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#22
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
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Brock wrote: wrote: Brock wrote: Ed, you might take Brock's advise and experiment with other boards where behaviour like that of this tawdry team is prohibited. Brock spends considerable time being denied access to his favourite board for his inability to behave civily. You are lying, again, Dennis. Found those quotes yet . . . Are you still screwing up your students by telling them to fire Spectrum and Bullseye at the same schedules? Seeing as I have HUNDREDS of testimonials from students, and you seem to have none, who is screwing who . . . What I said was that the firing schedules for Bullseye and Spectrum are so close as to make no difference. The schedule you posted was in direct conflict with info posted on Spectrum's website I also advise my students to LOOK in the kiln to see if the project is done properly. The entire concept of heat work seems to have totally eluded you. But then, no wonder, if, like you, and your "artisans" all I aspired to do was slump single squares of Spectrum Baroque into simple molds, I probably would not understand heat work either. You are a pathetic fraud. Listen, you lying toad, just post the quotes you cited. Or, admit you made it up. Again! Your students must be enormously reassured to hear that with all your extensive experience you think Spectrum and Bullseye will respond at the same temperatures. They must be even more reassured to hear you tell them to not rely on their digital controller but instead keep checking every firing visually. Here is a very simple challenge for you Dennis. Post the quote of mine you cited, where I said I have never used Spectrum. You have posted on the internet that I have said that. So, prove it! Again, Dennis, you incredible moron, there are far more things to do in a kiln than slump single sheets of Spectrum Baroque. Many processes have to be observed, and stopped at a precise time. Waiting for your posting of those quotes. Or, better, your silence. Brock |
#23
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
Brock wrote: wrote: Brock wrote: wrote: Brock wrote: Ed, you might take Brock's advise and experiment with other boards where behaviour like that of this tawdry team is prohibited. Brock spends considerable time being denied access to his favourite board for his inability to behave civily. You are lying, again, Dennis. Found those quotes yet . . . Are you still screwing up your students by telling them to fire Spectrum and Bullseye at the same schedules? Seeing as I have HUNDREDS of testimonials from students, and you seem to have none, who is screwing who . . . What I said was that the firing schedules for Bullseye and Spectrum are so close as to make no difference. The schedule you posted was in direct conflict with info posted on Spectrum's website I also advise my students to LOOK in the kiln to see if the project is done properly. The entire concept of heat work seems to have totally eluded you. But then, no wonder, if, like you, and your "artisans" all I aspired to do was slump single squares of Spectrum Baroque into simple molds, I probably would not understand heat work either. You are a pathetic fraud. Listen, you lying toad, just post the quotes you cited. Or, admit you made it up. Again! Your students must be enormously reassured to hear that with all your extensive experience you think Spectrum and Bullseye will respond at the same temperatures. They must be even more reassured to hear you tell them to not rely on their digital controller but instead keep checking every firing visually. Here is a very simple challenge for you Dennis. Post the quote of mine you cited, where I said I have never used Spectrum. You have posted on the internet that I have said that. So, prove it! Again, Dennis, you incredible moron, there are far more things to do in a kiln than slump single sheets of Spectrum Baroque. Many processes have to be observed, and stopped at a precise time. Waiting for your posting of those quotes. Or, better, your silence. Brock |
#24
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
Brock wrote: wrote: Brock wrote: wrote: Brock wrote: Ed, you might take Brock's advise and experiment with other boards where behaviour like that of this tawdry team is prohibited. Brock spends considerable time being denied access to his favourite board for his inability to behave civily. You are lying, again, Dennis. Found those quotes yet . . . Are you still screwing up your students by telling them to fire Spectrum and Bullseye at the same schedules? Seeing as I have HUNDREDS of testimonials from students, and you seem to have none, who is screwing who . . . What I said was that the firing schedules for Bullseye and Spectrum are so close as to make no difference. The schedule you posted was in direct conflict with info posted on Spectrum's website I also advise my students to LOOK in the kiln to see if the project is done properly. The entire concept of heat work seems to have totally eluded you. But then, no wonder, if, like you, and your "artisans" all I aspired to do was slump single squares of Spectrum Baroque into simple molds, I probably would not understand heat work either. You are a pathetic fraud. Listen, you lying toad, just post the quotes you cited. Or, admit you made it up. Again! Your students must be enormously reassured to hear that with all your extensive experience you think Spectrum and Bullseye will respond at the same temperatures. They must be even more reassured to hear you tell them to not rely on their digital controller but instead keep checking every firing visually. Here is a very simple challenge for you Dennis. Post the quote of mine you cited, where I said I have never used Spectrum. You have posted on the internet that I have said that. So, prove it! Again, Dennis, you incredible moron, there are far more things to do in a kiln than slump single sheets of Spectrum Baroque. Many processes have to be observed, and stopped at a precise time. Waiting for your posting of those quotes. Or, better, your silence. Brock I have no more concern about this demand than any others you've made. |
#25
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
Bobbin', weavin', bobbin', weavin' . . . you have ZERO credibility
Dennis. Thanks for proving it . . . Brock |
#26
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
"Brock" wrote in message oups.com... wrote: glassman wrote: wrote in message ps.com... Buying from a message board chatroom post? Not exactly the three tier system. Dennis has this need to denegrate, insult, threaten, and turn off just about everyone he can. Why is the question? Why try to protect the antique 3 tier system? The internet has already buried it. Adapt or die! OK Dennis I'm being perfectly civil here. In all seriousness, how is your teaching method any different than what I've been teaching for over 20 years? I've taught thousands. Part of my lecture talks about selling work to make money, but very very few actually make it. I know because they have become friendly competitors of mine. I'm sure like a surgeon, you keep records of the success and failure of your students. How many basement bandits have you taught, and how many of these self styled students of yours are making a living at doing glass and how about with your kiln formed glasswork you rave about? How much do you charge? I'm not being cynical, only trying to understand what you're doing, and why it's different than what the rest of us do? -- JK Sinrod www.SinrodStudios.com www.MyConeyIslandMemories.com What percentage? I've no idea, but over the 30 years I've been teaching Business Administration and Entrepreneurial Management, I've helped several hundred individuals create successful enterprises. What do I charge? University class fees vary as set by the university. My personal fees vary for different lengths of class and whether the classes are "brick and mortar" or internet online. In many cases, I supply free "mentoring". There are some 50 artisans that regularly contact me for advice and assistance. What's different than what the rest of you do? I teach artisans that they should make every effort to innovate - to ignore how others do business and create their own business style. What's got you and your compadres here ****ed off is my persistent suggestion that artisans shouldn't be dealing with retail shops. I suggest that anyone that buys supplies to be made into a product for resale should be buying at the same place and price as the retailer. Many here, are worried about competition from low overhead "basement bandits", I teach individuals to start their business with the lowest possible overhead and to use that cost advantage to create a market for their work. Starting off with low prices is always a workable way for any business to get started. An established business relies on their reputation to generate business. A newcomer has no reputation so must rely instead on ability and willingness to "work cheap". That's an advantage I recommend they use. There's nothing new about that suggestion. Lots of business instructors make it. You just don't like having to compete with those that have taken that advice. Times change. Some have chosen to whine about their inability to effectively deal with those changes. I'm teaching people how to find ways to take advantage of those changes. One of the things I'm teaching retailers and artisans, is that stained glass is diminishing in popularity while kilnforming is increasing - and that new materials and equipment will soon make hot glass (blowing and casting) the next big thing in glass art. I expect glass casting to soon become as popular as kilnforming - and expect stained glass to continue to diminish in popularity. You can hang on to the old ways, or accept and adopt the new ones. Adapt or die! Okay, then die! Dennis, if you were anywhere near as smart as you obviously think you are, you would reaalize that alienating the entire glass community is hardly the paradigm of a successful business plan. You cannot post on any board on the internet without someone slamming you immediately. Believe me, it is not jealousy, it is the fact you are a complete and total asshole. ".......it is the fact you are a complete and total asshole." I said that about 2 years ago and seemed like nobody believed me! I need credit for quotes, no plagiarism here... |
#27
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
"Javahut" wrote in message Okay, then die! Dennis, if you were anywhere near as smart as you obviously think you are, you would reaalize that alienating the entire glass community is hardly the paradigm of a successful business plan. You cannot post on any board on the internet without someone slamming you immediately. Believe me, it is not jealousy, it is the fact you are a complete and total asshole. ".......it is the fact you are a complete and total asshole." I said that about 2 years ago and seemed like nobody believed me! I need credit for quotes, no plagiarism here... Yep. You said it. I believed it then and believe it now. It's really a shame that somebody didn't dump a gallon of Clorox in the Brady gene pool way back when. What a total waste of oxygen that asshole is. |
#28
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
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#29
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
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#30
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Weller 100 900 deg soldering tips
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