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Where's my Dykem blue gone - there's no need to read this

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Robin Graham18/04/2019 00:56:07
1089 forum posts
345 photos

But despite the warning you are reading aren't you! So you're owed an explanation.

Over the years I've been posting beginner's questions here I've sometimes woken up the next morning embarrassed to find that I actually know the answer - the exercise of formulating the question gets the little grey cells working. It's a long shot I know but maybe if I post this I'll suddenly remember where it is .

If this ruse doesn't work I'll buy another bottle which will certainly result in it turning up almost immediately..

Robin.

Hopper18/04/2019 01:06:40
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7881 forum posts
397 photos

Obvious: It's in that special place you put it so you wouldn't lose track of it...

Kevin Murrell18/04/2019 06:30:08
59 forum posts
6 photos

Just checked in the workshop, and I have it! Sorry!

Plasma18/04/2019 07:02:27
443 forum posts
1 photos

I once got a phone call from a work colleague, early on a Sunday morning, we were both at home at the time; "Ey up, where's mi car keys?"

Bear in mind we hadn't seen each other since finishing on Friday and I had never been to his house.

"How do I know?" I responded, flummoxed at why he would have called me with such a query.

"Well I've looked everywhere and I just thought you might have an idea"

Back at work on Monday he said he'd found the keys just after calling me so it must have sparked something.

I always say the name of what I'm looking for repeatedly as I'm looking, supposedly focusses your attention on the task according to psychologists.

Regards mick

not done it yet18/04/2019 07:21:12
7517 forum posts
20 photos

Remembering where you used it the last time often helps. You can then ‘visualise’ that job and maybe recall what you did next.... Finding it on its side with the cap nearby is probably the worst scenario.sad

pgk pgk18/04/2019 07:52:49
2661 forum posts
294 photos

It should be on the glues, paints, solvents and sticky tapes shelf, roughly in line with where that stream of hot swarf comes off the lathe...

pgk

Tim Chambers18/04/2019 08:06:04
89 forum posts
33 photos

Of course you know it will be in the last place you look!😊

Gary Wooding18/04/2019 08:21:46
1074 forum posts
290 photos

Many years ago, in another life, I was a computer software developer. Programs always contain bugs (errors), especially when they are being developed, and some are incredibly difficult to find and fix. It's even more difficult to fix bugs in programs written by someone else.

Sometimes, after spending fruitless days in trying to fix a bug, it was very helpful to try to describe and justify the mechanism of the program to another person - even somebody who had no programming skills at all. The other person would ask questions, often totally irrelevant, and then, after a relatively short while, the eureka moment occurred and the bug was found.

Nick Clarke 318/04/2019 12:40:46
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1607 forum posts
69 photos
Posted by Tim Chambers on 18/04/2019 08:06:04:

Of course you know it will be in the last place you look!😊

So you should always look in the last place first!

Hang on let me think that one through dont know

Mark Rand18/04/2019 13:49:08
1505 forum posts
56 photos

Don't know about the Dykem, but the Stewarts Micrometer Blue will be in the zip-lock bag with the wiping rags and the brayers if that's any help. wink

Brian G18/04/2019 14:29:53
912 forum posts
40 photos

Did you lay a curse on this thread Robin? I just picked up a bottle of blue and the top was loose. Blue floor, blue bench, blue lathe and blue hands.

Brian

larry phelan 118/04/2019 16:28:42
1346 forum posts
15 photos

Old friend of mine,with a very untidy shop,always maintained that he had no trouble finding things [which surprised me,somewhat ]

He said "Ti,s simply a question of remembering where you last dropped it "

But,therein lies the problem !!

John Paton 118/04/2019 16:32:26
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327 forum posts
20 photos

No blue language Brian?

Larry, the other ones are where did that little part end up that just flew out on my hands on the grinder and why is that 10BA nut I just vacuumed up by mistake not here in the dust bag contents??

Maurice18/04/2019 19:18:27
469 forum posts
50 photos

I think all these lost items are in a parallel universe. I carried a length of chain with a padlock and key into the workshop. The key dropped onto the floor. I put the chain and lock down and went to recover the key. Nowhere to be found. It's probably in the same place as my two airbrushes that also went beyond the ken of man!

Maurice

Neil Wyatt18/04/2019 19:29:10
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles
Posted by Gary Wooding on 18/04/2019 08:21:46:

Sometimes, after spending fruitless days in trying to fix a bug, it was very helpful to try to describe and justify the mechanism of the program to another person - even somebody who had no programming skills at all. The other person would ask questions, often totally irrelevant, and then, after a relatively short while, the eureka moment occurred and the bug was found.

I use that principle, but I find it does little for domestic harmony...

Neil

peak419/04/2019 00:07:34
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2207 forum posts
210 photos

I kept on putting stuff in a safe place and could never find it again.
I had this sudden flash of inspiration and bought a small safe off Gumtree.

Problem cured, but where on earth did I hide the key.

Bill

Edited By peak4 on 19/04/2019 00:07:50

Robin Graham19/04/2019 02:51:10
1089 forum posts
345 photos

After intermittent (but exhaustive, as I thought) searches of the workshop over the last two weeks, and making do meanwhile with Sharpies, it turned up today. Missus asked if I had any metal polishing stuff - well, I might have something in that cupboard labelled 'polishing' I said, and then the Dykem was in there staring me in the face. Onset of senility I suppose. But the ruse worked. This forum obviously works in mysterious ways.

I've always found it easier to debug other people's computer programs and algebra than my own. The brain just goes along the same tramlines with your own stuff.

Robin.

Harry Wilkes19/04/2019 07:50:45
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1613 forum posts
72 photos

"Onset of senility I suppose " Robin if that is the case let me tell you it only gets worse wink

H

Douglas Johnston19/04/2019 08:52:02
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814 forum posts
36 photos

The trouble really starts when you forget what it was you were looking for.

Doug

not done it yet19/04/2019 09:31:00
7517 forum posts
20 photos
Posted by Robin Graham on 19/04/2019 02:51:10:

I've always found it easier to debug other people's computer programs and algebra than my own. The brain just goes along the same tramlines with your own stuff.

Robin.

Quite right. In my first job we had to make some fairly lengthy calculations to compute the result for any particular pair of assays. These were always checked by another colleague (and signed off as correct). If any errors were found to have been missed, the checker got the dressing down, not the initiator. Usual calculators, back then, were slide rules (or cylinders) mechanical machines, log tables or a crummy early electronic calculator (that was decidedly inconsistent in it workings)!

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