Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
drunkle
Participantthis thread has more sex than a marion post; “cox”, internet porn… high speed intercourse…
drunkle
Participantthis thread has more sex than a marion post; “cox”, internet porn… high speed intercourse…
drunkle
Participantthis thread has more sex than a marion post; “cox”, internet porn… high speed intercourse…
drunkle
Participantthis thread has more sex than a marion post; “cox”, internet porn… high speed intercourse…
drunkle
Participantif the code is lenient on the use of al wire, is the incidence of fire due to faulty/corroded al wiring low?
i hadn’t thought about this kind of thing, i’m glad this topic came up. for stuff like r/c cars, al wire was standard, but the life span of a battery pack or such was only a few months. al seat posts ‘sticking’ to steel bike frames is the worse problem. but for a home that you plan on living in, much less paying for for 30 years and not plan on being a fire trap…?
drunkle
Participantif the code is lenient on the use of al wire, is the incidence of fire due to faulty/corroded al wiring low?
i hadn’t thought about this kind of thing, i’m glad this topic came up. for stuff like r/c cars, al wire was standard, but the life span of a battery pack or such was only a few months. al seat posts ‘sticking’ to steel bike frames is the worse problem. but for a home that you plan on living in, much less paying for for 30 years and not plan on being a fire trap…?
drunkle
Participantif the code is lenient on the use of al wire, is the incidence of fire due to faulty/corroded al wiring low?
i hadn’t thought about this kind of thing, i’m glad this topic came up. for stuff like r/c cars, al wire was standard, but the life span of a battery pack or such was only a few months. al seat posts ‘sticking’ to steel bike frames is the worse problem. but for a home that you plan on living in, much less paying for for 30 years and not plan on being a fire trap…?
drunkle
Participantif the code is lenient on the use of al wire, is the incidence of fire due to faulty/corroded al wiring low?
i hadn’t thought about this kind of thing, i’m glad this topic came up. for stuff like r/c cars, al wire was standard, but the life span of a battery pack or such was only a few months. al seat posts ‘sticking’ to steel bike frames is the worse problem. but for a home that you plan on living in, much less paying for for 30 years and not plan on being a fire trap…?
drunkle
Participantif the code is lenient on the use of al wire, is the incidence of fire due to faulty/corroded al wiring low?
i hadn’t thought about this kind of thing, i’m glad this topic came up. for stuff like r/c cars, al wire was standard, but the life span of a battery pack or such was only a few months. al seat posts ‘sticking’ to steel bike frames is the worse problem. but for a home that you plan on living in, much less paying for for 30 years and not plan on being a fire trap…?
drunkle
Participantwow… that’s funny. is there no building code dealing with such issues? did the engineer/architect not know any better? or did the contractor substitute the aluminum for copper to cut costs?
drunkle
Participantwow… that’s funny. is there no building code dealing with such issues? did the engineer/architect not know any better? or did the contractor substitute the aluminum for copper to cut costs?
drunkle
Participantwow… that’s funny. is there no building code dealing with such issues? did the engineer/architect not know any better? or did the contractor substitute the aluminum for copper to cut costs?
drunkle
Participantwow… that’s funny. is there no building code dealing with such issues? did the engineer/architect not know any better? or did the contractor substitute the aluminum for copper to cut costs?
drunkle
Participantwow… that’s funny. is there no building code dealing with such issues? did the engineer/architect not know any better? or did the contractor substitute the aluminum for copper to cut costs?
-
AuthorPosts
