X-Virus-Scanned: clean according to Sophos on Logan.com Return-Path: Received: from [24.25.9.103] (HELO ms-smtp-04-eri0.southeast.rr.com) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 4.3.4) with ESMTP id 985629 for flyrotary@lancaironline.net; Sun, 05 Jun 2005 19:43:07 -0400 Received-SPF: pass receiver=logan.com; client-ip=24.25.9.103; envelope-from=echristley@nc.rr.com Received: from [192.168.0.10] (cpe-065-187-243-074.nc.res.rr.com [65.187.243.74]) by ms-smtp-04-eri0.southeast.rr.com (8.12.10/8.12.7) with ESMTP id j55NgKL4008780 for ; Sun, 5 Jun 2005 19:42:20 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <42A38DDB.9070106@nc.rr.com> Date: Sun, 05 Jun 2005 19:42:19 -0400 From: Ernest Christley User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2-1.3.2 (X11/20050324) X-Accept-Language: en-us, en MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Rotary motors in aircraft Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: EC2 problems - solved References: In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Virus-Scanned: Symantec AntiVirus Scan Engine John Slade wrote: >>I don't think you may be running a luck deficit. >> >> >I was kinda hoping luck wasn't involved. >John > > > From 4 yrs of testing electronic telecom gear in a factory, my experience is that finding an intermittent open is always shear luck. I don't know how much work it would be or how much you trust the rest of it, but I learned to be trigger happy with throwing away cables. They were cheap and didn't merit the headaches of dealing with them. -- This is by far the hardest lesson about freedom. It goes against instinct, and morality, to just sit back and watch people make mistakes. We want to help them, which means control them and their decisions, but in doing so we actually hurt them (and ourselves)."