Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #28296
From: rijakits <rijakits@cwpanama.net>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: Excommunication
Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2005 10:58:35 -0500
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Lynn,
get a gmail account and you never ever run out of space - it is also very user-friendly.
If you are the kind that stores everything interesting - like a tech library - you use labels like folders, but you can put multiple labels on single messages so you have them different references.
 
Best of it, it is FREE. Another interesting feature (though unobtrusive....): You get a list of advertisers custom-selected to the email.
E.g. You mention "Electric Waterpumps" you will get a list of EWP sellers. If you don't find the right one you can expand the list.
As I said it is unobtrusive - actually I cought myself google-ing up some stuff, although I had it right there!!
It seems Google is getting into it big now so there are plenty of "invites" around - want one?
 
THomas J.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2005 10:43 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Excommunication

All AOL people were dropped after AOL altered their Spam controls, in some way that PL's list looked like Spam and bounced the messages. Other systems may have done the same thing, and some require you to add the PL list to your list of OK sites in order to get messages from that list. I was unable to figure that out for AOL, and apparently I was not alone.
 
I re-upped through a free Lycos Email page and all goes well unless the mailbox fills up and then you start bouncing again and get dropped.
 
PL was promoting rotary engines for aircraft when most people had never seen one. He has little time for those who refuse to look up anything on their own, and, or, insist on constructing failure prone contraptions that will damage the rotary's (and home building in general) already doubtful reputation. Most of the people on his list belong to this one anyway, so I see no advantage in slamming his list. There are some real bright people over there too.
 
If you are familiar with some of the basic rules for designing hose systems, aircraft fasteners,
and just plain common sense, you could scarcely keep your lunch down when looking at some of the home built planes at Sun&Fun. The rotary planes are actually pretty advanced when compared to most. But I have yet to see even one rotary powered plane where I agreed with every method or feature of construction. There is always something that could be made better looking, or safer, or stronger, or lighter, or, whatever.
 
Its about time that the rotary people had their own air-race, early, during Sun&Fun (but not near Lakeland) and just post the results in the rotary tent. (So the Sun&Fun people don't have a cow)
 
But then, I could be (and often am) wrong.
 
Lynn E. Hanover
    
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