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Reiver

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Posts posted by Reiver

  1. Real sorry to hear that Emma. I remember reading your review for the YBR. I too am a YBR rider and to some folks they may be just little tiddlers but to me it is great as it is my first bike and I love it. I hope everything works out for you in a positive way.

  2. An honest mistake and no big deal. I have many transexual and trannie friends and we are all cool with whatever... it is only the narrow minded bigoted dickheads who we don't particularly like, but they tend to be in the minority and as long as they don't physically assault us then they are safe from having their limbs broken. Don't worry about it mate, it is fine :thumb:

  3. I’ve got a cheap acoustic too but mainly play electric, I should try and use the acoustic more for chordy stuff though.


    I’ve vowed not to buy another guitar until I can afford and need one of these:


    https://reverb.com/item/11655787-fender-usa-version-1-plus-deluxe-tele-crimson-frost-maple-1990


    Really love the sound and looks of them.

     

    Acoustics are much more than just for chordy stuff matey! I do a lot of fingerpicking on steel string acoustic, all kinds of stuff from classical, blues, jazz etc through to Celtic stuff. That is why guitars are amazing, the versatility of them. By the way, that telecaster you posted a link to is a lovely colour! I love telecasters. They are like a blank canvas and they feel so comfy. Mine is a standard blonde one with the black pickguard. Oh I shouldn't start talking about guitars or I won't shut up!

    :cheers:



  4. Thanks mate.

    At the moment my main guitars are a PRS Santana and a Epiphone SG. My main amp is a Marshall JCM900 through a 2x12 cab. I've also got a hughes and K ettner for smaller gigs.

    How long you been playing?

     

    Asbo, how is the neck on the SG? I bought one new a few years ago but sent it back as the neck was seriously bendy. The slightest pressure and it change pitch drastically . I heard a lot of similar tales from Epiphone SG and ES335 owners. Maybe it was just a batch from that period which were dodgy. How is yours?

     

    It's not too bad. I know what you mean though it didn't take much to shift the pitch. I struggled with the heavy head. Neck drop. But Velcro inside the strap to grip my t shirt sorted that though. It has some serious tones. My mate has the gibson and there's not a lot in it. Certainly not enough to warrant to extra cash.

    What do you have now?

     

    I tend to play acoustic mainly these days, have a couple of nice Yamaha acoustics, but I still have a Fender Tele and a Squier Jazzmaster and a 1990s Danelectro U2 and a lovely Ibanez copy of a Gretsch style semi. My brother has an older Epiphone SG and it is fine, no neck trouble but it is a much older one than mine was and you're right, they sound damn good!

  5. I don’t feel I’m at a level I’d be comfortable playing in a band, maybe some day though.

    Good luck with it and I hope it goes well, what is your guitar/amp setup?.

     

    Thanks mate.

    At the moment my main guitars are a PRS Santana and a Epiphone SG. My main amp is a Marshall JCM900 through a 2x12 cab. I've also got a hughes and K ettner for smaller gigs.

    How long you been playing?

     

    Asbo, how is the neck on the SG? I bought one new a few years ago but sent it back as the neck was seriously bendy. The slightest pressure and it change pitch drastically . I heard a lot of similar tales from Epiphone SG and ES335 owners. Maybe it was just a batch from that period which were dodgy. How is yours?

  6. Good to see some fellow musicians on here. I play guitar mainly and also fiddle. I prefer jamming and recording with friends these days. I can't be bothered with being in a proper band anymore. Or maybe I'm just too tired and cynical with old age :)

  7. Hi everyone I got my motorbike fixed by motomax 33 great service. It turned out to be the ignition switch which was wired differently even though its for a fuel injection model so beware when buying aftermarket ones. Great to be back on motorbike. I kept the cost down in fixing most of stuff first so don't let it put you off. :wink:

     

    Great stuff. Thanks for the info and glad you are back on the road :thumb:

  8. I still think its a bad earth connection. The big black lead from the battery which usually bolts to the engine somewhere.

     

    Good point. I hadn't thought of that but he has changed just about everything it could be so a bad earth is probably the only remaining problem. I had a car like that once, which fired when cold but wouldn't start if the engine was hot. It turned out to be very slight corrosion between the terminal on the starter motor earth strap, and the car body. The terminal and earth lead looked fine but underneath the terminal it was really bad and caused a high resistance when the engine was warm, just enough to stop it starting. So easy to miss.

  9. Don't like sound that !! dipping cheese !! sounds like a guy dirty nob or sex disease :scratch:

     

    I was about to say I have poked a pot of melted cheese with a lot worse things than bread...

  10. I do not post on here much and there are sometimes weeks go by without me looking at the forum due to my work and travel and family issues etc but I would hate to be deleted as after trying out several other motorbike forums, this is the only one I feel comfortable on and the members on here are decent helpful folks who do not give sarcastic answers to the type of daft questions a new lad like me would ask, as certain people on other forums do. I love this forum even if I do not get the chance to visit much. Please don't delete me :D



  11. What ??

     

    Sorry Six.. that was probably my fault; about three pages back I was talking about the old Northumbrian/Scottish tradition of First Footing. I think I was also responsible for the entire Thatcher thread after mentioning me dad's NCB kneepads. Somehow the mention of dad's NCB kneepads instigated discussion about Thatcher. I seem to be a bit of an unintentional troublemaker round these parts... my apologies ;)

     


    :lol: no worries , never head of first footing , just googled it , them Scots are a strange bunch :lol: , keep up the unintentional trouble making :thumb:

     

    Nae bother lad.. but as a Northumbrian,.. I am either Scots or English.. depending on which side is winning..;)

  12. Got on till I reached the first footing part of the thread then skipped the rest. My dad's side of the family comes from Durham/Sunderland so we know and do first footing. For my family it needs to be a female though as whenever it's done the traditional way with a male, a male in the family dies.


    Missus was pissed off at new years being forced out before midnight to walk back in once it had passed. But I only have my dad and 2 uncles above me and I am not massively superstitious but I'm not testing that one.


    No one down south knows of it though so I stand out down here as do my parents.

     


    What ??

     

    Sorry Six.. that was probably my fault; about three pages back I was talking about the old Northumbrian/Scottish tradition of First Footing. I think I was also responsible for the entire Thatcher thread after mentioning me dad's NCB kneepads. Somehow the mention of dad's NCB kneepads instigated discussion about Thatcher. I seem to be a bit of an unintentional troublemaker round these parts... my apologies ;)

  13. Firstly, very well done for getting there mister. I had never been on a bike until last October and I did not get my CBT first time. I just wasn't confident enough on the road and had to go back the following week, which I got through fine. And I have been driving a car since I was your age. It must be much harder for folks who have not got any previous road experience so well done to you for getting through it. Many congratulations to you, and once you have had a wee bit of time on a geared 125 you will soon get used to it. I was terrified at first but now it just seems natural. Just takes getting the brain and physical side to get that co-ordination but once you have it it sort of clicks. And my brain is older and therefore more decrepit and slower to learn than yours so have fun and enjoy it :thumb:

  14. Think I've found the winner of bat-shit crazy politics. Behold the manifesto of an Independent candidate in Stoke!

    https://abolishmcrm.com/party-constitution-and-manifesto/

     

    This manifesto has to be a joke. I can't believe this is at all genuine. Or perhaps i am just a bit naive. What is his problem with disabled people? My old man didn't fight in the war so he could have his blue badge abolished. Well... he didn't fight in the war at all as he was only 2 in 1944 but you know what I mean.

  15. We did the bearish museum with the kid's. Very good day out.

    Also for any with an interest in mining. Do the national coal mining museum. Inbetween Huddersfield Barnsley and Wakefield. Free in and you get to go underground etc.


    Used to take the kid's to see Santa there. His grotto was at the seam. Santa was always an ex miner from wakey. Proper rough arse Santa :cheers:

     

    Beamish is good. And Tanfield railway is too if ye are in that area. I used to explore abandoned lead mines in the North Pennines/Cumbria/Durham, mainly Nenthead in Cumbria.. not tourist mines, but mines which were literally abandoned and forgotten.. and not open to the public..(H&S would have a fit actually) often we would spend many weeks digging out the collapsed entrances...old mines that had been closed and abandoned in the 18th/19th centuries.. it was amazing to find stuff that had just been left when the mines closed, still intact as if the workers had just finished their shifts... cases of unused dynamite,. old newspapers from the 1800s, old bottles, old tallow candles, amazing bits of Victorian machinery, old oil lamps, all kinds of stuff.. walking into a mine like that was a real time capsule. I would love to be doing it again but it aint something you do on your own.

  16. it had turned midnight and my dear owld granny who was incredibly superstitious, wouldn't let me back indoors until a suitable first foot turned up. She kept me waiting outside in the snow until the tall lad from a few doors along came in searching for a free booze-up. Oh the good old days.. :roll:

    builds character! or that's what they tell you :lol: I may plan a trip to the black Country museum haven't been in years and was a fun day out as I recall (maybe less so if you lived through it!) they have an awesome sweet shop there too! forum ride out anyone?? :lol:


    Also "forum rules" ha! ha! hahahaha

     

    Oh aye.. builds character! And gives ye a fear of massive spiders at 1am when there is a huge monster killer spider dangling above yer head by the guttering fitful light of a hurricane lantern, making forbidding arachnid shadows large enough to send hideous tremors of chilling fear down the shivering spine of any 9 year old... Sorry.. We were recording an Edgar Allen Poe book of short

    stories at work today and got a bit carried away... worst thing about the outside lavatory was the bliddy frozen cistern.

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