Jump to content

JohnfromUK

Members
  • Posts

    9,843
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by JohnfromUK

  1. 2 minutes ago, stockybasher said:

    So these 2 brothers have got 3+ and 5 years inside, as of this January.  But some of the piccies on Newbie's link above show more than 2 people were involved, but the whole scenario seems very similar to the stuff left outside the shop. 

    Very weird and worrying people involved !! 

    I tthink here is a very good chance that the police know exactly who they are.  Proving it to get a conviction is a different matter.

  2. 21 minutes ago, Wymondley said:

    Well I'd define "poaching" as taking something either for the pot or to sell without the landowners permission

    I'd broadly agree with that.

    There is a betting element in using dogs to bring down wildlife, along with badger baiting/fighting and other illegal wildlife based activites.  Big money.  Certainly deer species are hunted (obviously illegally) with dogs.  The one I don't understand is the presence of the Birds of Prey.  I can see how it can get confused with poaching.  Accurate journalism is unknown these days and any 'key words' such as 'poaching', 'shot', 'guns' are worked in to sensationalise.  Other 'key words' that may lead to accusations of discrimination against (human) minorities are carefully screened out of articles.

  3. 24 minutes ago, 12gauge82 said:

    The article I read, some locals who were interviewed, one of which was a game keeper, hinted very strongly at it being a member of a certain community that are often involved in hare coursing, dumping rubbish, trespass ect. He reckoned it was basically a two finger salute at the law.

    To be fair, I don't think the shooting community is going to be blamed for this one.

    Defiantly their 'style', and the article I read hinted that is the 'official thinking'.  If it is the case, nothing is likely to be done and it will quietly disappear from the news.

  4. I have a Defender 90.  Bought it when it was 3 years old - and it's now 30 years old and still with me.  Not been welded yet, but getting near on the rear cross member.  200tdi engine and LT77 gearbox both fine despite engine output raised by Allards (bigger intercooler and boost pressure) and running on LWB sized 7.50 tyres (gives higher gearing).  Anything marked Lucas is risky (had a new starter, and various other electricals).  Never let me down yet in 27 years and 100K miles.  Comfortable enough if you are the right size, very uncomfortable for the tall or large.  Some built in features - leaks water in, head linings sag, lights (standard) hopelessly bad by modern standards, wipers poor, heater poor.  Appreciating in value, and still up with the best off road.

    Biggest problem these days is stopping it getting stolen.

  5. 7 hours ago, theshootist said:

    I've recently bought a new boxlock,  Churchill Utility XXV 1934 patent assisted opener. It has a long stock and good wall thickness. It's 2.5" and I'll keep my cartridges to 1oz.

    So my cased Webley 700 (26" with Churchill Rib) is going into auction. I bought it probably 13/14 years ago from an advert on here and it's served me well.  Sad to see it go but I wouldn't use it over the Churchill. I enjoy carrying and shooting these short barreled guns, they make instinctive shooting easier and I find pushing my left hand further down the barrels keeps them from moving too fast.

    Polish_20240315_220743315.jpg

    IMG-20240314-WA0005.jpg

    Both have lovely wood on them.

  6. 5 minutes ago, 8 shot said:

    TD5 2006 model 

    Thanks.  I do use a 'Disklok' on my 1993 Defender.  When I bought it in 1995 it was a 'stolen recovery'!  Not really sure the Disklok helps and it is a bit 'tedious' to use, but I see it as a deterrent.

  7. 7 hours ago, 8 shot said:

    Nearly a 100% increase on the Defender on Tuesday.....did the Go Compare thing £40 cheaper with breakdown cover added than last year:yahoo:

    Out of interest, is this the 'old' or 'new' Defender?

    I know both are attractive targets for theft.

  8. On 12/03/2024 at 18:09, chrisjpainter said:

    Be warned... there are two Collins guides out there! There's one with photographs, which is the above one made in conjunction with the BTO, and there's one with detailed prints/sketches (below). The vast majority of birders, myself included, go for the latter. It has more detailed images across different ages and both sexes. The maps are easier to read too. I have the BTO Collins one and it's good, but its wheel of sightings probability is rather elaborate and the population maps are not easy to get to grips with quickly. In a way they're more accurate, because they're based on specific data rather than a generalised assessment, but the maps aren't user friendly. Where it EXCELS is the bit that no one bothers to read (save the geeks like me!). The beginning is stuffed full of really useful tips and tricks on how to birdwatch, not just what you're looking at. It teaches you far more about fieldcraft, but is somewhat let down as a field guide. The app @yatesmight be referring to is the same as the below one. Again I have it and it's very good indeed. Hope that helps! 

    image.png.dd615e09f742b52b1bf963d35904c9b5.png

    Collins Bird Guide: Amazon.co.uk: Svensson, Lars, Mullarney, Killian, Zetterström, Dan: 9780008547462: Books

    I have (an earlier edition of) the one you pictured.  It is a very good and comprehensive book - but I do find it a little 'overkill' in that there are a LOT of birds not seen in the UK.  My copy (around 20 years old) has been invaluable, but I too now use a phone App.

    DE7E2F8F-968E-46A3-9320-96F2ACCA4D0B_1_201_a.jpeg

  9. Just now, Penelope said:

    Fulani is a tribe and would not be used as a 'surname'

    It is - and she may have chosen it for reasons that the 'Fula' are a 'tribe' who have an Islamic background and are almost exclusively Muslim.  That may be important to her 'networking'.

  10. 9 hours ago, redial said:

    Ka-Ching.

    Reminds me of the Lady-in-Waiting who got the heave-ho at the palace for asking a black woman where she was from.

    The UK has gone mad.

    In fact the good lady, Lady Susan Hussey, has been quietly (but quite rightly in my view) reinstated as part of the Royal's team.

    1 hour ago, Zoli 12 guage said:

    a black woman with an African name she'd plucked out of the air (as she was born with a normal English sounding name)

    She was using the name Ngosi Fulani - but she was originally christened Marlene Headley.   The names she uses now are of West African tribal origin apparently.

  11. When talking about the Spanish guns, one has to bear in mind that 'quality' need to be more than skin deep.  For two examples, in my view (and these are my own views) -

    1. An AyA Yeoman, though 'basic, no frills', is actually made from decent materials, and whilst not highly finished, is well put together.  Popular guns and deservedly so.
    2. A 'highly spec'd' sidelock, Spanish made and proofed, but bearing an "English" sounding name - heavily advertised and promoted in the UK some years ago (and very 'cheap' for what they purported to be).  It has all the 'features', but the wood is poor, the wood to metal fit is poor, the engraving is profuse, but crudely executed, internals are crude and badly finished and (apparently) the metal material is 'soft'.  I knew someone who owned one and it was forever in trouble with broken springs, 'mushroomed' and bent metal parts.  Fortunately I don't think they are trading now, but there are some about and some of their models were better than others (came from several different Spanish sources I believe).

    As has been mentioned earlier, care is needed because the same 'name' can be different workshops and they are not all as well made as might be assumed.

  12. My house has heat recovery fans for the bathrooms fitted above the bathrooms in the loft space.  One of these makes a low hum which very strangely is louder and more noticeable in the ground floor room below the bathroom but not nearly as much in the bathroom itself which is directly underneath the ventilation unit and has air ducts to it.  I can only assume some resonance in the house structure causes this.  It's not a problem as the fan only runs when the bathroom lights are used and for a few minutes afterwards.

  13. 16 minutes ago, Wymondley said:

    Absolutely, I want the old Conservative party back with old Conservative values, what I suspect we'll get is a more gradual slide to the left to appeal to Labour voters.

    Perhaps that's just the way of it, old Conservative values are for the old, and we're getting thinner on the ground now.

    To get a Party of 'your views' in power as a Government, you need a near full set of candidates for General Election, - probably around 650 of them - funded and 'organised' by a 'party' structure to give consistency, organisation etc.

    That party needs to win in around 315+ constituencies under our system (first past the post).  To get a win, you need to have policies that will cause probably an average of 15,000 to 20,000 votes for your candidate.  So broadly and approximately - you need to attract around 10-12 million people to vote for you.

    There will be a significant portion of voters who will always vote for the same 'left' or 'right' party.  Always have, always will.  Its the people who are in the middle (called 'swing voters') who actually choose the winning candidate - hence it is to them your party must appeal.

    Parties that are too far away from the central ground simply won't attract the votes of the swing voters.  It is a fine line to tread to satisfy both the swing voters (who are essential for a win) AND those on the left or right - and in general, those 'away from the centre (either way)' are more likely to be solid reliable voters (for whichever side), simply because they have had nowhere else to go.  

    Hence the reason Sunak and Starmer both have to play for the middle ground.  It's those pesky 'swing voters' that they both have to attract.

  14. 3 hours ago, Lloyd90 said:

    A man of real principles, starting in Labour, moving to the Cons and now over to Reform. 

    He is perfectly entitled to change his mind (or jump ship onto the next one) - as he clearly has done twice now.  He will likely move again if he things it will benefit him.  I vote for a person whose views agree with my own and he/she is prepared to represent those views in Parliament. 

    I wouldn't vote for someone who just changes with the way the wind is blowing today.

  15. 6 minutes ago, Lloyd90 said:


    They also haven’t put up with 20 years of pay stagnation. 
     

    When we toured the US last year we were impressed with many of the states pay for various undervalued jobs here. 
     

     

    America is much more focussed on rewarding success than we are ........... but it's not a good place to be 'unsuccessful'.

  16. 30 minutes ago, Lloyd90 said:


    Seriously have to question just how much you were able to make across those 4 years to be able to buy a farm, a beach house, a city estate as well as multiple other investments all debt / mortgage free. 
     

    What line of work was that in? 
     

    I can’t see many industries in the UK supporting that level of success, and that’s without accounting for losing a huge amount to taxes. 
     

    I’d wager your taxes were a lot lower.

    Some of the states my wife and I visited they were around 6%. 

    In the UK, both property and farmland are extortionately expensive.  Property due to short supply.  Farmland (at least in part) due to it being an escape route available to very wealthy people who can tie up money in unproductive assets for the UK's very high (and much hated) inheritance tax.

    America is a rich country and those who find a niche for their skills/product/service and are prepared to put in the work can do very well and are not penalised by a taxation system like ours which preys on success and stifles enterprise.

  17. 2 minutes ago, London Best said:

    Please, what is a ‘canbus’ part?

    To those who know more than me (which will be many) please feel free to correct!

    CANbus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAN_bus) is a system which 'connects' all of the "separate electrical sub-assemblies" of an electrical/electronic nature into a 'Controller Area Network'.

    It enables all "separate electrical sub-assemblies" to be CANbus connected and so controlled and monitored centrally.  Such things as reporting bulb failures in the case of light units.

    Unfortunately (in my very limited personal experience of my recently departed BMW), most fault reports are incorrect (I had many tens of 'bulb failure reports' but only one actual failed bulb).  Even more unfortunately, error reports and even false error reports are an MoT FAIL.  To be fair - the BMW worked well for it's first 14 years or so before the system began to get senile.

    Faults can be read on a 'fault code reader' on an OBD port which allows all of the fault data collected by the CANbus to be collected by the garage to allow the bill to be suitably inflated.

    My personal experience is that when it works, it works very well, but when it starts playing up it is way beyond what garage mechanics/technicians can cope with and can prove hugely expensive to sort out. 

  18. 1 minute ago, London Best said:

    I’ve just had a ‘minor’ light failure on my 2009 Defender. 
    Fixed it with a bit of wire and a self-tapping screw.

    Yes, regular thing on my 1993 Defender.  Lucas tail light fittings, especially the stop/tail light one side and the reverse light.  Usually just a clean up of the contacts.  Where Lucas used to get such bad metal from is a mystery .........

    This was a friends Discovery 5 - where the whole large light assembly - which is around the size of a biscuit tin - I assume his price is dealer inc fitting as the part ('genuine' part from an indie on the internet) is £293.47 plus VAT plus freight.  It has a circuit board and various sundry 'canbus' electronics which may (or may not) do something more valid that push the price up - though I can't imagine what that would be. 

    But it is the cost of items like that - easily damaged in car parks - that push up the insurance - because IF you are paying that sort of price for simple parts, suddenly an insurance claim becomes a possibility rather than just fixing it yourself.

  19. 2 minutes ago, Sweet11-87 said:

    inflation on parts, more cars on the road since lockdown, more complex cars are common place e.g EVs, hybrids and all cars have thousands of sensors and as others have said write off with little bumps and knocks.

    /\. This. I was speaking to someone the other day who had had a 'minor' light failure on his car; not accident damage, but just a tail light not working (intermittently flickering).  The whole assembly had to be replaced because the fault was with the 'canbus' parts.  £600 and weeks wait for the part.  Fortunately he was still under warranty, but the days of replacing a tail light lens/cover assembly damaged in a parking mishap for a few £ are gone now with these complex 'canbus' lighting systems apparently.

  20. It has always been the case that for some people doing 'financial transactions', a degree of record keeping and understanding of the rules is needed to ensure that you remain on the right side of the law.

    Just as when driving, where you need to understand the 'rules of the road' and have in place suitable licenses, permissions, insurance as applicable to what you are doing - when buying and selling you also need to understand the 'rules'.

    The tax system has been so much 'fiddled', and 'avoided', by so many that HMRC are trying to up their game in making sure those who should pay .... do pay.  The fallout from this is that those who are genuinely not liable for tax may have to keep sufficient records to be able to demonstrate that. 

    When I ran a shoot business some years ago, we registered as a business, registered for VAT, had proper accounts prepared and it was "a business".  Depending on how good your own book keeping was, the accountants will need a few hours to translate your books into the correct 'formal accounts' as needed.

    Some shoots that used various 'dodgy techniques' and operated as a 'non business' to avoid tax and VAT etc. got into trouble, because when investigated it clearly was a business.

    Everyone needs to understand the rules.  If you don't need to pay tax on your activities, but you are doing a level of selling that might be around of above the figures given above, it would be a good plan to be able to explain that and have suitable 'records' to show that.  IF you had to employ an accountant, it would certainly be 'a few hours', and I guess most will charge around £100 - 150 an hour.

  21. Family (my father) had a 4x4 from around 1960 to circa 1985.  Series 1 petrol, two Series 2A diesels, Range Rover Classic 4 door (dreadfully unreliable and thirsty), and a short spell with a Daihatsu 4 Track (surprisingly good off road and 100% reliable, but horribly uncomfortable).

    I personally have had a 1952 Series 1 (bought 1980 ish), a G-wagen 280 GEL (desperately thirsty, poor on road, good off road), BMW X5 (very good on road, very comfortable, poor off road) and my current Defender 90, bought 1995 and still owned.  The Defender has very recently been joined by a Land Cruiser which has replaced my 17 year old BMW 3 series touring.

×
×
  • Create New...