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We had some great images and interpretations of our last Loch Ness challenge. Thanks to all who took part.
This week, rather than a scene, we have a spanner, or wrench for those on the western side of the atlantic ocean.
How creative you can get with this spanner?
The “rules”:
To download the image below, hover over the image and click on the circle with the arrows at the top right.
Then, when the image opens in its own window, right click and choose “Save Image As/Save Target As” (or similar depending on your browser).
When posting back your image — please use the blue reply button in this first post and use the 'Insert Photos' icon at the top of the reply box. If posting a comment on someone else’s entry, then please use the grey reply button next to their image post.
Have fun!
Dave
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For when your nuts are really tight
(I'm sorry I got torqued into it)
and Friday rolls around and yes it'll be a big wrench but we'll have to think castles now 😉
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Thanks for getting us started Euan. If that long spanner doesn't work then we might need a bit of heat from Trevor's fire breathing Loch Ness monster in teh last SFTW 🙂
Dave
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Very good Jacob, bonus points for combining last and this weeks' themes.
Dave
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The longer you look at this Jacob, the more you see. It takes on shapes and becomes alive. I can almost hear it talking.
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Thank you very much for sharing, Trevor, really intriguing.
Statements like yours here in SFTW keep deepening my insight in the vast differences in the sense of sight, as a crucial part of perception.
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Most of my wrenches aren't metric.
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Haha! I still have some non-metric spanners and sockets, but rarely find a use for them these days.
Dave
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Bob, I believe most of us over here have both kinds, and in many cases they can be used interchangeably.
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When I was in my spanner swinging years I used a set of Metrinch.
As the name implies, they fit both metric and imperial sizes due to sitting on
the flanks of fasteners. No turning your nuts off.
https://youtu.be/-AXs_8hetE8?si=QzHFIrsh65Ce98DZ
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Hiding in plain sight Bob 🙂
Dave
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Bob is that a display in your hardware shop? I LOVE hardware shops.
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I agree, there is little beats a browse around a good tool shop.
Dave
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I love smaller hardware shops like yours, Bob, as opposed to the Big Box stores like Home Depot. I'm curious, though, as to why you only have one of each item on your pegboard?
Jane
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Trevor, Dave, Jane,
I have been reluctant to grass on Bob, but we are looking at his own pegboard, of course.
Apart from that, there is the small tool shop secret:
By only keeping one of each up there, and replacing when sold, it keeps punters on their toes, securing the last one when they may need one some day.
And then you always know when a replacement is needed: whenever one is sold.
A win win win: More sales, less effort, satisfaction of hoarding justified (also when telling the mrs).
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I'm just glad to see no gaps. Don't you hate it when people borrow tools and don't return them!
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Edward Spannerhands
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Clever GC. Drive into the garage and be greeted by that mechanic!
Dave
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Time for another rebus!
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A challenge within a challenge! I came up with two possible answers. I'll not put them here though. Maybe you can tell us the solution later in the week when others have had a go.
Dave
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And now for the correct answer: “Stick a wrench in it.”
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Every workshop has something like this on the wall. Unfortunately there is always someone who ignores the warning. I have seen large hammers fly across the workshop. The same person left hanging with the gantry crane hooked into the army webbing belt he wore outside his overalls — and no one was brave enough to let him down. (Both incidents happened in the 70s)