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After many years i've concluded that some folks aren't worth helping.
They have both. A flintlock only season and an anything goes “muzzleloader” season.It seems to me that if you’re going to have a ml season it should require a proper ml. Pennsylvania used to require a flintlock with primitive sights (no screws). I’m not sure that’s how they do it now but that always made sense to me.
Do NOT loan those guys anything with moving or removable parts. Goes double for in-laws.
My wife's family is the worst for this. They'll have something nice, ignore basic maintenance and care, and want me to fix it when it just inexplicably doesn't work anymore
Oh it's equipment too. A few years back my wife wanted me to go look at her dad's mower because it wouldn't start. He had it around back of his shed when I got there.I have some family that lives across the fence who are the same way...but with tractors and equipment.
"Hey can you come look at this tractor? It won't shift."---I end up using an entire QUART of oil freeing up the gear selector and accompanying linkages. ZERO care for maintenance or longevity.
I don't even want to imagine what a muzzleloader would look like a year after purchase by them.
I have some family that lives across the fence who are the same way...but with tractors and equipment.
"Hey can you come look at this tractor? It won't shift."---I end up using an entire QUART of oil freeing up the gear selector and accompanying linkages. ZERO care for maintenance or longevity.
I don't even want to imagine what a muzzleloader would look like a year after purchase by them.
AMENIMHO a person should have to pass a mechanical aptitude test in order to own tractors or farm equipment. I've seen some pretty crazy stuff over the years.
That's probably the best comparison I've ever heard. Marginally acceptable for some applications, total garbage for others, never as good as the original, but generally accepted as a "better" replacement because it meets some made up set of rules.Is ethanol laden gasoline the Pyrodex of the internal combustion engine world?
Lol. I remember at work one time I had a fellow supervise ask me “why is it that you ask peoples opinions of an idea of yours, but don’t always follow the feedback?” My response was that I wasn’t seeking how to do it, or if to do it, as I was asking if I missed anything in my analysis, or if I was completely “off base”, etc.I refer to these people as askholes. They ask for advice because of your expertise and experience then do the opposite. Often they come back with there tail between there legs wanting you to FIX there bad decisions.
They're now selling an inline thing that you put onto an AR lower receiver! Uses shotgun caps, etc.Last year I helped a friend who is a hunting season ml'er only get his two guns in order. I gave him instructions, supplies and even a couple tools for maintaining the rifles. One of them was (yep, past tense 'was') an inline. Well, he loaded that monstrosity, ignored almost everything I told him to do and popped the cap with no ignition to watch Brother Buck just walk away. He took it to a machinist who used an impact wrench to remove the breech. In the process the threads and part of the barrel broke off. That mess is now in the trash. He has a good experienced ml'er friend (me) who could have helped him but, instead, he went the impact wrench route. And,- AND - he has a CVA Mountain Rifle also. Used that for his hunt and, again, let Bro Buck walk off. He used #10 caps on a #11 nipple. Oh, well. I did what I could for him.
A fellow on this forum once said, "you can't fix stupid, but you can numb it with a 2x4"!!Last year I helped a friend who is a hunting season ml'er only get his two guns in order. I gave him instructions, supplies and even a couple tools for maintaining the rifles. One of them was (yep, past tense 'was') an inline. Well, he loaded that monstrosity, ignored almost everything I told him to do and popped the cap with no ignition to watch Brother Buck just walk away. He took it to a machinist who used an impact wrench to remove the breech. In the process the threads and part of the barrel broke off. That mess is now in the trash. He has a good experienced ml'er friend (me) who could have helped him but, instead, he went the impact wrench route. And,- AND - he has a CVA Mountain Rifle also. Used that for his hunt and, again, let Bro Buck walk off. He used #10 caps on a #11 nipple. Oh, well. I did what I could for him.
I knew mankind was in trouble, when they had to put instructions on a shampoo bottle!I knew mankind was in trouble when a ladder from Home Depot comes with a 100 page instruction manual with hundreds of things you are not supposed to do with the ladder and pages upon pages of dangerous things that can kill you using a ladder. Plus they included pictures and a table of contents too. A guy was looking at the ladders as I walked by and he asked me if they had videos he could watch about how to use a ladder. Go figure?
And we are in awe at the condition of this Country today?!! Doomed!I knew mankind was in trouble when a ladder from Home Depot comes with a 100 page instruction manual with hundreds of things you are not supposed to do with the ladder and pages upon pages of dangerous things that can kill you using a ladder. Plus they included pictures and a table of contents too. A guy was looking at the ladders as I walked by and he asked me if they had videos he could watch about how to use a ladder. Go figure?
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