Well
If I make a cabinet it usually fits. For the last couple days have been installing stock, melamine faced crumble-board (landfill in progress). What absolute garbage! with nice doors and crooked drawers. The HO is wanting crown molding all supplied with no tail to screw to and a bulky under-apron for strip lighting.
After looking at the drawing the person drawing the crown and under-light had never installed a cabinet!!!!!
CAD = Can’t Acutally be Done.
Explanined to HO she said ” OH it was her first time” Mutter X 10, bite finger wish I was in Hawaii or Siberia ,grey hairs knocking at the door.
Blood pressure hit the ding bell.
On the way home decided any one who designs this garbage should be laid in a confined space with 5 layers of melamine covered wood glue mould food under them and a small but steady stream of water flowing over them thus, compressing their body against their drawings glued to the top of the unmovable top area.
AHHH that fells better
Did I mention public stoneings for the people who developed and used malimine covered wood pulp and made it acceptlable to the public.
The fancy door hinge covers had more than one name one them!
Am I out of sorts?
Replies
I have no sorts, so I'm definitely out.
My sorts have a fungus. You don't want those.
Is that what they're calling it these days?
Welcome to the Taunton University of Knowledge FHB Campus at Breaktime. where ... Excellence is its own reward!
I've giving full disclosure.
That beats full exposure
Welcome to the Taunton University of Knowledge FHB Campus at Breaktime. where ... Excellence is its own reward!
That was "disclosure."
Sorry, I can't answer that. I'm busy sorting my sorts.
anyone can buy a hammer, but does that make them a carpenter? Nope. Same goes for CAD programs. Bad data in = bad data out.
The gym where I go has some of those fancy exercise bikes with a TV screen that shows you a computer-generated terrain. There are about 30 different routes you can select.
One route in particular that comes to mind takes you through some presumably Andes terrain, with a couple of suspension bridges to cross.
The bridges have suspension cables with ropes coming off of them to support the road surface. The connection between the rope and the cable is a sort of metal eye, with the cable running through the eye and the rope tied to it.
On one bridge 2 or 3 of the eyes don't have the cable going through them -- they miss the cable by what one would judge to be a foot or two and just hang in midair.
And at the ends of the bridges are stone pillars to anchor the suspension cables. On one end of one bridge the pillars are levitating a foot or two in the air.
You can do anything with CAD.