "Copper is not used for drain lines, so the comment makes no sense." which is inaccurate on all three counts: the qualification
1628:
I see your point, but the article needs to be rewritten. Or written; there is zip about bridges here. As it stands there is a brief explanation of the principle of the Warren Truss, followed by a lot of stuff about its use in aircraft. It seems bizarre to have not a single illustration of a bridge
1374:
Bridge), but it is impossible for him to have been responsible for the 1905 bridge, which the article as amended by you now implies, because he'd been dead 21 years before it was built. There's significant scope for confusion in all of this: the original road bridge was moved, as the article says,
1365:
Bridge was put up at the same time; Buchanan (reference 2) seems to imply that the bridge put up in 1905 was the first on that site, but the 1880s Ordnance Survey map of that area clearly shows a road bridge in place. I don't know whether Sanders would have been responsible for the earlier Midland
536:
Spectrum speed listed as 4x faster and the latter was 1200 bps. I also remember it being a lot faster than the 6 bytes per second - that's a crazy claim. You realise that you're endorsing hopelessly wrong figures with these blind 'undo's. Successive improvement is better and what Knowledge (XXG)'s
4261:
I'm sorry if you've been disgruntled by being reverted, I can understand that. And blanket reversion especially. I'd love to expand this article, and electric supercharger, with coverage of the marine stuff in particular. But we have to focus on being a generalist encyclopedia first, and initial
4248:
The other issue is copy-editing (and I wouldn't have reverted for this). IMHE, it is easier to spoon-feed the reader: we get a more readable lead if we explain mechanically-driven superchargers in one paragraph, then extend this scope to turbochargers in the following paragraph. This is didactic
3289:
Hello Andy. I know your opinion of me, no problem. And I am swearing again. We are discussing whether the brand of trucks built by International Harvester Company are branded "International" or "International Harvester". It is long, I would like you to note a line of sources I left, and anything
2590:
Hmm, that doesn't seem very obvious. A single joint on a swing axle would cause the exact rotational problem Hooke discovered! The early VW beetle also used swing arms, but with CV joints. However, I have found pictorial evidence that you are correct. I still don't know for sure whether the Hooke
2491:
Hooke joints are only one form of universal joint. CV, giubos and rag joints (which all regularly get described as universal joints by our readership, even if some sources might exclude them) are commonly used for axle halfshafts, Hooke joints less so, yet Goggomobil were using Hooke joints (they
1895:
but if Kim and Aggie are ever let loose on loose respirable alpha contam, I hope they at least go at it with bucket and mop rather than a vacuum cleaner ('a leaf-blower with filtration' as it may or may not have been described to me once by a professional health physicist - not one of the amateur
1342:
I'm sorry you reverted my edit on Midland Bridge, because some of the information now in the article is simply wrong. The bridge does not allow access to the Midland station (Green Park) for the S&D, and certainly didn't in 1870, because the S&D didn't start running trains into Bath until
5076:
I think we may have got our wires crossed here in an edit-clash type situation. I had already explained to the editor who originally added the "descriptive passage" why it wouldn't do (inaccurate) - new quick definition of what a rotary actually is was added as a compromise, but even this is not
4216:
Ships are a bit out of my knowledge, but I know they are using electric blowers in this way. However, AIUI, these came in a few years ago as part of environment rules and their purpose is to encourage clean burning and avoiding smoke, when the engine is idling at low power in port and the normal
4044:
Gee, Andy, it clearly is a mish-mash. The Ace product describes itself as "emery", as do the 3M and Norton items at Home Depot. The red tape is indeed aluminum oxide, as is at least some blue - which are described with terms like "abrasive" or "utility" cloth, though still called "emery cloth"
2547:
After doing some more reading, I'm even more confused. Depending where you look, the Hooke joint is either a single Cardan joint (that's the more common tern here in the U.S., after simply "universal"), or it is a Double Cardan joint (the nearly exclusively used term here for a pseudo-CV joint).
2463:
In any case, it's not great to have a link labeled "Hooke" (with no supporting documentation) redirecting to the universal joint page, where one can find no reason for the "Hooke" distinction - in fact, Hooke isn't even credited with the invention. Further, neither of the links in the Goggomobil
2256:
You undid a change I made on the solder page without comment. This makes it nearly impossible to determine your intent. Per Knowledge (XXG) guidelines, the comment is requested as it helps in further edits and prevents "revision wars." I have changed the article to better reflect the subject and
338:
You said "the idea that condensers are there primarily to save on water consumption is just wrong". The article previously said "or efficiency, as well as conserving feedwater, marine engines have usually been condensing engines". Doesn't that sentence mean that one of the two reasons for using
116:
In what way do you mean accumulator would be more "misleading" than indirect address? HL holds direct addresses, just like all other 16-bit registers in the Z80 (BC,DE,IX,IY,SP,PC). Also, we cannot possibly source every single word... Note, I'm in no way not out for a fight here... but a honest
1856:, not here. I can see two issues - one is the need for a connecting rod: There are enough "crank" mechanisms widely described that either don't use them, or use the human arm or leg as one, that we might separate sections in the article for the two forms, but we definitely have to include them.
889:
to search for this, owing to the false positives and the number of novels about blind weavers (really!). If I can tidy the study enough to reach the piles of bookshelves behind the piles of book boxes behind the piles of books I might even get to a "dictionary of tailoring terms" or something.
3035:
Thank you for clarifying which point you are making. However, since your note is brief, I am not completely sure that you understand the point I am making. At the risk of repeating something that is already obvious to you ... my point is that the grayToBinary example uses a loop that shifts
534:
I agree to need to add a source for the bitrate and that it should be a bitrate, not a baud rate by their definitions. But the speeds are spot on, not least because I double-checked them against the ROM listing. I did post that in the change notes...had you sorta glibly assumed I was lying or
4253:
for us to be clear and give a correct overall impression than to be formally correct in every single statement. English is imprecise and often contradictory. Our best route through that is with clarity and simplicity, not by making the first statement a complete enumeration of every possible
4228:
of power. It's easy to make an electric one (that doesn't work, but is a device that is descriptively "a supercharger"), hard to make a worthwhile electric one, but impossible unless the engine is already generating a substantial amount of electrical power. So plausibly we might see them for
184:
I will probably add a paragraph on that and other interesting aspects of the implementation, as soon as I get the time to do it. Hope you don't mind? (This narrow ALU is why an ADD HL,rr takes 11 cycles on the Z80 but only 10 on the 8080, btw, although some other instructions became faster.)
173:
The Z80 changed this though! It not only incorporated a signed overflow flag but also new instructions, ADC HL,reg and SBC HL,reg that adjusts the full array of flags: sign, carry, zero, negative, and the new overflow flag, just like 8-bit arithmetics do. So the HL register is indeed a real
1967:
Sorry, my mistake - it was pretty bad beforehand. The idea of the flux stabilising the arc is the problem. This just doesn't happen. At most it has a minor role in the establishment of the arc (not a positive one - just that a damaged rod can strike sideways), but stability after that is
573:
Dear boy, how hopelessly absurd - you're the one breaking it and reinstating text that's wrong. You do realise the article does not belong to you, that you're not in charge of it, right? I understand this computer very, very well so I like it being correct. What's your motive - plain old
5433:
is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
1042:
Broadcloth is another fabric that has been lowered in quality until the word means nothing at the present time. An analysis of a great variety of fabrics sold as broadcloths discloses that constructions vary from those originally associated with the word to fabrics more like muslin than
2455:
Hi Andy. You reverted a change I made on this page regarding universal joint types. I'm confused about the revert because "universal joint" refers to the type of joint that Hooke invented, and not any other type (such as CV or rag joints). Or I should say, in the U.S. that's true, and
5697:. And cited. Whether or not, for example, a view is "spectacular" is subjective. "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" and all that. If a particular person described it as spectacular, and their perception is attributed and cited, then absolutely fine. Otherwise, we run the risk of
1036:"Cotton broadcloth" was, and is, a term so all-encompassing as to to be almost meaningless. From the twenties, the USDA proposed standards for the term, and much US and some Canadian (and a surprising amount of British, BTW) usage later consolidated around those standards. Here's
358:"Efficiency" is itself a weak term. It might even be justified as "the only way to make a workable marine stream engine before about 1850 was to make it condensing". This is a very strong requirement, not just a minor bit of fuel saving. If anything, the previous wording should be
515:
As to "bizarre", then it's a long time since I've used a ZX81, but I don't remember them running at anything like 300 bps (compared to Kansas City on other contemporary systems). It needs robust sourcing to change the article from 50 to 300. Also it's almost never useful to use
4597:
Nor will I re-write it, as I consider it to be perfectly acceptable as it was before. It includes "efficiency" for one, which was a new concept in civil engineering at the time and was being expounded by this new generation of mathematically literate engineers, such as
4233:
locomotives and ships, but not unless there is also that great big generator, and it's always going to be easier to drive mechanically or as a turbocharger. As to why turbochargers are used (especially for diesels), that's a whole different issue and tied up with the
2651:
following your advice). Your choice; it is ok if you cannot change this, since the replies clarify matters. (As long as I write, I would appreciate your considering implementing the change I propose in the talk page of the article, which I cannot implement on my own.)
1351:
Bridge. The junction between the S&D and the Midland was about a mile west of the station (near the present Windsor bridge). The S&D had running rights over Midland metals into Green Park from that junction eastwards, and that included running over the Midland
4002:
Also "emery cloth" has gone as a sheet material. We don't need it - wet & dry is ubiquitous and has the high tensile strength that the cloth had. So the only cloths left are as narrow tapes because they're rippable, or the remaining machine belts that are still
2807:
Andy, it seems that you are not happy with the section. As per Knowledge (XXG) article guidelines, gallery is an important aspect of article. The gallery is been prepared accordingly. If you have any issues, please discuss on the talk page but do not revert again.
4146:
You undid my edit and gave 'No way do electric motors belong in the lead'as the reason. So I ask 'Why do mechanical and not electrical drives? If it does not belong in the lead then we could remove mechanical as well, but that would leave little introduction.
3307:
Sorry, but I really know little about US trucks and nothing about International Harvester. Although general principles for clarity would make me favour a fuller "International Harvester" rather than an ambiguous "International", even if somewhat out of date.
3045:
is moved from one computer to another. It was my hope to repair that shortfall. Can you think of an approach that repairs the shortfall while maintaining the clarity you hope to see? Thank you for entertaining my questions and considering my perspective.
5493:
Hi Andy, saw your recent edits, much appreciated. Do you know of a way of linking this Du Cane back to the family Du Cane which is so prominent and has a number of bios here? I failed miserably, although Google was my only research tool in short order....
4635:
Third, I do not understand - nor appreciate - your aggressive (and at times demeaning) manner in all this. You are not being a very good Knowledge (XXG) citizen, and, honestly, I do not intent to be on the receiving end of it passively any longer. Yours,
3000:
the shift at each step, just like the replaced code. I think that is the point you refer to in your edit comment. My edit just reverses the order of the XORs, which is legitimate, and puts them in a loop that self-detects when it can stop. Thank you --
1605:
First of all, I'm not looking at if "it's a duplicate", it's about a longer-term view as to whether the organisation of trusses and Warren trusses is best in the list articles or split into a separate one. I'd support the separate one - especially as the
4917:
doesn't distribute well - transformer losses are too great to move it long distances. This made its generation difficult and was the main reason why railways such as the French avoided it, even though they had to develop new traction equipment to do so.
4813:
But that's the point: it was only used because powerful but compact motor technology (i.e. railways) required it. It was never used for the distribution networks, either industrial or domestic, and even most railways escaped it as fast as they could.
5853:
such as to make the viewpoint nationally famous. To my mind, that edit solves nothing: in either case there is (I feel) still a requirement to support the claim in some way. Contemporary quotes seem to be the official WP way of doing this (although
993:. Thanks for that link, but I'm a bit confused because when I tried to search for broadcloth or broad cloth in that book nothing came up. How does it prove that broadcloth was used to describe shirt quality poplin 10 years before the early 1920s?
1060:
It's clearly quite a minefield, but as it is, the current edits (even if I say so myself) are an improvement on the previous version that had cotton quite early on, with a rather sketchy cite. Incidentally, should we move this discussion over to
5737:. I wouldn't object to replacing "spectacular" with "picturesque" (it's perhaps the more contemporary term) but "extensive" indicates nothing as to the subject matter (Have you seen the view from Kings Weston?). Any hill on the A19 approaching
2149:
You almost certainly know better than me, as I generally treat Commons as a fetid swamp into which the editors of the Wikipedias are occasionally obliged to venture, rather than somewhere to visit through choice; can the various other files at
904:
I just did some quick reading to try and clarify what was with this "cotton broadcloth" weirdness and discovered that it's an Americanism for poplin. Should there be a hatnote at the top to redirect people looking for American broadcloth to
3064:
This is not a coding tutorial. This is an explanation of Gray code. It needs to be the clearest explanation of Gray code that is can be, not the most optimised (for size or run time) code fragment. That alone is reason to keep the original
4249:
prose: we are not judged on our success by the accuracy of the writing, but by the accuracy of the reader's retained impression after reading it. This is English language text, not formal mathematics or a propositional calculus. It is
5841:, perhaps because I read the original text slightly differently. The claim to be stood up - I thought - was not that the views are 'spectacular', but that the conventional wisdom in the late 18th century was that they were (much like
4747:
You flagged the number in "Mains electricity". Yeh, I think you're right - it was special usage. I've sort of rolled electricity generation into mains electricity. Would you buy 25hz instead? If not, what's the lower limit here?
1375:
across Bath to a site further west, confusingly linking a road called "Midland Road" to the north bank, by the old Destructor works. The road on which the current bridge stands is called "Midland Bridge Road". I drove along it today.
4564:
Andy, it's bad writing. Please rewrite it if you don't like my edit, don't just revert it and claim I have a problem with my reading skills, which is quite beneath you. As is your attitude here, after working cooperatively on the
5232:
that interesting to other editors, it is unlikely to have been for a good reason). I hope my concerns over your signature are clear enough (and if they're not, I'm not seeking to explain them further, just to have you blocked under
5631:
You removed me edit stating it was used until '71. I'm a bit confused as it clearly states that it was used in the Indo-Pakistani war in '71. So, if it was used in '71 in Pakistan/India, how it is possible it was retired in 1950?
4617:. That is not arguable. My edit is not, by any measure. It may not express whatever it is you are seeking so passionately to; fine, if you are aware of more nuance in that convoluted statement, as you appear to be, great, then
5767:
Replacing "it became a popular destination for artists" with merely "a destination for artists" makes it meaningless: artists go all over the place, to dentists and to canvas makers down industrial alleys. Only when qualified as
4979:, with added shielding gas? So the original redlink was also the wrong name. Seems like an interesting topic, but I'm not putting such an obscure link back into the lead of the main article, especially not when it's still red.
3982:
Yes, I can still buy it. But only from the 1/2" thick catalogue of abrasives. Emery paper I can't buy anywhere. We are quibbling here over minor terms like "remains popular" and "Emery paper, more commonly seen, ". I don't see
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used, but it is still used when the aesthetics justify it. My whole bathtub is copper, so I'm not plumbing that in with plastic), most importantly heating pipework is still substantially in copper - and soldered with a lead-tin
5547:
Is this a subject you have knowledge in? Please consider reverting your recent revert of me. I also just posted about this issue in talk, if you wish to discus there. Your revert of me was all to quick. Please slow it down :)
2492:
also used rag joints, but not in this case). This is a distinction worth keeping. Admittedly it's less important for RWD, but Hooke joints in FWD are such a problem that they're exceptional by this time, except in 4WD vehicles.
1356:
Bridge (a different bridge between the station on the east bank and the approach line and other facilities, including goods and loco sheds, on the west bank, and now the link bridge into Sainsbury's supermarket). The Midland
4199:. We have to be even more careful with what's in the lead, because of its prominence and that its shortness doesn't allow for much subtlety of expression: if it's difficult, we should leave it to fuller coverage in the body.
4007:
bearing designs isn't clear either. But even if you try to go and buy emery specifically, you can hardly get it - you'll be sold "emery", and it will be synthetic. Which is why I have a 1/2" thick abrasives catalogue handy.
1045:
In the twenties, "cotton broadcloth" did not mean "cotton poplin", necessarily. It could be anything from a short-napped blind face fabric that looked and felt a good deal like the original all the way down to bad muslin.
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ten years when the proliferation of frequencies prevailed, so everybody 'escaped' or converted to something right quick. You're spot-on about sourcing such a definitive statement, so I've deleted it until I can source it.
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Not all of us live in the USA. Your change assumes that we do, and that US policy applies everywhere. Lead-based solder is still widely used, and if withdrawn or formally forbidden, that is still largely restricted to
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is no longer the abrasive used. The abrasives of choice for coated abrasives are now fused aluminium oxide, aluminium zirconia and silicon carbide - all synthetic. Natural emery, and garnet too, has gone the way of
1761:, but not the Z80. The Z80 is there of course, but hidden away under unrecognisable sub-categories. In which case, the Z80 also ends up hidden away in a separate tree from from the 8080, which is just ludicrous. The
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2721:, similarly for the at present still sparsely populated UIC, AAR and "Commonwealth" arrangements - it may take a while since I'm doing it as I work through loco articles. This is why I'll be reverting your edit on
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In this case, I'd agree that they're too much of a selfie and not enough of anything illustrative for clothing - also the problems of poor quality and poor focus. This week (and broadly against policy) Commons
788:
I think the confusion is that the term "hammer mill" may be variously used. It is certainly used in English sources for the historic German forges, but here's an example of it being used for an English forge:
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Certainly 16 2/3 was used in industrial and railway applications in the electrical stone age, and continues in use today in railroads. Whether it was ever provided to less specialized customers I don't know.
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and then accuse me of trolling. Mind if we get things settled in a civilized manner? If the two of us can not reach agreement on what the term "Comparable vehicles" mean, I suggest we use the steps given in
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was in relation to my warning him for inserting them into articles and for uploading copyvios, rather than specifically for uploading them to Commons, I assume his attitude will be the same in both cases. ‑
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article. Pop culture sections tend to become repositories of trivia (often rather promotional) with little relevance to the subject of the article. So I tend to chop stuff that is lacking sources. Thanks,
1465:? I participate at Knowledge (XXG) about my related topics. If these Topics are being discussed by someone else that what is my fault. You can check the notability of the articles which I posted. It looks
149:
Pardon my rhetoric tone, but in what way would HL be more "indirect" than BC/DE? I'm not really expecting an answer, so let me just say that it is used for the exact same type of adressing as BC/DE, i.e.
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when less loaded-language is available. ("Extensive" for example communicates that the view is expansive and notable - without presupposing or presuming how everyone who views it should perceive it...)
2099:
I still fail to see how this violated any policies and wasn't a true statement of fact regarding the topic at hand and very much related to the education and skills that a web developer should possess?
3265:
on what happened with the AWS Icon Set - I'll chase it down on this side and see if I can get it fixed. For the logo, I was told it was freely licensed, but I'm confirming that as well. My email is
3190:, so other people are unlikely to find your request. You might wish to do something to make your request more visible. I happened to find it after reading one of your comments in the DR on Commons. --
1837:
Hi Andy, my thinking is that since the handle of the quern is fixed in place it offers no rotational translation. It is merely a guide for the hand which is providing all the rotational force, cheers
5445:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose
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the problem of using a 7 bit code) and I had to make it work with a 8 bit encoder instead. Now imagine how impossible it would be to rule a grating for a 32 bit Gray code! Two billion increments!
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for - add 'reference needed' instead and I'll gladly do it. Please follow that co-operative route, not the "my article, I decide" approach that one occasionally gets dragged down by around here :-)
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specify if either the FT or M1917 was the focus, because the short paragraph itself explains that already. The title just needs to tell the reader what the content in that (sub)section is about.
3464:" on several articles but there is actually no such page. Are you planning to write one, link to a more general colliery organisation or just hoping someone else will get fed up with red links?
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the handful of loudest voices. The spectacle of half a dozen Germans with "professional levels of the English language" arguing over basic English grammar or convention is a regular favourite.
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Your edit is poorly written, unsourced and most of all it duplicates what comes before it. No-one is disputing that daisy wheels were used for graphics, the question is how to express this.
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to solve the issue. That keeps things from getting personal, which would be really silly since we both take an apparent interest in military history and strive to make good articles better.
1859:
Secondly, this idea here that a fixed crank without an inherent rotating sleeve isn't a crank. Again, examples without are widespread and we simply use a loose hand grip to take its place.
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reason (I make no claim either way). But otherwise I don't understand the logic of this paragraph and especially its context of an article about evaporators (rather than engine efficiency).
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I would say that the article needs expansion with more detail, not cutting back to suit street slang. I am not sure how to do this, but that should not mean closing the door that I opened.
1918:
I am confused by the reversal of my edit to the welding page. The reason given is: (rv unsourced claim that flux is there to stabilise the arc. Undid revision 780799836 by Waynems (talk))
4676:
Hi. How is the article more balanced? In all of the other missile articles, the claims are taken at face value but in this one they're purely reported as claims. How is that balanced? --
4522:
Thankyou for finally clarifying what you were complaining about. A shame you couldn't do it within the mandatory 24 hour response time that you demand for user talk pages, but no matter.
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Probably. It's usually better to over-explain than under-explain. Not being American I'm unfamiliar with this, but I know that "poplin" has a lot of local differences in its meanings.
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Your calculator (which is still largely in Spanish, not English) relates tightening torque to bolt tension. It does nothing in relation to the shear forces that are most relevant here.
2499:. Although I'm inclined to restore it altogether and use the piped form, as possibly slightly clearer to those hovering the link without following it (although WP is against such, per
4245:. If I missed them becoming un-rare, then show some sources to that effect, because until it's sourced that they really form an appreciable proportion, they ain't going in that lead.
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we are again. Are you confusing me with someone you bear a grudge against or something? In any case you're at risk of slightly making a fool of yourself if you carry on like this. --
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Hi I do not think that my link is irrelevant. One of the paragraphs make references to calculate the torque required by a bolted joint. And this is what the web page I linked does.
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page? My addition was completely relevant and cited from the source of a web developer. Nothing posted violated any terms of use and was completely relevant to the subject at hand.
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you'll see that even the x86, ARM, 6502, 68000, and Z80 aren't listed. That's because they're in the "Microprocessors by company" category, and not directly in Microprocessors. the
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Your signature exists to communicate to other editors. It should communicate your identity: your identity as represented in log files, so that we can cross-reference them; and to a
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Galleries are almost always a bad thing and a poor way to display images. This one is especially poor. Also you've added it three times now, despite being reverted, so please see
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I am far from being interested enough to track just which version of your signature you're using with each particular edit (You are not that interesting to other editors. If you
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else that interests you. I am asking you to make an objective opinion on the name only. There is also a lot of crud, whatever you want to say. Thank you. EDIT: I forgot the link:
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I'm happy that "emery cloth" still belongs as an article, even more so that at least the photo shows some, but it does have to reflect that other abrasives have moved past it.
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Hi Andy, please help me understand why you moving hammer mill articles from the category designed for them to "power hammers" which is more generic. Are you planning to delete
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I agree; it's a mess. There aren't so many microprocessors that a big category of ~500 would be a problem, and it's easy to have sub-categories for large families if needed.
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3586:) or revert your edit. Additionally, I would think that an established editor such as yourself would know the difference between redirection and deletion, the former being
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really necessary. For an article on a particular engine we assume, I think, that the reader will seek details afforded by more general articles covering type of engine. --
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Barring any updates from Hey or Hecht, who I've been corresponding with, I think the history section is getting close to being done. Would you mind fine-tooth-combing it?
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Your point is valid, I have changed the article a bit. In the U.S. one cannot even purchase leaded plumbing solder anymore, it disappeared decades ago, thanks to the SDWA.
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does the sentence make sense, that this location became a destination chosen specifically on aesthetic grounds, for its virtues. This is not subjective (or at least, not
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I still think it's not a crank mechanism, maybe because the handle is being mistaken for an axle, but you are right, it is a can of worms, I shall leave it alone, cheers
739:
These sites are not of that type or function. Instead they are what are more widely known as "battery mills", where a battery (like artillery, a group of individuals) of
5693:. As you note, there is no policy that precludes the use of adjectives. However, if those adjectives represent an opinion, especially a subjective one, then there is a
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Sorry, I don't have one to hand. I've just been rooting through old photos (it's some years since I was in Durham) to try and find one. It's a very elegant mechanism.
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1519:, This is criminal to stay on Knowledge (XXG) just to attack on a specific person. I have noticed you are doing nothing. Justing attacking on my profile and content.
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violations. I imagine you'll have thought that through though, and it is of course your risk to take. I'd be grateful though if you could correct your factual error
489:, I'll only have to put them back again if it's to be correct. Before you do, can you explain what your motive was and what 'bizarre' is supposed to mean? Thanks.--
512:. This stuff needs to be sourced, and given in greater detail, if it's to stay. I've expanded it a bit myself, but it's relying on just the one source I've added.
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important that everything in an article is 100% correct. But it's mostly because I really hate meningless time consuming fights. Life is far to short for that. :)
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Clearly not the answer I wanted, but exactly what I asked for. I would have prefered a judgement on the actual name, but I did think of "I" vs."i". Thank you.
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The two sections below say exactly the same thing, in that one of the things flux does is stabilize the arc. My change simply makes the sentence less awkward.
5186:. It is high time that Dicklyon was topic banned from causing yet more trouble in this field, with his persistent, idiosyncratic and against policy renames.
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is not helpful. Nor is a liberal sprinkling of weasel concessions like "generally". The simpler, prior, version was correct overall and much clearer to read.
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Bridge is the one referred to in the first reference as part of the composite tender put in by the station contractor. It may well be that the first Midland
4709:
If you have complaints about other articles not being checked equally, then the place to raise that is on those articles, or at least tell us which ones.
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I have no opinion on it. I'm inclined to a keep, but find the arguments both ways to be substantial (BLP1E vs the significance of her own later writing).
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five years ago, but I updated the article on the weekend, and can confirm from Wynn, Moore and Stoddart that the RAF was indeed supplied with the Mark 5.
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Commons used to be a bit more chilled out than WP. Now it just seems to have so few active editors that nearly every one is some sort of monomaniac.
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Also please stop adding CSD tags to it. If it's challenged, you can't re-request speedies over and over. Please discuss at talk:, or else use AfD.
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readers have to walk away afterwards with the most accurate picture we can leave them, including how vanishingly rare electric drives are here.
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contributions have you made today, other than blanking a bunch of articles and doing nothing yourself about adding the sources you're demanding?
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be lumped into a single nomination, or will they each require a separate listing? (Given that we're talking about a project that maintains that
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robotic animal, owing to its claim that it actually worked by a biological or biomorphic process, rather than just being clockwork in feathers.
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I've witnessed his feisty behavior firsthand as an IP, but that's anecdotal. Have a drink and just hope it ends in a favorable way. Good luck
5752:
You replaced the brickwork description of 1/16" jointing as "exceptionally fine" with merely fine. This is wrong: brickwork handbooks regard
4444:; making false claims without evidence isn't tolerated here. A strikethrough will be fine, I don't require an apology. Thanks in advance. --
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that I have read his message. It has been suggested to me that if I tell him what I have done with it, I might be subject to sanctions from
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As usual, there is some overlap with historical names. But these German sites are of the metalworking type (a few tilt hammers) and neither
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If you would like to take this survey, please sign up on this page, and a link for the survey will be mailed to you via Special:Emailuser.
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improve articles. It is simplistic 'bot-based editing to think so. This is why human editors, with editorial judgement, are still needed.
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are over, including and especially those taking days to prep, such as take hundreds of characters. Thanks for the hostile environment. //
3634:—what do you have to show for your own work, apart from belittling others? Show your sources and lay down the personal attacks—you're on
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demand, or else (post WWI) a distribution and load-balancing grid network. I know of no instances where railways did this with their 16
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Yes, the mis-statement you made about me there. Perhaps, but I may not as I think you've already been answered satisfactorily there. --
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Asking MPS1992, the one who apparently has an opinion on the subject of using the routine template vs. using a paraphrase of template.
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Hi Andy, from the discussion above, you appear to know that we don't keep unreferenced content, especially that which isn't sourced to
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Not really my party this one, try asking at WP:MILHIST, but a month or so back there was a big push to make articles match the name at
5849:, not all of which would now be thought particularily outstanding). Deleting 'spectacular' leaves us with a claim that the views were
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article. It is most uncalled for, and, in a word, bullying, for which there is a Knowledge (XXG) action page you are familiar with.
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attempted to solve this by using a 'velocity control' method with an on-board gyroscope, rather than simpler 'acceleration control'.
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Thanks for the response. It would have been great to include a bit of this in the comment for your revision. That was my suggestion.
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I remember the usage. What's a "mains"? If you worked for the railroard back then, the power was 16-2/3 hz. And then there were
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OK, thanks. (BTW, my instinct is that a viewer is overseeing the colliery, not sitting looking at a lump of coal - if that helps!)
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4205:- show some sources for them. There are plenty of these for sale to the car tweaking crowd, and they're all charlatans. I know of
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There's no way you stalked my contribs to make four successive and unrelated reverts but didn't note that I wrote the entirety of
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Also, I fixed the 8080 categories. The x86 category, unexpectedly, comes from using the template "Intel processors|discontinued".
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article with somewhat different ideas to merge it into current content. Would you have any objection or suggested improvements to
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WP:OR subjectivity), but is recording the behaviour of a significant group which we can establish with some sense of objectivity.
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library on sandpaper vs. glasspaper, garnet or flint papers, then that's on the other shelves and goes back to the 17th century.
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in that it is literally and objectively so: such narrowness is otherwise unheard of (I've never seen it anywhere else, even for
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I'll keep an eye on it. It's not good, but they seem well enough intentioned otherwise that we can only hope for improvement.
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You still seem to think that there is some great unfairness by other editors limiting your access. This is wrong. You have no
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While not nearly as popular as it once was (for the reasons stated in the edited passage), the product is still widely sold:
96:- which is well worth the read. He was a Vickers development engineer and there's some good obscure hands-on stuff in there.
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4893:"Mains" here means either a commodity distribution network, where customers are sold a fungible product according to their
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is not just bad writing, it is gibberish. Please do not add, and re-add after being reverted, that sentence to the article.
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Disappointed you didn't manage this yourself so I did it for you. Reinstate it and we're back at AN/I. You're so far into
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I don't think it needs rewriting, so much as renaming. The scope should be that of the warren truss, not just the bridges.
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information about how this noticeboard works - which problems it deals with well, and which problems it struggles with.
4490:
You may have missed this request so I will ask again. Please can you remove the mis-statement you made about me there? --
2894:. Thing is, I only started Knowledge (XXG) 10 days ago, and I really need a bit of help getting to know Knowledge (XXG).
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accumulator, the A register. This is the only register with full access to the ALU. That's the meaning of "accumulator".
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changes like that aren't the best thing to start with. Try talking to people at the Teahouse for more of a suggestion.
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is a continuation of the behavior that got you blocked once already. I am now requesting a one-way Iban. That is it. --
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5764:); it is the exception to all other fine brickwork jointing. This is what the sentence means, and we should keep that.
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I've blocked to prevent further disruptive editing, but do not have time to review and revert, please take a look. --
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You must be hungry after working hard to make sure the Spoken Knowledge (XXG) section doesn't spiral out of control.
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as canon, rather than the previous mixture. As you're the one pushing to change this, it's your turn to justify it.
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accumulator in the Z80. The fact that it has fewer addressing modes than 8-bit operations does not change this fact.
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5276:, that's just not part of the agenda. Claiming or demanding that it is (and many have tried) leads to long blocks.
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1938:) for the electrode that stabilize the arc and shield the base material from impurities continued to be developed.
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I can't be bothered, but I think you would be correct to bring Rhadow to requests for Administrator Intervention.
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Why are you wasting so much time and effort on defending such a clearly poor change? Take it to ANI if you wish.
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articles, rather than just spammed links into them, you'd discover that a bolted joint isn't what you think it is.
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Hello again, I understand the problem was with the link I provided, so I will next add the line without the link
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2010:. When this was developed it was realised that the arc would happily go right through the flux coating sideways.
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poplin was available and known as such; has been continuously. Not something that was introduced in the twenties.
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No, never. Have you stopped breaking things? The joy of conversing with the pointlessly obstinate has faded... --
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I know nothing of its use in that conflict, there's nothing in the article about that, and there's certainly no
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is a device (usually water powered) for crushing minerals, usually at a mine site before taking them to a metal
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haven't even done that much to clear up the issues you still persist in carping about? Thanks for clarifying.
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By the way, this page is quite boring to me, so if you want or need my attention, be sure to ping me. Thanks.
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The deleted content ought to be restored, as relevant to the broader truss scope. It can't be restored to the
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here, but you've received one within the last 12 months already. Comments like "Oh, make no question of it:
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Thank you for the response, and the additional information. Best. Michael S Wayne 00:22, 19 May 2017 (UTC)
1931:) were made. Flux covering the electrode stabilizes the arc, and shields the base material from impurities.
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This seems to be a language variation between German sites being called "hammer mills" and the WP term at
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I wasn't a member of "Dingly and his friends" (because of an old grudge of mine) but may become one ;) --
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I have reverted your edit. Back in the 1980s Daisy Wheel printers were widely used to produce ASCII art.
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Or should this article be merged into a more general one on coated sheet abrasives for hand use, under "
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written prose by academically limited and overly inexperienced writers too lazy to run down a cite like
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is permitted on BLPs and what isn't. If you need any help understanding this, just reply here. Best, --
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I'd heard that (in Blaenavon, naturally), but only for it being rejected as too latin and too made-up.
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of the spectacular nature of its views (oddly there's no example on Commons). They form, literally, a
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power. Maybe they did - Italy would be the most likely place for it to happen. The problem is that 16
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might be incorrect (but still makes sense), copper is used for drainage lines (it's expensive so it's
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3594:. If you don't have sourcing for those unsourced pages too, you should revert those reverts as well.
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supports that. I notice you're from the UK, so perhaps you're used to a different usage of the term.
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Do you recall the source? I would like to expand that article but I cannot find any mention of this.
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position at time. The grayToBinary32 example (both as originally and as I have edited it) instead
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3229:. Would you mind formatting the references? I always get in a terrible mess when I try to do it.
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2472:) contain any mention of a Hooke joint. Indeed, the drive shaft page uses the term "universal".
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list isn't a good place for a description of three uses of the truss when 2/3rd aren't bridges.
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throughout the project; the downside risk is that eventually you'll end up getting blocked for
975:(Also, "poplin" remains the dominant name for cotton plainweave used for better men's shirts.)
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any clearly stated photo of used in this bridge mechanism with mentioned linear gear bearing.
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of copper tubing before soldering, as well as in the various kits of other working tradesmen.
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Thanks, you just beat me to it - I've been filling out the ANEW (I'll paste it to the ANI).
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Why do you think ANI would be at all interested in your year and a half old content dispute?
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officially admirable views from carefully prescribed 'viewing stations' in the Lake District
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I agree. It's a rather obscure and specializwd thing, used mainly for underwater pipelines.
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5453:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The
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The patronising tone seems strange when addressing an editor with more than 125,000 edits.
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MY EDIT It was largely replaced with arc welding, as advances in metal coverings (known as
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Indeed. Thanks. User Rjccumbria's changes, to attribute the perspective on the views (and
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Sorry, but I know nothing about his personal life - just a bit about his technical work.
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What does "close enough for jazz" mean, and how does it relate to Knowledge (XXG) policies
318:
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Just wanted to let you know that the fair use of images of living people generally fails
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3244:
Not tonight, but I'll take a look. There's some more in the Thomas Hackworth book too.
3128:
it should not be in the lower category. If you could revert the edit that would be great.
2220:. Nice to see Commons is still maintaining its role as Knowledge (XXG)'s penal colony. ‑
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As to your linked image, then I think that is there mostly to justify the existence of
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OK. It looks as though it's moving towards my view there. I'll join in if that'd help.
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4632:: the term is linked once in the lead; I linked it in appropriate section of the body.
4185:
3068:
Secondly, this is a Gray code. I've never seen a 32 bit Gray code. I cannot imagine a
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is my company name which I used to create my username here. How you have tagged me as
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Are you asking me, kid, or the person whose talkpage this is? Get a grip of yourself.
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in Europe use it almost exclusively) as it lasts so much better than aluminium oxide.
3376:
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joint is single, or actually the so-called Double Cardan. I'll keep looking. Thanks!
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Then the others need to be added. It's ridiculous to have something obscure like the
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for anything, bps is far clearer. Perhaps this original "50" figure stems from that?
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article. (Just don't expect me to go write an article about it.) I hope that helps.
4213:
diesel engine of the 1930s - an idea that did work, but they didn't persist with it.
3390:
No, it seems not. I guess the target must have been edited since. If you post it at
1430:
Thanks for drawing my attention to that connection. I'll keep an eye open for them.
751:
refining from ore). This includes large blacksmithing operations to make blades, or
463:
Thanks, that's a pretty major expansion. I look forward to reading it all in depth.
362:, not weakened to imply a balance of fuel efficiency and reduced water consumption.
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much clearer for that. There's also a loop-based example immediately preceding it.
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4588:" They sought an optimal design for a of beam made of the new material of riveted
4432:
Hi Andy. Your choice to continue to parade your (deliberate?) misunderstanding of
5401:
Thank you on behalf of the Support & Safety and Anti-Harassment Tools Teams,
5019:
Please provide references to support your re-addition of unsourced trivia to the
4113:
Hi, and thank you for your contributions. Please don't add sourcing derived from
2434:
Patience Andy, patience. I'm only just starting, there is much goodness to come.
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a deletion discussion on it. That is simply trying to stack the deck against it.
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1934:
ORIGINAL It was largely replaced with arc welding, as metal coverings (known as
1687:: Can you point me to the specific MOS provision you're referring to? Thanks. —
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5823:) are expertly done, and more than address my own concern. Thanks to you both.
3580:
you just restored a paragraph of content that has been unverified for two years
2158:
has potential encyclopedic value, I have no idea whether these images actually
636:
https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia_talk:Good_article_reassessment/Transformer/1
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Which are you referring to in the Goggomobil, the single or double joint? The
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GAR process is started. Direct all future GAR process comment in talk page at
3513:
It seems to depend on the age a bit. The eighteenth century favoured "coal".
339:
condensing engine is to conserve feedwater? I agree that it might not be the
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turbochargers are ineffective. Nor are they superchargers: they are at most
4122:
4022:
3709:. This means that the image is in the article twice: it was already in the "
3665:, I wanted to encourage you to offer an opinion in the deletion discussion.
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5182:
Sorry, was that not clear enough for you? Try reading the whole thread at
5053:
Knowledge (XXG):Articles_for_deletion/List_of_pioneers_in_computer_science
5041:
Knowledge (XXG):Articles_for_deletion/List_of_pioneers_in_computer_science
4068:
Blue abrasive grits will be aluminium zirconia. That's the main one I use (
3147:
No. As already raised, you just shouldn't even be emptying this category
2506:
Limitations of other articles are a problem for those pages, not this one.
5665:
If you can source this, then go for it. But it does need sourcing first.
5386:
https://wikimediafoundation.org/2017_AN/Incidents_Survey_Privacy_Statement
5116:#1 unless there are extreme extenuating circumstances. So I had to remark
4956:. I didn't put that link there, but I think someone got the idea from the
5734:
5541:
4210:
3116:
Hi, I removed the category from the duck article because it's already in
1663:
article, as it was, as that's the place that is limited to bridge scope.
164:
for signed numbers, it did not even set the sign flag for 16-bit numbers.
5457:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
4462:
And perhaps you would care to join that discussion in the place for it.
2996:
article, which you undid. My provided code re-write still makes use of
1277:
regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. The thread is
4254:
variation. Sticking "electrically driven" in there because it was used
3830:
Thanks; a few of the edits were sensible, so improvement might happen.
1735:
1116:
if he wants to archive or delete the thread now it has been relocated.
733:
4975:
Thanks - so the main aspect of that would seem to be as a sub type of
3801:
problem. Your eyes on his contributions would be appreciated. Thanks,
3016:
Read the edit summary, "rv - missing the point of that whole example."
5742:
4780:
as "mains" frequency for a distribution network is obvious bollocks.
906:
2185:
deleting on the basis of "quality" (which really means IDONTLIKEIT).
232:
I'm glad as you referenced to created by me Wiki-article dedicated "
154:
addressing, using a (variable) direct address stored in a register.
5260:
the project. The project (in a corporate sense) might decide that
5256:
here (same as everyone) if it's thought that you might contribute
4572:
I would like to see a constructive edit on your part here. Yours,
2722:
1769:
is just plain wrong, but then hey, Knowledge (XXG) and simplistic
1607:
756:
5184:
Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Trains#More_Line_capitalization_issues
4529:
piece of vaguely clear and agreed consensus policy we have here,
1370:
Bridge (although it is likely he was responsible for the Midland
193:
I let you have your "indirect address" though... it's not really
5582:
Thank you for quality articles written in eleven years, such as
3713:" section, which is the most appropriate section for satisfying
2531:
But hey, it's an article with bundled refs, so it's unworkable.
1762:
517:
486:
479:
5460:
If you wish to participate in the 2017 election, please review
3943:
http://www.homedepot.com/s/emery%20cloth?NCNI-5&gsitesearch
3939:
http://www.acehardware.com/product/index.jsp?productId=53090276
5695:
policy that expects that this subjective opinion be attributed
849:
regarding an issue with which you may have been involved.
309:
You and I seem to have simultaneously focused on the same new
2344:
regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. --
1343:
1874. I think in any case that you are confusing the Midland
909:? I've added referenced notes to both pages to explain this.
5837:
Apoloogies for intruding, but my concerns were not those of
3485:"Coal viewer" vs. "colliery viewer" is one question though.
2524:
problem, through a mechanism we do know today as the Cardan
2216:
Consider me duly unshocked to see Neelix was the creator of
4954:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12289-010-0945-3
3861:
regarding an issue with which you may have been involved.
5859:
Year (or a happy new year for MoS devotees) to you both.
5779:
These removals, as do all these crusade-based edits under
4188:. It matters not what you or I think, but only if we can
4018:
been "more common" than emery cloth for a very long time.
1457:
is the first time when I joined Knowledge (XXG) working.
1248:
Thanks, I might even dust off a microphone and join in.
600:
for instance. You're starting to sound awfully familiar.
3897:
Knowledge (XXG):Sockpuppet investigations/Amy. Firehoof.
5820:
5802:
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is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
4441:
4396:
I happened to stop by here this evening, so I can tell
4144:
3705:
3635:
3582:. Please either source the paragraph you want to keep (
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It's not a WP term, I think it's mostly British slang.
535:
something? I did so because I remembered the ZX81-: -->
445:
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4241:
So electric superchargers are out on a limb. They are
3759:
Go ahead & take it to ANI. See if I give a damn.
2764:
article. There is a proposal to move this article at
2190:
Category:Nude or partially nude women with purple hair
2055:
Andy please explain why you reverted my change on the
1538:
1489:
Knowledge (XXG):Sockpuppet investigations/IMZahidIqbal
596:
Have you ever edited here before under another name?
5207:
mentioned it. Until yesterday. Just so you know...
3859:
Knowledge (XXG):Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents
2342:
Knowledge (XXG):Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents
1275:
Knowledge (XXG):Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents
847:
Knowledge (XXG):Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents
559:
the one doing the legwork and adding the references.
3656:
Knowledge (XXG):Articles for deletion/Olympia Nelson
3205:
The script did seem to barf a bit when I posted it.
1968:
electromagnetic. Hafergut showed this in the 1960s.
124:
But none of that is the function of the accumulator?
5626:
3721:. It does not need to be in the infobox as well. --
3460:
I notice that you've been wikilinking "viewer" to "
3418:
intended to be funny? If so, it misses the mark. --
60:Some time ago you added this to the MCLOS article:
5118:File:Portrait of artist Fuller with dog statue.jpg
3584:burden lies on the editor who adds the information
3227:Locomotives of the Stockton and Darlington Railway
3221:Locomotives of the Stockton and Darlington Railway
3154:Also this is not merely a robotic animal, it is a
2965:Locomotives of the Stockton and Darlington Railway
2528:, even though this much was entirely Hooke's idea.
5252:to be here at all, so do not demand one. You are
2085:"Webtrex", posting links to "Trex technologies"?
5729:. This is in the contemporary traditions of the
5290:Thanks for the comments and advice. Take care.
1152:A beer for you (given what you're going through)
275:Here are some nice photos, including the joint:
3394:an admin should do it, usually fairly quickly.
2760:You have previously discussed the title of the
747:are used for metalworking of metal (i.e. metal
5145:it's just discomfort that's it's you doing it
2152:Commons:Deletion requests/File:Hatashe-Tye.jpg
4508:territory that you are out the other side. --
4404:or his friends. So I will not tell you that.
4209:real electric supercharger, a really obscure
3095:Talk:Gray_code#Gray_code_code_example_changes
8:
5120:for deletion under a different criterion. --
4763:Oh, I wouldn't know - maybe we go by what's
3344:Thanks for the improvements you made to the
87:The 'Secret' World of Vickers Guided Weapons
4010:What is this article about? Does it mean "
3899:thanks. I added some thinking I'd be first.
3590:to the latter and an edit that can be done
5633:
5396:Sign up here to receive a link to a survey
5051:You are invited to join the discussion at
4624:Second, I am going to restore the link to
4238:, another article that needs to be better.
2382:
2292:covered in an international encyclopedia.
2060:
1985:
1945:
1944:Michael S Wayne 03:13, 18 May 2017 (UTC)
1773:overruling truth and accuracy, yet again.
485:Hi Andy, please stop undoing the edits on
247:
204:
5821:clarify the attribution of other elements
5092:I read that. It's a better description.
4862:it depends on that you think a mains is.
3914:Probably little point, SPIs take months.
2699:Category:Locomotives by wheel arrangement
2038:
2036:
1757:directly under the top-level category of
1738:series wasn't following that convention.
305:Improved Military Rifle (IMR) propellants
5717:But these adjectives are not excessive.
4702:that Ababeel is capable of this without
4613:Andy, first, the sentence as written is
961:, showing USAnian use a decade before.
2576:, so obviously this is a single joint.
2032:
1576:In what way is this mot a duplicate of
541:Fixed. C'mon Andy, work with us here --
3364:Midland Railway 2511 Class locomotives
1112:, leaving this as a record. Its up to
1108:Have boldly transferred discussion to
1041:
240: -page or at least send on my email:
5741:is just as "extensive" (and perhaps "
3482:Just working on it. Also WP:REDLINK.
2756:Ship transport or maritime transport?
2622:so, how to distinguish? Thanks, Boaz
2218:Category:Handbras, by one's own hands
2198:Category:Handbras, by one's own hands
278:"Durham Bridges: 1. Kingsgate Bridge"
7:
5430:2017 Arbitration Committee elections
2941:) makes it impossible to trust you.
2715:Category:Commonwealth classification
2678:. done. nice to agree sometimes! :)
2476:joint in the Goggomobil suspension.
5592:Ebbw Vale Garden Festival Funicular
5443:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process
5427:Hello, Andy Dingley. Voting in the
3857:There is currently a discussion at
3260:Help with AWS logo and AWS Icon Set
2740:OK, so long as it stays somewhere.
2340:There is currently a discussion at
1580:, which is largely about bridges???
1491:is where your current and previous
1273:There is currently a discussion at
845:There is currently a discussion at
770:. We definitely should not link to
5414:ArbCom 2017 election voter message
4117:to articles on living people, per
3661:Since you objected to the PROD on
2869:Knowledge (XXG):Dispute_resolution
2697:Hi Andy, I've begun expanding the
1767:Category:Intel x86 microprocessors
1599:where I've already explained this.
1184:Thanks! I'll feed it to my ulcer.
774:, we ought to reword for clarity.
656:I'm new to Knowledge (XXG) jargon
24:
4950:Shielded active-gas forge-welding
4533:, was nothing to do with you and
3987:of these as credibly supportable.
2249:Undoing Revisions Without Comment
1706:BTW, I hadn't noticed the accent.
5699:using loaded or flowery language
5575:
5419:
5046:
3852:
2552:page clearly needs some cleanup.
2335:
2257:context of the original change.
2200:, let alone their intersection.
2162:outside Commons's scope.) While
1390:Have you seen the discussion at
1268:
1207:
1159:
959:Bennett's Cotton Fabric Glossary
957:, that's simply untrue. Here's
840:
5745:" too), but has nothing of the
5464:and submit your choices on the
4312:Would you prefer the template?
2770:if you care to participate. —
2701:by creating sub-categories for
1924:Please explain your reasoning.
1651:, not here - I'll copy it over.
1151:
5153:WP:ARBATC#All parties reminded
4525:So do I have this right? The
3711:Percy in the television series
3523:10:23, 27 September 2017 (UTC)
3509:10:20, 27 September 2017 (UTC)
3495:10:11, 27 September 2017 (UTC)
3477:09:57, 27 September 2017 (UTC)
3447:20:07, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
3428:19:54, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
3404:20:00, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
3385:19:57, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
3358:16:07, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
3332:11:40, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
3318:09:41, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
3302:02:56, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
3280:19:09, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
3254:22:30, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
3239:22:25, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
3215:11:36, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
3200:23:04, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
3172:15:30, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
3142:15:20, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
3106:17:23, 14 September 2017 (UTC)
3083:17:21, 14 September 2017 (UTC)
3055:17:04, 14 September 2017 (UTC)
3030:16:41, 14 September 2017 (UTC)
3011:16:28, 14 September 2017 (UTC)
2977:20:54, 13 September 2017 (UTC)
2725:of this morning. Keep well! -
85:That would be Forbat's book -
1:
5869:20:54, 31 December 2017 (UTC)
5833:16:03, 28 December 2017 (UTC)
5815:23:22, 27 December 2017 (UTC)
5797:13:57, 27 December 2017 (UTC)
5712:13:38, 27 December 2017 (UTC)
5675:11:40, 24 December 2017 (UTC)
5652:18:02, 23 December 2017 (UTC)
5627:https://en.wikipedia.org/PIAT
5617:13:55, 13 December 2017 (UTC)
5558:19:59, 12 December 2017 (UTC)
5533:21:40, 10 December 2017 (UTC)
5519:21:26, 10 December 2017 (UTC)
5504:21:13, 10 December 2017 (UTC)
5367:14:35, 27 November 2017 (UTC)
5348:05:57, 24 November 2017 (UTC)
5329:16:02, 21 November 2017 (UTC)
5306:16:45, 20 November 2017 (UTC)
5286:16:28, 20 November 2017 (UTC)
5223:15:45, 20 November 2017 (UTC)
5196:12:48, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
5177:12:30, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
5156:
5130:20:37, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
5102:10:19, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
5087:10:15, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
4195:There's also the question of
4192:reliably does it belong here.
3790:IP editing hand tool articles
2495:As to the redirect, then see
382:You state (per the following
246:Best regards, Sergiy Sheyko
219:01:30, 26 February 2017 (UTC)
141:23:38, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
106:20:15, 21 February 2017 (UTC)
80:14:47, 21 February 2017 (UTC)
5480:18:42, 3 December 2017 (UTC)
5409:18:24, 1 December 2017 (UTC)
5065:20:14, 9 November 2017 (UTC)
5034:16:23, 9 November 2017 (UTC)
5007:17:30, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
4989:10:28, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
4970:02:57, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
4928:11:39, 5 November 2017 (UTC)
4876:03:34, 5 November 2017 (UTC)
4843:02:46, 5 November 2017 (UTC)
4824:01:26, 5 November 2017 (UTC)
4809:01:21, 5 November 2017 (UTC)
4790:23:27, 4 November 2017 (UTC)
4758:23:24, 4 November 2017 (UTC)
4737:18:37, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
4719:18:37, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
4686:18:28, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
4660:12:22, 26 October 2017 (UTC)
4646:12:13, 26 October 2017 (UTC)
4582:11:42, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
4547:17:05, 25 October 2017 (UTC)
4518:16:44, 25 October 2017 (UTC)
4500:17:05, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
4486:11:46, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
4472:11:35, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
4454:11:32, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
4414:20:24, 23 October 2017 (UTC)
4391:23:38, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4361:22:13, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4326:22:00, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4308:21:26, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4293:14:52, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4272:23:02, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4168:21:49, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4131:14:44, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
4104:16:13, 19 October 2017 (UTC)
4085:14:34, 19 October 2017 (UTC)
4059:14:24, 19 October 2017 (UTC)
4039:23:38, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
3971:22:39, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
3955:22:31, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
3924:18:08, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3909:18:05, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3886:18:05, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3871:18:04, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3840:13:04, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3826:10:08, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3811:01:15, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
3784:23:16, 15 October 2017 (UTC)
3774:just doing it to revert me?
3768:23:10, 15 October 2017 (UTC)
3749:23:10, 12 October 2017 (UTC)
3734:22:18, 12 October 2017 (UTC)
3120:, which is a subcategory of
4610:is nominally against them.
4049:up the great work! Yours,
3690:17:07, 8 October 2017 (UTC)
3675:15:21, 8 October 2017 (UTC)
3647:18:50, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
3622:17:00, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
3603:16:55, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
3576:reliable, secondary sources
3570:Restoring unverified claims
3564:21:07, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
3549:18:49, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
2707:Category:UIC classification
2450:Chapman strut (Hooke joint)
1007:It doesn't. It shows that
89:, J. Forbat, Tempus, 2006,
5891:
5472:MediaWiki message delivery
4619:rewrite it in good English
3368:Midland Railway 2511 Class
3188:the list of open SPI cases
3122:Category:Biomorphic robots
2890:Sorry for the blanking of
2156:File:Tracy Fruit Loops.jpg
1891:DU - keep up the good work
1720:21:25, 23 April 2017 (UTC)
1697:20:52, 23 April 2017 (UTC)
1673:09:32, 23 April 2017 (UTC)
1639:13:18, 22 April 2017 (UTC)
1624:15:44, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
1590:15:40, 21 April 2017 (UTC)
1566:16:59, 16 April 2017 (UTC)
1551:14:42, 16 April 2017 (UTC)
1529:16:21, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1505:12:09, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1479:11:20, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1440:11:39, 10 April 2017 (UTC)
1418:21:17, 30 March 2017 (UTC)
1404:21:10, 30 March 2017 (UTC)
1385:21:08, 30 March 2017 (UTC)
1333:20:25, 29 March 2017 (UTC)
1306:17:18, 29 March 2017 (UTC)
1291:14:51, 29 March 2017 (UTC)
1258:10:01, 24 March 2017 (UTC)
1239:02:42, 24 March 2017 (UTC)
1194:16:19, 23 March 2017 (UTC)
1176:15:45, 23 March 2017 (UTC)
1144:13:01, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
1126:12:52, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
1090:19:42, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
1075:19:11, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
1056:16:10, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
1003:12:24, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
985:19:23, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
971:19:22, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
933:18:09, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
919:16:19, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
900:11:14, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
880:11:04, 17 March 2017 (UTC)
859:20:35, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
835:20:15, 18 March 2017 (UTC)
806:20:33, 15 March 2017 (UTC)
784:17:30, 15 March 2017 (UTC)
712:17:22, 15 March 2017 (UTC)
688:20:03, 14 March 2017 (UTC)
666:19:48, 14 March 2017 (UTC)
647:19:46, 12 March 2017 (UTC)
444:I realise that you posted
203:Take care. /Sven Ekeberg
5108:Fair use of living people
4706:evidence to support that.
3977:So what is "emery cloth"?
3184:the SPI request you wrote
2837:08:53, 30 June 2017 (UTC)
2818:03:27, 30 June 2017 (UTC)
2794:21:31, 19 June 2017 (UTC)
2779:21:28, 19 June 2017 (UTC)
2750:14:12, 19 June 2017 (UTC)
2735:13:37, 19 June 2017 (UTC)
2688:04:36, 18 June 2017 (UTC)
2661:17:27, 13 June 2017 (UTC)
1730:Hi Andy. If you look at
625:15:03, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
610:14:52, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
584:14:39, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
569:14:15, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
551:14:11, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
530:13:35, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
499:13:29, 9 March 2017 (UTC)
473:10:28, 8 March 2017 (UTC)
458:09:49, 7 March 2017 (UTC)
434:10:14, 5 March 2017 (UTC)
415:10:18, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
396:01:17, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
372:10:04, 5 March 2017 (UTC)
353:20:41, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
327:01:44, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
297:19:48, 3 March 2017 (UTC)
266:19:28, 3 March 2017 (UTC)
5523:Ok, well thanks anyway.
5488:Peter Du Cane (engineer)
4025:". (And if you want the
3588:a preferable alternative
3118:Category:Robotic animals
3112:Rollback on duck article
2951:14:12, 6 July 2017 (UTC)
2923:13:53, 6 July 2017 (UTC)
2904:13:51, 6 July 2017 (UTC)
2881:18:55, 5 July 2017 (UTC)
2857:13:49, 1 July 2017 (UTC)
2711:Category:AAR arrangement
2646:17:27, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2632:13:28, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2601:01:25, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2586:00:58, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2564:00:42, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2541:00:28, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2516:00:19, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2486:00:09, 8 June 2017 (UTC)
2444:14:02, 2 June 2017 (UTC)
2424:18:56, 31 May 2017 (UTC)
2401:18:48, 31 May 2017 (UTC)
2369:11:17, 30 May 2017 (UTC)
2354:10:59, 30 May 2017 (UTC)
2321:20:08, 24 May 2017 (UTC)
2302:15:02, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2269:13:22, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2239:20:25, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2225:20:20, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2210:20:07, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2171:19:43, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
2135:14:25, 19 May 2017 (UTC)
2095:08:30, 19 May 2017 (UTC)
2079:02:58, 19 May 2017 (UTC)
2020:08:29, 19 May 2017 (UTC)
1978:05:47, 18 May 2017 (UTC)
1906:21:56, 14 May 2017 (UTC)
1759:Category:Microprocessors
1732:Category:Microprocessors
1649:Talk:Warren Truss Bridge
1597:Talk:Warren Truss Bridge
1347:Bridge with the Midland
1216:Here's a treat for you!
1134:Sure, that makes sense.
743:, usually water-powered
236:". Could you present on
5268:. It doesn't matter if
5139:I was going to leave a
3632:physician, heal thyself
3285:International Harvester
3162:just makes this worse.
2959:Interesting development
2719:Category:Whyte notation
2703:Category:Whyte notation
2194:Category:Cereals in art
1883:01:50, 6 May 2017 (UTC)
1869:10:09, 4 May 2017 (UTC)
1847:19:08, 3 May 2017 (UTC)
1827:09:18, 3 May 2017 (UTC)
1812:02:20, 3 May 2017 (UTC)
1798:02:10, 3 May 2017 (UTC)
1783:16:10, 2 May 2017 (UTC)
1748:14:04, 2 May 2017 (UTC)
5689:Hiya. With respect to
5372:ANI Experiences survey
4203:Electric superchargers
4094:Roger. Done. Yours,
3697:Percy the Small Engine
3628:Catalan general strike
3414:Was your edit summary
1817:That's great, thanks.
1469:is my personal enemy.
885:You're welcome - it's
18:User talk:Andy Dingley
5721:is built where it is
5439:Arbitration Committee
5141:{{subst:DS/alert|at}}
4236:turbo-compound engine
4224:Superchargers take a
3667:World's Lamest Critic
2988:Please look again at
2909:No problem. But big,
2674:you made, please see
1610:list is tiny and the
1445:Stop Personal attacks
949:For what it's worth,
865:Blind cloth - thanks!
700:Category:Hammer mills
311:IMR Legendary Powders
5756:as "fine", 1/16" is
5681:Attribution of POV (
5403:Patrick Earley (WMF)
5381:can be found here:
5151:; see in particular
3534:Daisy wheel printing
1629:but two of aircraft.
1338:Midland Bridge, Bath
1296:Oh no, not again. --
1038:their take from 1938
5596:SNCF Class BB 13000
5570:transport solutions
4229:generator sets, or
4177:, rather than here.
3501:Martin of Sheffield
3469:Martin of Sheffield
2767:Talk:Ship transport
2008:firecracker welding
1572:Warren Truss Bridge
1392:Talk:Midland Bridge
792:Abinger Hammer Mill
759:or 'battery brass'.
333:Evaporator (marine)
284:. 28 November 2013.
5719:Kings Weston House
5683:Kings Weston House
5600:awesome Wikipedian
5455:arbitration policy
4115:tabloid journalism
2862:FV4401 Contentious
2693:Wheel arrangements
1298:Border of Phantasm
702:and, if so, why?--
225:Kingsgate Bridge
5856:strictly speaking
5733:and the (nearby)
5654:
5638:comment added by
4671:Ababeel (missile)
4175:Talk:Supercharger
3739:see talk: there.
3139:
2403:
2387:comment added by
2164:his response here
2113:Then please read
2081:
2065:comment added by
2003:
1990:comment added by
1963:
1950:comment added by
1245:
1244:
1200:A cookie for you!
1181:
1180:
1114:User:Andy Dingley
755:to produce sheet
282:The Happy Pontist
268:
252:comment added by
238:Kingsgate Bridge
221:
209:comment added by
5882:
5579:
5525:The Rambling Man
5496:The Rambling Man
5423:
5304:
5295:
5221:
5212:
5175:
5142:
5050:
5049:
4916:
4915:
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4888:
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4872:
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4805:
4800:
4779:
4778:
4774:
4600:Eaton Hodgkinson
4383:
4318:
4278:Mandatory notice
4219:scavenge blowers
4180:We work here by
4173:This belongs at
3856:
3855:
3797:seems to have a
3763:
3725:
3708:
3699:duplicated image
3645:
3643:
3601:
3599:
3453:Colliery viewers
3231:Roberttherambler
3186:isn't listed in
3130:
2969:Roberttherambler
2776:
2727:André Kritzinger
2572:Goggomobil used
2339:
2338:
2043:
2040:
1852:This belongs at
1647:This belongs at
1330:
1312:TFD Template:Adr
1302:Complaint Center
1287:
1272:
1271:
1211:
1204:
1203:
1163:
1156:
1155:
956:
844:
843:
285:
65:Vickers Vigilant
56:Velocity control
5890:
5889:
5885:
5884:
5883:
5881:
5880:
5879:
5839:User:Guliolopez
5781:WP:NOADJECTIVES
5687:
5624:
5605:
5604:
5584:Renaissance Wax
5580:
5565:
5545:
5491:
5484:
5483:
5424:
5416:
5374:
5355:
5336:
5316:
5297:
5291:
5214:
5208:
5204:
5173:
5140:
5137:
5110:
5079:Soundofmusicals
5074:
5047:
5044:
5021:Zabriskie Point
5017:
5015:Zabriskie Point
4952:(SAG-FW). See:
4944:
4913:
4909:
4908:
4903:
4899:
4898:
4886:
4882:
4881:
4870:
4865:
4803:
4798:
4776:
4772:
4771:
4770:But claiming 16
4745:
4674:
4628:, as it is not
4562:
4430:
4379:
4314:
4280:
4231:diesel-electric
4141:
4111:
3935:
3894:
3853:
3850:
3832:Just plain Bill
3803:Just plain Bill
3792:
3761:
3757:
3723:
3704:
3701:
3659:
3641:
3639:
3597:
3595:
3572:
3537:
3462:colliery viewer
3455:
3412:
3348:article. Best,
3342:
3287:
3262:
3223:
3182:I noticed that
3180:
3140:
3114:
2986:
2961:
2888:
2864:
2849:Maury Markowitz
2845:
2805:
2772:
2758:
2695:
2668:
2619:
2550:Universal_joint
2521:Universal joint
2458:Universal joint
2453:
2436:Maury Markowitz
2432:
2379:
2336:
2333:
2251:
2147:
2053:
2048:
2047:
2046:
2041:
2034:
1913:
1893:
1835:
1728:
1681:
1574:
1536:
1513:
1511:Criminal Behave
1487:is over there.
1447:
1428:
1340:
1328:
1314:
1285:
1269:
1266:
1202:
1154:
1110:Talk:Broadcloth
1063:Talk:Broadcloth
950:
867:
841:
816:
814:Hounding, again
696:
654:
632:
504:Please look at
483:
442:
388:Todayis03032017
380:
336:
307:
276:
227:
117:discussion. :)
114:
72:Maury Markowitz
58:
53:
22:
21:
20:
12:
11:
5:
5888:
5886:
5878:
5877:
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5874:
5873:
5872:
5871:
5777:
5765:
5750:
5686:
5679:
5678:
5677:
5663:
5662:to back it up.
5623:
5620:
5574:
5572:
5567:
5566:
5564:
5561:
5544:
5539:
5538:
5537:
5536:
5535:
5490:
5485:
5462:the candidates
5425:
5418:
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5415:
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5399:
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5388:
5373:
5370:
5354:
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5073:
5068:
5043:
5039:Discussion at
5037:
5016:
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5011:
5010:
5009:
4992:
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4939:
4938:
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4852:
4851:
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4849:
4848:
4847:
4846:
4845:
4768:
4744:
4743:16.67hz mains?
4741:
4740:
4739:
4721:
4707:
4699:
4673:
4668:
4667:
4666:
4665:
4664:
4663:
4662:
4633:
4630:WP:OVERLINKing
4622:
4595:
4561:
4560:edit reversion
4555:
4554:
4553:
4552:
4551:
4550:
4549:
4523:
4502:
4488:
4460:
4459:Factual error?
4429:
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4417:
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4398:User:SPECIFICO
4368:
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3889:
3888:
3849:
3848:ANI discussion
3846:
3845:
3844:
3843:
3842:
3795:112.198.242.68
3791:
3788:
3787:
3786:
3756:
3753:
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3751:
3700:
3694:
3693:
3692:
3663:Olympia Nelson
3658:
3653:
3652:
3651:
3650:
3649:
3636:the fast track
3571:
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3225:I've expanded
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2892:River Gaunless
2887:
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2762:ship transport
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2545:
2544:
2543:
2529:
2504:
2493:
2452:
2447:
2431:
2428:
2427:
2426:
2412:
2378:
2373:
2372:
2371:
2332:
2327:
2326:
2325:
2324:
2323:
2310:
2307:
2289:
2280:
2250:
2247:
2246:
2245:
2244:
2243:
2242:
2241:
2214:
2186:
2178:
2146:
2143:
2142:
2141:
2140:
2139:
2138:
2137:
2097:
2052:
2049:
2045:
2044:
2031:
2030:
2026:
2025:
2024:
2023:
2022:
1981:
1980:
1912:
1909:
1892:
1889:
1888:
1887:
1886:
1885:
1857:
1834:
1831:
1830:
1829:
1786:
1785:
1755:Signetics 2650
1727:
1724:
1723:
1722:
1707:
1680:
1677:
1676:
1675:
1657:
1653:
1652:
1644:
1643:
1642:
1641:
1603:
1600:
1573:
1570:
1569:
1568:
1535:
1532:
1512:
1509:
1508:
1507:
1446:
1443:
1427:
1424:
1423:
1422:
1421:
1420:
1339:
1336:
1313:
1310:
1309:
1308:
1265:
1262:
1261:
1260:
1243:
1242:
1212:
1201:
1198:
1197:
1196:
1179:
1178:
1164:
1153:
1150:
1149:
1148:
1147:
1146:
1129:
1128:
1105:
1104:
1103:
1102:
1101:
1100:
1099:
1098:
1097:
1096:
1095:
1094:
1093:
1092:
1058:
1023:
1022:
1021:
1020:
1019:
1018:
1017:
1016:
1015:
1014:
1013:
1012:
973:
940:
939:
938:
937:
936:
935:
866:
863:
862:
861:
815:
812:
811:
810:
809:
808:
760:
737:
722:
695:
692:
691:
690:
676:
653:
650:
631:
628:
613:
612:
593:
592:
591:
590:
589:
588:
587:
586:
574:interfering?--
538:
513:
482:
477:
476:
475:
441:
438:
437:
436:
418:
417:
379:
376:
375:
374:
335:
330:
306:
303:
302:
301:
300:
299:
286:
226:
223:
201:
200:
199:
198:
188:
187:
186:
185:
178:
177:
176:
175:
168:
167:
166:
165:
158:
157:
156:
155:
144:
143:
125:
120:/Sven Ekeberg
113:
110:
109:
108:
57:
54:
52:
51:
46:
41:
36:
31:
25:
23:
15:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
5887:
5870:
5866:
5862:
5857:
5852:
5848:
5844:
5840:
5836:
5835:
5834:
5830:
5826:
5822:
5818:
5817:
5816:
5812:
5808:
5804:
5800:
5799:
5798:
5794:
5790:
5786:
5782:
5778:
5775:
5771:
5766:
5763:
5762:opus spicatum
5759:
5755:
5751:
5748:
5744:
5740:
5739:Middlesbrough
5736:
5732:
5728:
5724:
5720:
5716:
5715:
5714:
5713:
5709:
5705:
5700:
5696:
5692:
5684:
5680:
5676:
5672:
5668:
5664:
5661:
5657:
5656:
5655:
5653:
5649:
5645:
5641:
5637:
5629:
5628:
5621:
5619:
5618:
5614:
5610:
5603:
5601:
5597:
5593:
5589:
5588:Mercury relay
5585:
5578:
5573:
5571:
5562:
5560:
5559:
5555:
5551:
5543:
5540:
5534:
5530:
5526:
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5521:
5520:
5516:
5512:
5508:
5507:
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5501:
5497:
5489:
5486:
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5481:
5477:
5473:
5469:
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5463:
5458:
5456:
5452:
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5440:
5435:
5432:
5431:
5422:
5413:
5411:
5410:
5407:
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5397:
5394:
5393:
5392:
5387:
5384:
5383:
5382:
5378:
5371:
5369:
5368:
5364:
5360:
5353:92.76.123.142
5352:
5350:
5349:
5345:
5341:
5340:198.58.171.47
5333:
5331:
5330:
5326:
5322:
5313:
5307:
5303:
5300:
5294:
5289:
5288:
5287:
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5279:
5275:
5271:
5267:
5263:
5259:
5255:
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5236:
5231:
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5225:
5224:
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5211:
5201:
5197:
5193:
5189:
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5181:
5180:
5179:
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5168:
5165:
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5146:
5134:
5132:
5131:
5127:
5123:
5119:
5115:
5107:
5103:
5099:
5095:
5091:
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5089:
5088:
5084:
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5072:
5069:
5067:
5066:
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5058:
5054:
5042:
5038:
5036:
5035:
5031:
5027:
5022:
5014:
5008:
5004:
5000:
4996:
4995:
4994:
4993:
4990:
4986:
4982:
4978:
4977:forge welding
4974:
4973:
4972:
4971:
4967:
4963:
4959:
4958:forge welding
4955:
4951:
4947:
4941:
4929:
4925:
4921:
4896:
4892:
4890:power? Where?
4879:
4878:
4877:
4874:
4873:
4868:
4860:
4859:
4858:
4857:
4856:
4855:
4854:
4853:
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4831:
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4821:
4817:
4812:
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4755:
4751:
4742:
4738:
4734:
4730:
4726:
4722:
4720:
4716:
4712:
4708:
4705:
4700:
4698:apply to all.
4697:
4693:
4690:
4689:
4688:
4687:
4683:
4679:
4678:110.93.236.75
4672:
4669:
4661:
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4653:
4649:
4648:
4647:
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4639:
4634:
4631:
4627:
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4456:
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4434:WP:BLPSOURCES
4427:
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3993:
3989:
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3815:
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3812:
3808:
3804:
3800:
3796:
3789:
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3777:
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3771:
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3754:
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3498:
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3436:
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3405:
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3397:
3393:
3389:
3388:
3387:
3386:
3382:
3378:
3374:
3371:
3369:
3365:
3362:Can you move
3360:
3359:
3355:
3351:
3347:
3339:
3333:
3329:
3325:
3321:
3320:
3319:
3315:
3311:
3306:
3305:
3304:
3303:
3299:
3295:
3292:
3284:
3282:
3281:
3277:
3273:
3272:KevinJGoddard
3269:
3267:
3259:
3255:
3251:
3247:
3243:
3242:
3241:
3240:
3236:
3232:
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3203:
3202:
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3189:
3185:
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3169:
3165:
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3157:
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3146:
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3133:
3127:
3123:
3119:
3111:
3107:
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3099:
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3084:
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3071:
3067:
3063:
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3061:
3060:
3059:
3058:
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3056:
3052:
3048:
3047:64.132.59.226
3043:
3039:
3031:
3027:
3023:
3018:
3015:
3014:
3013:
3012:
3008:
3004:
3003:64.132.59.226
2999:
2995:
2991:
2984:
2981:
2979:
2978:
2974:
2970:
2966:
2958:
2952:
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2708:
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2700:
2692:
2690:
2689:
2685:
2681:
2677:
2673:
2666:spamming sock
2665:
2663:
2662:
2658:
2654:
2648:
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2643:
2639:
2634:
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2629:
2625:
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2598:
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2347:
2346:Reaganomics88
2343:
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2328:
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2314:
2311:
2308:
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2299:
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2240:
2236:
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2228:
2227:
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2219:
2215:
2213:
2212:
2211:
2207:
2203:
2199:
2195:
2191:
2187:
2184:
2179:
2175:
2174:
2173:
2172:
2169:
2165:
2161:
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2153:
2144:
2136:
2132:
2128:
2124:
2120:
2116:
2112:
2111:
2110:
2109:
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2103:
2098:
2096:
2092:
2088:
2084:
2083:
2082:
2080:
2076:
2072:
2068:
2064:
2058:
2057:Web Developer
2051:Web Developer
2050:
2039:
2037:
2033:
2029:
2021:
2017:
2013:
2009:
2005:
2004:
2001:
1997:
1993:
1989:
1983:
1982:
1979:
1975:
1971:
1966:
1965:
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1961:
1957:
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1708:
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1701:
1700:
1699:
1698:
1694:
1690:
1686:
1679:Commons links
1678:
1674:
1670:
1666:
1662:
1661:truss bridges
1658:
1655:
1654:
1650:
1646:
1645:
1640:
1636:
1632:
1627:
1626:
1625:
1621:
1617:
1613:
1612:truss bridges
1609:
1604:
1601:
1598:
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1463:WP:SOCKPUPPET
1460:
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1199:
1195:
1191:
1187:
1183:
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1177:
1173:
1169:
1168:Yukari Yakumo
1165:
1162:
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251:
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234:Gear bearings
230:
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5850:
5807:Andy Dingley
5789:Andy Dingley
5784:
5773:
5769:
5757:
5753:
5746:
5722:
5688:
5667:Andy Dingley
5634:— Preceding
5630:
5625:
5609:Gerda Arendt
5606:
5581:
5569:
5568:
5550:76.90.112.41
5546:
5511:Andy Dingley
5492:
5465:
5459:
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5426:
5400:
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5375:
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5317:
5278:Andy Dingley
5273:
5269:
5265:
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5249:
5241:
5229:
5205:
5188:Andy Dingley
5159:
5144:
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5111:
5094:Andy Dingley
5075:
5045:
5018:
4981:Andy Dingley
4948:
4945:
4920:Andy Dingley
4894:
4863:
4829:
4816:Andy Dingley
4796:
4782:Andy Dingley
4764:
4746:
4729:Andy Dingley
4711:Andy Dingley
4703:
4675:
4652:Andy Dingley
4626:wrought iron
4618:
4614:
4604:wrought iron
4590:wrought iron
4587:
4571:
4563:
4539:Andy Dingley
4534:
4531:WP:DAILYMAIL
4526:
4464:Andy Dingley
4431:
4386:
4380:
4321:
4315:
4281:
4264:Andy Dingley
4255:
4250:
4242:
4225:
4206:
4189:
4157:
4153:
4149:
4142:
4137:Supercharger
4112:
4109:October 2017
4093:
4077:Andy Dingley
4047:
4043:
4031:Andy Dingley
4026:
4015:
4011:
3984:
3936:
3916:Andy Dingley
3901:Dlohcierekim
3895:
3878:Andy Dingley
3851:
3818:Andy Dingley
3793:
3776:Andy Dingley
3758:
3741:Andy Dingley
3702:
3682:Andy Dingley
3660:
3614:Andy Dingley
3609:
3573:
3556:Andy Dingley
3541:Stub Mandrel
3538:
3515:Andy Dingley
3487:Andy Dingley
3466:
3459:
3456:
3413:
3396:Andy Dingley
3375:
3372:
3361:
3346:Lewis Cozens
3343:
3340:Lewis Cozens
3310:Andy Dingley
3288:
3270:
3263:
3246:Andy Dingley
3224:
3207:Andy Dingley
3181:
3164:Andy Dingley
3155:
3148:
3115:
3098:Andy Dingley
3075:Andy Dingley
3069:
3041:
3037:
3034:
3022:Andy Dingley
2997:
2987:
2962:
2943:Andy Dingley
2935:
2915:Andy Dingley
2889:
2886:Really sorry
2865:
2846:
2829:Andy Dingley
2806:
2801:Tower bridge
2786:Andy Dingley
2773:
2765:
2759:
2742:Andy Dingley
2696:
2672:this comment
2669:
2649:
2635:
2620:
2578:Andy Dingley
2533:Andy Dingley
2525:
2508:Andy Dingley
2501:WP:EASTEREGG
2497:WP:NOTBROKEN
2474:
2462:
2454:
2433:
2416:Andy Dingley
2408:
2383:— Preceding
2380:
2376:Bolted joint
2361:Andy Dingley
2334:
2313:Prosecreator
2294:Andy Dingley
2284:
2276:
2261:Prosecreator
2259:
2255:
2253:Hello Andy,
2252:
2231:Andy Dingley
2202:Andy Dingley
2182:
2159:
2148:
2127:Andy Dingley
2087:Andy Dingley
2061:— Preceding
2054:
2042:Weman, p. 26
2027:
2012:Andy Dingley
1986:— Preceding
1970:Andy Dingley
1946:— Preceding
1943:
1940:
1933:
1926:
1923:
1920:
1917:
1914:
1894:
1861:Andy Dingley
1836:
1819:Andy Dingley
1801:
1787:
1775:Andy Dingley
1765:being under
1729:
1712:Andy Dingley
1682:
1665:Andy Dingley
1616:Andy Dingley
1578:Warren truss
1575:
1558:Andy Dingley
1537:
1517:Andy Dingley
1514:
1497:Andy Dingley
1467:Andy Dingley
1451:Andy Dingley
1448:
1429:
1396:Andy Dingley
1371:
1367:
1362:
1358:
1353:
1348:
1344:
1341:
1322:
1315:
1283:
1279:Andy Dingley
1267:
1250:Andy Dingley
1231:Lionsdude148
1223:Lionsdude148
1221:
1218:
1215:
1186:Andy Dingley
1136:Andy Dingley
1008:
925:Andy Dingley
892:Andy Dingley
886:
868:
817:
791:
776:Andy Dingley
768:hammer mills
748:
745:trip hammers
697:
694:Hammer mills
680:Andy Dingley
675:, I presume.
671:Location? -
655:
633:
614:
602:Andy Dingley
561:Andy Dingley
556:
522:Andy Dingley
484:
465:Andy Dingley
443:
426:Andy Dingley
407:Andy Dingley
403:World War II
381:
364:Andy Dingley
360:strengthened
359:
340:
337:
308:
289:Andy Dingley
281:
248:— Preceding
245:
231:
228:
205:— Preceding
202:
194:
151:
133:Andy Dingley
128:
119:
115:
98:Andy Dingley
86:
69:
62:
59:
33:
5758:exceptional
5747:picturesque
5743:spectacular
5731:picturesque
5691:this change
5640:Old Ukraine
5467:voting page
5334:Rhadow AFDs
5160:SMcCandlish
4638:Wikiuser100
4615:bad writing
4608:WP:OVERLINK
4574:Wikiuser100
4567:Emery cloth
4096:Wikiuser100
4051:Wikiuser100
3963:Wikiuser100
3947:Wikiuser100
3931:Emery cloth
3706:this revert
3324:Sammy D III
3294:Sammy D III
2963:Please see
2929:SamRathbone
2896:RullRatbwan
2653:Boaz.tsaban
2638:Boaz.tsaban
2624:Boaz.tsaban
2574:swing axles
2470:Drive_shaft
1702:Thanks for
1631:TheLongTone
1582:TheLongTone
1521:Macrolancer
1471:Macrolancer
1459:Macrolancer
1455:Macrolancer
1043:broadcloth.
772:hammer mill
764:stamp mills
753:brass mills
726:hammer mill
719:hammer mill
673:Talk:Quartz
630:GAR process
315:my proposal
229:Dear Andy,
5861:Rjccumbria
5825:Guliolopez
5704:Guliolopez
5451:topic bans
5314:Renault FT
4765:sourceable
4558:Box girder
3997:glasspaper
3945:. Yours,
3933:page edits
3762:TREKphiler
3719:WP:NFCCP#8
3715:WP:NFCCP#3
3156:biomorphic
2466:Goggomobil
2389:Fonebone83
2222:Iridescent
2168:Iridescent
2028:References
1898:Rjccumbria
1854:Talk:Crank
1394:just now?
887:impossible
798:Bermicourt
730:stamp mill
704:Bermicourt
421:Raised at
319:Thewellman
127:A Z80 has
5727:spectacle
5447:site bans
5321:Weslam123
5254:tolerated
5245:properly.
5202:Signature
5149:WP:ARBATC
4946:Hi Andy,
4880:Their 16
4723:Also see
4402:User:John
4381:SPECIFICO
4316:SPECIFICO
4190:source it
4027:extensive
4023:sandpaper
3863:Railfan23
3467:Regards,
3457:Hi Andy,
3350:Railfan23
3126:WP:SUBCAT
3093:Moved to
2994:Gray code
2983:Gray code
2843:Excalibur
2774:AjaxSmack
2616:Carpentry
2464:section (
2430:Excalibur
2006:BTW, see
1771:WP:SUBCAT
1685:this edit
639:Cblambert
440:Project E
34:Archive 5
5735:Wye Tour
5660:sourcing
5648:contribs
5636:unsigned
5622:The PIAT
5563:Precious
5542:Ironsand
5114:WP:NFCCP
5071:Le Rhône
4835:Sbalfour
4767:instead?
4750:Sbalfour
4602:. Also
4592:plates."
4506:WP:POINT
4438:WP:POINT
4211:Crossley
3990:Mostly,
3755:Shrapnel
3630:... But
3608:So what
3392:WP:RM/TR
3377:Tony May
3373:Thanks.
3366:back to
3065:example.
2998:doubling
2939:contribs
2873:BP OMowe
2784:Thanks,
2593:Glenebob
2556:Glenebob
2478:Glenebob
2397:contribs
2385:unsigned
2075:contribs
2063:unsigned
2000:contribs
1988:unsigned
1960:contribs
1948:unsigned
1941:Thanks!
1689:Ipoellet
1543:Ghmyrtle
1539:Sporange
1534:Blorenge
1319:this fix
1219:Thanks!
1082:Anmccaff
1048:Anmccaff
991:Anmccaff
977:Anmccaff
963:Anmccaff
658:Sisima70
598:Factor-h
450:Hawkeye7
378:Good Sir
262:contribs
250:unsigned
207:unsigned
5770:popular
5723:because
4999:Zaereth
4962:Zaereth
4428:Request
4406:MPS1992
4353:MPS1992
4300:MPS1992
4197:WP:LEAD
4160:kimdino
3892:OICU812
3703:Hi, re
3638:to ANI
3192:Stefan2
3132:ZXCVBNM
3042:doubles
2992:to the
2990:my edit
2810:Kautuk1
2803:Gallery
2407:If you
2288:solder.
2277:potable
2123:WP:SPAM
2102:Webtrex
2067:Webtrex
1992:Waynems
1952:Waynems
1911:Welding
1875:Unibond
1839:Unibond
1736:NS320xx
1726:NS320xx
1493:WP:SPIs
1372:Railway
1359:Railway
1354:Railway
1349:Railway
734:smelter
617:ToaneeM
576:ToaneeM
543:ToaneeM
491:ToaneeM
341:primary
5851:merely
5749:to it.
5359:ferret
5264:wants
5235:WP:CIR
5230:become
5174:ⱷ<
5135:ARBATC
5122:Majora
5057:Zazpot
5026:Vsmith
4942:SAG-FW
4895:ad hoc
4830:barely
4251:better
4119:WP:BLP
4070:Hermes
4003:cloth.
3985:either
3799:WP:CIR
3726:rose64
3610:useful
3592:boldly
3578:, yet
3149:during
3124:. Per
2825:WP:3RR
2680:Jytdog
2670:about
2285:rarely
2279:water.
2196:&
2119:WP:COI
1915:Andy,
1485:WP:ANI
1432:Cabayi
1426:Thanks
1410:Johnlp
1377:Johnlp
1264:Notice
1118:Mabalu
1067:Mabalu
1009:cotton
995:Mabalu
989:Hello
953:Mabalu
911:Mabalu
907:poplin
872:Mabalu
851:Jytdog
827:Jytdog
555:Dude,
345:DMacks
152:direct
5805:too.
5293:-- WV
5272:want
5250:right
5210:-- WV
5169:: -->
4725:WP:EW
4692:WP:RS
4182:WP:RS
4016:paper
4012:emery
3992:emery
3410:Query
2723:0-4-2
2526:shaft
2115:WP:EL
1833:Crank
1804:Dgpop
1790:Dgpop
1740:Dgpop
1608:truss
1495:are.
1453:This
1281:.
757:brass
749:after
506:WP:RS
16:<
5865:talk
5845:'s
5843:West
5829:talk
5811:talk
5803:this
5801:See
5793:talk
5754:1/4"
5708:talk
5671:talk
5644:talk
5613:talk
5594:and
5554:talk
5529:talk
5515:talk
5500:talk
5476:talk
5437:The
5406:talk
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5344:talk
5325:talk
5282:talk
5242:tiny
5192:talk
5126:talk
5098:talk
5083:talk
5061:talk
5030:talk
5003:talk
4985:talk
4966:talk
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4754:talk
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4696:WP:V
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4682:talk
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4642:talk
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4496:talk
4492:John
4482:talk
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4468:talk
4450:talk
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4442:here
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4357:talk
4322:talk
4304:talk
4289:talk
4285:John
4268:talk
4256:once
4243:rare
4186:WP:V
4184:and
4164:talk
4143:re:
4139:edit
4127:talk
4123:John
4121:. --
4100:talk
4081:talk
4055:talk
4035:talk
3967:talk
3951:talk
3920:talk
3905:talk
3882:talk
3867:talk
3836:talk
3822:talk
3807:talk
3780:talk
3745:talk
3730:talk
3728:🌹 (
3717:and
3686:talk
3671:talk
3642:czar
3618:talk
3598:czar
3560:talk
3545:talk
3519:talk
3505:talk
3491:talk
3473:talk
3443:talk
3439:John
3435:here
3433:And
3424:talk
3420:John
3416:here
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3381:talk
3354:talk
3328:talk
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3298:talk
3276:talk
3250:talk
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3211:talk
3196:talk
3168:talk
3136:TALK
3102:talk
3079:talk
3051:talk
3026:talk
3007:talk
2973:talk
2947:talk
2933:talk
2927:But
2919:talk
2911:BOLD
2900:talk
2877:talk
2853:talk
2833:talk
2814:talk
2790:talk
2746:talk
2731:talk
2713:and
2684:talk
2676:here
2657:talk
2642:talk
2628:talk
2597:talk
2582:talk
2560:talk
2537:talk
2512:talk
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2468:and
2440:talk
2420:talk
2409:read
2393:talk
2365:talk
2350:talk
2317:talk
2298:talk
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2235:talk
2206:talk
2131:talk
2121:and
2106:talk
2091:talk
2071:talk
2016:talk
1996:talk
1974:talk
1956:talk
1936:flux
1929:flux
1902:talk
1879:talk
1865:talk
1843:talk
1823:talk
1808:talk
1794:talk
1779:talk
1763:8080
1744:talk
1716:talk
1704:this
1693:talk
1683:Re:
1669:talk
1635:talk
1620:talk
1595:See
1586:talk
1562:talk
1547:talk
1541:.
1525:talk
1501:talk
1475:talk
1436:talk
1414:talk
1400:talk
1381:talk
1368:road
1363:road
1345:road
1284:Neil
1254:talk
1235:talk
1227:talk
1190:talk
1172:talk
1140:talk
1122:talk
1086:talk
1071:talk
1052:talk
999:talk
981:talk
967:talk
929:talk
915:talk
896:talk
876:talk
855:talk
831:talk
823:this
821:and
819:this
802:talk
780:talk
766:not
708:talk
684:talk
662:talk
643:talk
621:talk
606:talk
580:talk
565:talk
547:talk
526:talk
518:baud
510:WP:V
508:and
495:talk
487:ZX81
480:ZX81
469:talk
454:talk
430:talk
411:talk
392:talk
384:diff
368:talk
349:talk
323:talk
293:talk
258:talk
215:talk
195:that
137:talk
102:talk
91:ISBN
76:talk
63:The
5785:not
5783:do
5774:our
5270:you
5266:you
5055:.
4871:Eng
4804:Eng
4535:you
4527:one
4226:lot
4207:one
3724:Red
3370:?
3268:.
3178:SPI
3070:use
3038:one
2330:ANI
2160:are
2145:FYI
1515:Hi
1449:Hi
1329:nkB
1324:Fra
728:or
557:I'm
129:one
5867:)
5831:)
5813:)
5795:)
5710:)
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5650:)
5646:•
5615:)
5602:!
5590:,
5586:,
5556:)
5531:)
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5502:)
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5470:.
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5365:)
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5296:●
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5213:●
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5170:ⱷ҅
5157:—
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3673:)
3620:)
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3507:)
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3081:)
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