1967 RS/SSOoo! What year?
wm
1967 RS/SSOoo! What year?
wm
A local bee keeper sold me a piece of raw pure beeswax. Now what do I do with it? have heard of mixing with olive oil, mink oil, etc to make a patch lube. Are there any other uses? Does anyone have any recipes that they would be willing to share?
thanks, bp
When I was starting in the trades every carpenter had a folding rule. It was great for measuring inside measurement like door and window openings. I have one in my shop but rarely use it.My father who is long dead was a plumber all his adult life. These were the only measuring device he ever used. He was able to span distances between fittings easier with the stiff ruler, and cut his copper tube very accurately. I worked in the trade for over 40 years and cannot remember any other trade who use this type ruler. Now I use this rule in my workshop, and it is a permanent resident of my workbench.
I will combine both subjects here. Many years ago when I was a working pipefitter I used beeswax to lubricate the joints in my folding Lufkin rules.
They’re cheap(ish) at HG Lipscomb in Nashville. I’ve bought several there.Nice photo of wax but, the interesting item is ruler, have you lately priced one $$$$ they are now collectable.
My father in law is a mason and he always used a wooden rule for layout, my father is a civil engineer and he always had one with him.My father who is long dead was a plumber all his adult life. These were the only measuring device he ever used. He was able to span distances between fittings easier with the stiff ruler, and cut his copper tube very accurately. I worked in the trade for over 40 years and cannot remember any other trade who use this type ruler. Now I use this rule in my workshop, and it is a permanent resident of my workbench.
If you are inserting screws in any type of wood, especially hardwood, beeswax it what you want on the screw.A local bee keeper sold me a piece of raw pure beeswax. Now what do I do with it? have heard of mixing with olive oil, mink oil, etc to make a patch lube. Are there any other uses? Does anyone have any recipes that they would be willing to share?
thanks, bp
All of that is just more organic material that will add to the authenticity of your muzzleloading experience.That looks pretty dirty, you might want to melt it down and strain it through some cheesecloth. Beeswax contains wings, bodies, legs and any dirt from the hive.
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