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Guest El Satanico

Sometimes I wonder...

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Guest Shutterspeed

It's small enough to go to the bottom and not be seen again. With all the liquid going through, it doesn't last long anyway.

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Guest El Satanico

You'd still think there would be a sign of something, espiecally when you have heavy food loads like a lasagna dish.

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Guest Shutterspeed

My dishwasher has a small hose that runs into the kitchen sink. The waste water goes through it and down the plughole, taking the bits of food with it.

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Guest El Satanico

That would all make sense then. I wasn't certain about the draining capability of a dishwasher, now I just wonder if US and Australian dishwashers are roughly the same.

 

Here I believed Australian Dishwashers to be dingos

 

...I kid

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Guest El Satanico

That's wild...I had no clue. Do you guys also box them as a sport? Is Yahoo Serious considered a cultural icon?

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Guest Shutterspeed

No, for us to box kangaroos would be like setting your dog on your neighbour's. Despite the padding, it's still cruel and the RSPCA would be all over us like a rash.

 

Yahoo Serious is an embarassment. He's not often made mention of, and when he is, a cough usually precedes his name, uttered in a hushed tone.

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Guest El Satanico

Ah yes, dog fighting...we have that in America. We also have Rooster fighting, but we refer to it as Cock Fighting. Quite illegal, but a good time none the less or so I hear.

 

So not even his home country recognizes the true genius of Yahoo Serious. Tis a shame, and I begin to wonder if anyone ever will.

 

Does Australia still have a shortage of gas, or did that get worked out after Mel Gibson drew attention to the problem?

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Guest Shutterspeed

If I remember correctly, there was a deal made to resolve the petrol problem in Australia if we promised not to put Yahoo Serious in any more movies.

 

At present, all is well.

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Guest Shutterspeed

Don't "oi" me or I'll turn my Fosters can into a gravity bong and smoke your ass.

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Guest Smues
Best thread in weeks.

I agree. I didn't get any sleep last night and when I'm really tired I laugh at everything, and I almost had tears running down my eyes trying to read this thread. Which means if I was fully rested I probably would have gotten quite a chuckle.

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Guest El Satanico

Modern Inks

Color printing inks are made primarily with linseed oil, soybean oil, or a heavy petroleum distillate as the solvent (called the vehicle) combined with organic pigments. The pigments are made up of salts of multiring nitrogen-containing compounds (dyes), such as yellow lake, peacock blue, phthalocyanine green, and diarylide orange. Inorganic pigments also are used in printing inks to a lesser extent. Some examples are chrome green (Cr2O3), Prussian blue (Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3), cadmium yellow (CdS), and molybdate orange (a mix of lead chromate, molybdate, and sulfate).

 

Black ink is made using carbon black. And white pigments, such as titanium dioxide, are used either by themselves or to adjust characteristics of color inks. Inks also contain additives such as waxes, lubricants, surfactants, and drying agents to aid printing and to impart any desired special characteristics.

 

Olden Day Inks

the first inks were fruit or vegetable juices; protective secretions from cephalopods such as squid, cuttlefish, and octopus; blood from some types of shellfish; and tannin from galls, nuts, or bark from trees. The first man-made ink appeared in Egypt about 4,500 years ago and was made from animal or vegetable charcoal (lampblack) mixed with glue.

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