Mike, 

  You are quite correct ... it's-snot funny ... 

  Neil 


Mike Morris wrote:
> 
> >At 12:15 PM 1/7/04 -0500, you wrote:
> > >(The small hotel soaps work especially well. Don't us your wife's 
> > >good dove!!!!) This process has worked well for me. Any other 
> > >suggestions?
> > >
> > >Scott
> >
> >Thanks for the Tip Scott  and we won't tell your wife where You got 
> >the Hotel soap 
> >
> >Don KA9QJG
> 
> Some soaps harden after a while - and some doesn't.
> 
> I know that Ivory bar soap dries but doesn't turn to glue the
> way that liquid dish soap does.  In my late fathers toolbox
> there is still a half-bar of Ivory that he used to use for
> lubricating wood screws before he'd twist them in... he'd just
> drag the threads across the soap, stick them in the predrilled
> hole and twist...  That bar of soap was new sometime in the
> 1940s and there's still half left.
> 
> As far as lubricating coil slugs I've used a drop of Scotch
> Scotch "Yellow-77" wire pulling compound - which you can get
> at your local electrical distributor - sometimes referred to with
> other names (one of the more polite ones is "Gorilla Snot").
> It dries to a very slick talcum-powder-like residue - something
> that does not jam a slug at all..
> 
> Mike WA6ILQ
> 
> At 04:46 PM 1/7/04 -0600, you wrote:
> 
>



 

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