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Cosmik Debris posted:How much work would it be to cut the cripple and put a header and jack studs in and frame it out like a window? Embrace your inner Gary. There's not a thing wrong with leaving the stud there.
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 02:45 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 13:47 |
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Motronic posted:Sure, if you know how to install another connector properly it should be a perfectly reasonable way to repair it. Some of those cords have "interesting" wires so that may present a challenge. Thanks, I was just going to cut the wires and connect a new pre-wired barrel jack to that. I don’t think I could wire a jack myself. Also I was wondering if there is a way to test the jacks for defects before I use them in a project. If I ran power through it would a multimeter indicate that there’s a problem? Or would I just need to leave it on for a while and see if it gets too hot?
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 04:55 |
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devicenull posted:Embrace your inner Gary. Well except that a normal adjustable duct vent doesn't just sit on top of the drywall, it has a flange that extends a couple inches inward. So you'd have to potentially notch the flange to account for the space the stud would take up. If it even works at all since the mechanism takes up space too. Or you could use one that does sit on top of the drywall but then you lose the ability to close it. Cosmik Debris fucked around with this message at 05:18 on Feb 1, 2024 |
# ? Feb 1, 2024 05:16 |
My washer and dryer are in an alcove off the kitchen with some dead space above. I'd like to gain more storage by building shelves in there with the expedient of "plywood supported by say 2x2's along the sides and back edge", is there a rule of thumb for deciding what size plywood I should use for it to have that unsupported front span without bowing? Figuring on storing laundry items and kitchen sundries like the spare paper towels and what not, nothing super heavy. Alternate answer: don't be lazy, build a support at the middle.
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 22:21 |
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Arrath posted:My washer and dryer are in an alcove off the kitchen with some dead space above. I'd like to gain more storage by building shelves in there with the expedient of "plywood supported by say 2x2's along the sides and back edge", is there a rule of thumb for deciding what size plywood I should use for it to have that unsupported front span without bowing? The Sagulator (https://woodbin.com/calcs/sagulator/) is generally what you want for questions like this. I don't know exactly how to model the back edge support with it though.
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 22:53 |
Imbroglio posted:The Sagulator (https://woodbin.com/calcs/sagulator/) is generally what you want for questions like this. I don't know exactly how to model the back edge support with it though. Oh that's handy as hell, thanks!
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# ? Feb 1, 2024 22:58 |
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Arrath posted:My washer and dryer are in an alcove off the kitchen with some dead space above. I'd like to gain more storage by building shelves in there with the expedient of "plywood supported by say 2x2's along the sides and back edge", is there a rule of thumb for deciding what size plywood I should use for it to have that unsupported front span without bowing? How wide? I assume no more than 14" deep so you're not clouting your head whilst working the laundry. What are you planning to load it/them with? If the span is the width of both units (maybe 4' max) you can't go wrong with 3/4" plywood if you're putting ten gallons of laundry detergent up there. Bonus is you can go with one of those giant-rear end bottles with a spigot on the bottom front & just drop the detergent straight into the (top-load) washer directly.
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 00:16 |
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Consider a French cleat system. Modular and has plenty of room for supports depending on how you set it up. I'm building one for my master closet this weekend! https://youtu.be/QYbexqIH4IY?si=aVNwjQ8e2Qfqjkrd
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 00:23 |
PainterofCrap posted:How wide? I assume no more than 14" deep so you're not clouting your head whilst working the laundry. The width of both units so in the 4-5' range, I don't have the measurements in front of me. They're front loaders so the shelf might be upwards of 24" deep, though that is a fair point. If I were to get a top-load washer at some point that would be a head banger. I was thinking 3/4" just for the sheer strength of it. But yeah, detergent, dryer sheets, misc stain removal extras, basic kitchen stuff that can be stashed up there. Nothing terribly heavy beyond the detergent. Dead Pressed posted:Consider a French cleat system. Modular and has plenty of room for supports depending on how you set it up. I'm building one for my master closet this weekend! Wow that would be awesome, it would handily solve the 'what if i get a top-loader later' problem though it is beyond my tooling situation at least at the moment. Hmmm.
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 01:01 |
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Arrath posted:Wow that would be awesome, it would handily solve the 'what if i get a top-loader later' problem though it is beyond my tooling situation at least at the moment. Hmmm. So what I'm hearing is you have a reason to buy more tools? Where's the problem?
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 03:00 |
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devicenull posted:So what I'm hearing is you have a reason to buy more tools? Where's the problem?
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 03:04 |
devicenull posted:So what I'm hearing is you have a reason to buy more tools? Where's the problem? The self fulfilling prophecy. I'm trying to build these shelves for more storage, so I need more tools to build the shelves but then I need more storage for the tools...
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 03:18 |
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Arrath posted:The width of both units so in the 4-5' range, I don't have the measurements in front of me. They're front loaders so the shelf might be upwards of 24" deep, though that is a fair point. If I were to get a top-load washer at some point that would be a head banger. I was thinking 3/4" just for the sheer strength of it. Three-quarter-inch plywood with perimeter surface cleats will be more than enough - there will be no sag. For the cleats: 5/8" pine will serve. Bonus: attach the shelves to the cleats with maybe 1-screw through the shelf surface to the cleat, makes it easier to remove them later
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 05:00 |
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I cleaned up my computer room and very quickly within like a day I notice a thin film of dust coating my desk despite there being a air filter in my room running 24/7, would the Corsi-Rosenthal Box fan filter setup linked to me earlier help with that or do I also need like a filter on my desk and not just off to the side in a corner? Or would setting up my roomba to clean my office help keep down the amount of dust I am potentially kicking up whenever I walk in? I haven't used my roomba in a while as I've been trying to clean/reorganize my apartment so there's no dangling wires anywhere for it to choke on and to give it unobstructed access to as much as I can.
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 15:23 |
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(Still kinda messy as I'm still moving in, sorry.) This shelf would be perfect for my toaster oven and microwave. The problem is that there is only a few inches of clearance between the top of those items and the bottom of the hutch thing, which could warp the hutch thing over time (and is maybe a safety hazard?) I'd like to put in a pull out shelf thing there to deal with this problem, but I can't seem to find one. I feel like Rev-A-Shelf should offer one but they have a million products and I have no idea how to find what I really need.
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 16:27 |
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Raenir Salazar posted:I cleaned up my computer room and very quickly within like a day I notice a thin film of dust coating my desk despite there being a air filter in my room running 24/7, would the Corsi-Rosenthal Box fan filter setup linked to me earlier help with that or do I also need like a filter on my desk and not just off to the side in a corner? Or would setting up my roomba to clean my office help keep down the amount of dust I am potentially kicking up whenever I walk in? I haven't used my roomba in a while as I've been trying to clean/reorganize my apartment so there's no dangling wires anywhere for it to choke on and to give it unobstructed access to as much as I can. Pretty sure we discussed this here or in the small/stupid questions thread a few months ago, but no air filtration system is going to save you from dusting. It's also not surprising that there'd be extra dust shortly after cleaning, because you kicked up a lot of dust by cleaning, which then settled down over the course of the next day.
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# ? Feb 2, 2024 19:55 |
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Better still, wait until you learn that we are the dust. Or the dust is us. Mostly.
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 02:05 |
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Darchangel posted:Better still, wait until you learn that we are the dust. Or the dust is us. Mostly. Oh dear god. TooMuchAbstraction posted:Pretty sure we discussed this here or in the small/stupid questions thread a few months ago, but no air filtration system is going to save you from dusting. Hm, but I would still like to minimize the amount of maintenance I do, like dusting things myself like once a week ideally.
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 16:09 |
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Dusting once a week is perfectly reasonable. So what's the question then?
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 17:37 |
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TooMuchAbstraction posted:Dusting once a week is perfectly reasonable. So what's the question then? Right, I want to aim for dusting once a week. I feel like right now if I do that then things get dirty a bit too fast or maintenance piles up too quickly which results in me putting them off for months.
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 18:02 |
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I'm in need of some help troubleshooting a loose door handle. It's an Omnia fancy pants handle, with a split spindle. Unfortunately I can't figure out why the spindle halves no longer connect, so the handles just pop off regardless of how tight the set screws are. Has anyone dealt with this, and if so, is there something obvious I'm missing? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLOoLGnzryY Pretty sure it's this Omnia lever latch set, but it's from a 2008 construction so hard to say if the exact part is still being sold.
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 22:37 |
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Are those set screws (b on the diagram) missing, maybe?
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# ? Feb 3, 2024 22:46 |
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Raenir Salazar posted:Right, I want to aim for dusting once a week. I feel like right now if I do that then things get dirty a bit too fast or maintenance piles up too quickly which results in me putting them off for months. Dusting is in addition to vacuuming regularly. How often are you vacuuming? Ideally at minimum once per week. If you’re outsourcing to a roomba, 2x per week is better. Also, if you have flat surfaces that are dark in color, you will see dust settling way faster than if the desktop or whatever is light colored. There’s just no way around that.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 00:12 |
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Scam Likely posted:I'm in need of some help troubleshooting a loose door handle. It's an Omnia fancy pants handle, with a split spindle. Unfortunately I can't figure out why the spindle halves no longer connect, so the handles just pop off regardless of how tight the set screws are. Has anyone dealt with this, and if so, is there something obvious I'm missing? You'll have to remove both handles & see why the two halves of the spindle won't stay assembled. I'm guessing that there's some sort of keyway that is now stripped. I don't see where they sell replacements, and I don't have enough data to know why you can't just replace the spindle with a solid one.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 04:00 |
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Hutla posted:Dusting is in addition to vacuuming regularly. How often are you vacuuming? Ideally at minimum once per week. If you’re outsourcing to a roomba, 2x per week is better. Also, if you have flat surfaces that are dark in color, you will see dust settling way faster than if the desktop or whatever is light colored. There’s just no way around that. Well, used to be never. I would vaccuum occassionally the mat for the front door whenever it got too dirty and the cat litter mat for the same. And sometimes once in a blue moon I'd use it on like cracks in the floor boards (fake cheap wood floor boards that are all pealing etc); I noticed for the first time that my vacuum has like, a filter that needed cleaning, like a solid cm of dust caked to one side of it; I scrapped that off, rinsed it, put it into the washing machine and I'll see if this helps. As I normally have always just kinda hated vacuum cleaners ever since I was a kid because they never seemed to do the job as well as a broom. But maybe this is why? So basically this has been my plan, clean and reorganize everything so the robot won't choke on any wires or clothes, give it as close to maximum floor access as I can feasibly do; then let the roomba like daily clean what it can, it lacks the battery power it seems to do my full apartment? I'm almost done, I got my bedroom, kitchen, and old office to clean reorganize and then I think I'm all set and then I just need to mop with the swiffer once a week to any supplement vacuuming/dusting?
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 14:49 |
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We have two long haired cats and have not met a robot vacuum that can take their hair off the carpet. It’s a moot point. Just gotta vacuum it manually at least once a week. Pics of cats for cat tax Spaghetti, yelling on toilet Meatball, indignant
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 15:11 |
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Dr. Lunchables posted:We have two long haired cats and have not met a robot vacuum that can take their hair off the carpet. It’s a moot point. Just gotta vacuum it manually at least once a week. Adorbs. I don't have a carpet though, just a specific mat I placed under their litter which I assume helps with cleanup? I should get a cover for their litter as well.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 15:17 |
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Yeah, covered litter boxes and humidity control are huge in arresting dust. A big rear end air exchange and good furnace filters are also a must.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 15:25 |
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Dr. Lunchables posted:Yeah, covered litter boxes and humidity control are huge in arresting dust. A big rear end air exchange and good furnace filters are also a must. I actually do have a dehumidifier in my computer room as I suspect humidity is why a lot of "dust" on the inside of my computer is more like a paste than dust that could be blown off even with a high powered air compressor. Also didn't help my power supply was upside down! (facing up, away from the mesh filter at the bottom of the case) So by air exchange do you mean the corsi box mentioned earlier? I was thinking of getting a box fan and then a MEV 14 filter (is this overkill if I'm not in a woodshop?) on one end and a mev 2 or 3 on the other which I think I also suggested earlier as an alternative and then just placing it somewhere, maybe one for my computer room and one for my living room and put the current air filter in my bed room?
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 15:38 |
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I meant a furnace filter, essentially. Newer HVAC systems have fans that will run at variable speeds pretty much all the time to circulate and purify air, in the same manner as a corsi box, but with greater effect since it’s already going throughout your house. I don’t imagine it would cost much or be very hard to upgrade the filter housing on your current furnace without replacing the fan though. Even the older furnace at the house I rented had a “fan on” option, which means you’ll be running a house-wide corsi box. Bonus points if your HVAC has a humidity controller.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 16:10 |
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Dr. Lunchables posted:I meant a furnace filter, essentially. Newer HVAC systems have fans that will run at variable speeds pretty much all the time to circulate and purify air, in the same manner as a corsi box, but with greater effect since it’s already going throughout your house. I don’t imagine it would cost much or be very hard to upgrade the filter housing on your current furnace without replacing the fan though. Even the older furnace at the house I rented had a “fan on” option, which means you’ll be running a house-wide corsi box. Bonus points if your HVAC has a humidity controller. To be clear I don't have an HVAC system or anything like that, during the summers I use a portable AC unit; and during the winters I just have the heaters that line the bottom of a wall. So right now there's "nothing" to put a filter on. Hence my question about a box fan.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 16:19 |
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Dr. Lunchables posted:I meant a furnace filter, essentially. Newer HVAC systems have fans that will run at variable speeds pretty much all the time to circulate and purify air, in the same manner as a corsi box, but with greater effect since it’s already going throughout your house. I don’t imagine it would cost much or be very hard to upgrade the filter housing on your current furnace without replacing the fan though. Even the older furnace at the house I rented had a “fan on” option, which means you’ll be running a house-wide corsi box. Bonus points if your HVAC has a humidity controller. Just putting a higher restriction filter into your 1" x30xwhatever filter box is going to have you going off on high limit in the summer and reduce cooling performance/actually freeze the evap in the summer. Pretty much anyone who works in HVAC has been on service calls over the 3M filters they sell at Lowes Depot. The "repair" is to pur a $1 blue filter back in. If one really wants to use a furnace as a whole home filter you need to replace the filter box with something that can actually flow properly while still having the filtering characteristics you want. That's typically going to be somethiung like an Aprilaire 2300 series which uses $35+ filters. "Humidity control" is literally a different thing called a humidifier (which hapopens to use your forced air ducting and furnace fan in most cases) and they are not cheap to buy, install, run or maintain.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 16:24 |
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Yeah, the idea was to replace the entire housing, not just cram more filter in there. Either way, doesn’t matter, OP doesn’t have that. The box oughta work fine.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 18:12 |
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Yeah, all tools need maintenance, including vacuums. Once they get clogged, they can’t move any air which means no sucking power at the intake.The filters need either regular replacement or cleaning- some filters need to be rinsed, some can use soap, some will just disintegrate. If you can’t find the manual for your vacuum, you can almost always look it up online with the model number. Moving stuff around always kicks up way more dirt and dust than you think. Do a first pass, empty your vacuum, and do a second pass, you’ll be amazed at what was still there. If you can get on a regular maintenance cleaning schedule, then you can go longer in between the deep cleans. With 2 people and a cat, our roomba runs 2x/ week in each room and then I do a deeper clean with the real vacuum every 2-3 weeks. Without the constant maintenance, I’d have to vacuum every 5-7 days.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 20:10 |
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It sucks but it doesn't suck... Quite the philosophical problem.
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# ? Feb 4, 2024 23:08 |
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We got an IKEA bookshelf for my 12 year old this weekend, and after we moved the packs into their room they started putting it together on their own. When I checked in on them I noticed they had gotten past a step (setting some pegs) that required a hammer, one of the tools that the kit did not provide and they didn't have on hand. I asked them what they had done and they had just reversed the screwdriver and bashed them in with the handle. I immediately thought of this thread title. Anyway they're in charge of renovations now, they're going to leave some great work for the future owners I can tell.
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# ? Feb 5, 2024 04:44 |
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When you have a nail, everything looks like a hammer
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# ? Feb 5, 2024 14:02 |
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brugroffil posted:When you have a nail, everything looks like a hammer Everything is a hammer, actually.
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# ? Feb 5, 2024 14:03 |
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Dr. Lunchables posted:We have two long haired cats and have not met a robot vacuum that can take their hair off the carpet. It’s a moot point. Just gotta vacuum it manually at least once a week. Absolutely wonderful creatures, and not just because of the amazing names you've given them!
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# ? Feb 5, 2024 14:56 |
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# ? May 30, 2024 13:47 |
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Ashcans posted:We got an IKEA bookshelf for my 12 year old this weekend, and after we moved the packs into their room they started putting it together on their own. When I checked in on them I noticed they had gotten past a step (setting some pegs) that required a hammer, one of the tools that the kit did not provide and they didn't have on hand. I asked them what they had done and they had just reversed the screwdriver and bashed them in with the handle. I immediately thought of this thread title.
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# ? Feb 5, 2024 15:49 |