Did you not adjust your day-drinking for the summer? Sounds like you're processing info with a bit too much clarity.THAT is not AI.
Look at the splashes on the first video!
Cheers,
Sirhr
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Did you not adjust your day-drinking for the summer? Sounds like you're processing info with a bit too much clarity.THAT is not AI.
Look at the splashes on the first video!
Cheers,
Sirhr
Well, since I have had two glasses of lime juice since getting home...Did you not adjust your day-drinking with daylight savings time?
This looks fake, but spend time around the gulf coast and you’ll see em do this.AI BS. The water is almost impossible for AI to fake. And it's fake.
Sirhr
Not disagreeing with the flying skates... btut with the landing splash.This looks fake, but spend time around the gulf coast and you’ll see em do this.
AI BS. The water is almost impossible for AI to fake. And it's fake.
Sirhr
Nice saw. My all time favorite was the 038 Farm Boss. They gave them to the limbers but I bought one for myself, plenty for home use, tough as nails. Small enough to be easy on you but powerful enough to cut a good sized tree.As a point of order….
I had a MS241C with a decompression valve![]()
As a mason Ill say thats beautiful. No mortar joints is sweet. I wonder if he used the same brick in the firebox?
I used an 044 professionally as a much younger man and was always pleased with the performance. Left that career long ago. Just bought a MS400CM for farm work and rolled my eyes at computer this and magnesium that. Gotta say, that saw has more power with half the weight as my old trusted companion.Nice saw. My all time favorite was the 038 Farm Boss. They gave them to the limbers but I bought one for myself, plenty for home use, tough as nails. Small enough to be easy on you but powerful enough to cut a good sized tree.
The toughest I ever ran was a couple old Homelights. That was back when Homelite and McCulloch were the only options, Stihl was just getting known and Husky hadnt come over yet. This redneck kid was cutting a 3' Red Oak with a big old Homelite and when it fell it twisted and caught the bar, jerked the saw out of his hands, and butt stomped the saw hard. Bent the bar and the handle badly. He went to the truck, got a crow bar, straightened the handle, put a new bar on it, pulled the cord once and she cranked right up. A Stihl or Husky would have gone to the dump.
Back up to about 40 mph and hit the brakes?Ok, how you going to get it out?
Ah! The good old Homeheavies! I can still feel phantom vibrations in my hands along with the carpal tunnel from cutting miles of fire-line with one.Nice saw. My all time favorite was the 038 Farm Boss. They gave them to the limbers but I bought one for myself, plenty for home use, tough as nails. Small enough to be easy on you but powerful enough to cut a good sized tree.
The toughest I ever ran was a couple old Homelights. That was back when Homelite and McCulloch were the only options, Stihl was just getting known and Husky hadnt come over yet. This redneck kid was cutting a 3' Red Oak with a big old Homelite and when it fell it twisted and caught the bar, jerked the saw out of his hands, and butt stomped the saw hard. Bent the bar and the handle badly. He went to the truck, got a crow bar, straightened the handle, put a new bar on it, pulled the cord once and she cranked right up. A Stihl or Husky would have gone to the dump.
And, I have zero clue if the following is hopium, copium or real insight
I think thyre not as tough as they were but they have the performance tweaked.I used an 044 professionally as a much younger man and was always pleased with the performance. Left that career long ago. Just bought a MS400CM for farm work and rolled my eyes at computer this and magnesium that. Gotta say, that saw has more power with half the weight as my old trusted companion.
Had a similar accident with a grinder and a buffing wheel one time. Buffing between some boiler tubes when it caught a tube and kicked smooth out of my hands impacting my hip bone and wadding me up in my tyvek.
And, I have zero clue if the following is hopium, copium or real insight
The chimp ?As an aggregate of chaos.....
I have an MS 462 ported and tuned by an industry pro in Tennessee with a 25" bar. it like going from a Ford Tempo to a GT40
Had a similar accident with a grinder and a buffing wheel one time. Buffing between some boiler tubes when it caught a tube and kicked smooth out of my hands impacting my hip bone and wadding me up in my tyvek
I have a MS440 (newer iteration of the 044) as my “big” saw and it is still excellent in power to weight.I used an 044 professionally as a much younger man and was always pleased with the performance. Left that career long ago. Just bought a MS400CM for farm work and rolled my eyes at computer this and magnesium that. Gotta say, that saw has more power with half the weight as my old trusted companion.
288 with a 42" bar. My go to for the big stuff. Otherwise I use Husky 262 or a 272 XP.
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Don't make fun of my lifestyle!Cute MLP plush.![]()
Another buffing wheel story. This one related to me from my dad. They had a guy on their crew using one of the old black&decker wildcat 7" grinders with a buffing wheel. This was back in the days where the guards were looked at as optional. The guy running the grinder caught his shirt tail with the buffing wheel and the grinder ran up under his armpit. And somehow or another he was still on the trigger. Shirt wadded up I guess.Me and a buddy were using some angle grinders with wire wheels to clean some crusty-as-shit stainless pieces. All of a sudden I heard a commotion behind me and he was curled up on the ground writhing in pain. His wheel caught a sharp edge and spun the grinder, at the speed the wheel was just turning, into the side of his stomach. I tried asking what happened or if he needed anything and all he could do is moan in pain and try to get over the pain. Fun times at work
Best tractor attachment ever.I have a MS440 (newer iteration of the 044) as my “big” saw and it is still excellent in power to weight.
That 400 is an absolute hotrod, great saw man
I had 8 pro Stihl saws a couple of years ago and started thinning them out to now just the 440 and a MS261C. The 241 (which is rare and no longer imported) went to a pro arborist in NH who had looked for one for a year.
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That's badass. And so is a grapple, best attachment hands down.Another buffing wheel story. This one related to me from my dad. They had a guy on their crew using one of the old black&decker wildcat 7" grinders with a buffing wheel. This was back in the days where the guards were looked at as optional. The guy running the grinder caught his shirt tail with the buffing wheel and the grinder ran up under his armpit. And somehow or another he was still on the trigger. Shirt wadded up I guess.
Anyway, he clamped down on that grinder hard enough to bog it down, climbed down a ladder, and unplugged it from the welding machine.
Best tractor attachment ever.
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I think I just found my new part time job.
I can solve your problem in one word.
You should have said that it was an AI recreation of actual events. That may have calmed the masses. Not likely, but I did say "may have".Not disagreeing with the flying skates... btut with the landing splash.
I am 100 percent sure they do this. But the splash in the above video is not skate-ish.
Or maybe I am wrong.
Just 'sayin.
Sirhr
288 with a 42" bar. My go to for the big stuff. Otherwise I use Husky 262 or a 272 XP.
View attachment 8729268
For the new members who never learned proper rifle break in by the Nobody method.
Husky people288 with a 42" bar. My go to for the big stuff. Otherwise I use Husky 262 or a 272 XP.
View attachment 8729268
Suddenly, things become clearer
YaaassssBest tractor attachment ever.
View attachment 8729281