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Neil Wyatt22/06/2023 17:32:36
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19226 forum posts
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86 articles

I've had an email saying "I believe this is something that both you and your readers would be interested in as we draw ever closer to Wimbledon 2023."

I thought it might be worth checking if readers would like to see this in MEW... sarcastic 2

Good morning Neil,

In the build up to this year's Wimbledon tournament at the All-English Lawn Club, we pose the question: Is this the most fashion conscious event on the sporting calendar?

In order to find out, here at <redacted>, we take a look at:

  • the association with the royal family
  • the plethora of a-list attendees
  • the collaboration with Ralph Lauren
  • and the dress-code traditions that have made this annual event so incredibly unique

Michael Gilligan22/06/2023 17:48:10
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23121 forum posts
1360 photos

Bless ‘em … they probably picked-up on the word ‘Model’

MichaelG.

Bezzer22/06/2023 17:49:27
203 forum posts
16 photos

They've obviously seen your forum picture and asociated you to their last two points. smile d

JA22/06/2023 17:57:51
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1605 forum posts
83 photos

Who is Ralph Lauren?

Do I want to know? Do I live in the same World?

JA

Ady122/06/2023 18:02:21
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6137 forum posts
893 photos

Is Sam Fox mentioned

Sakura22/06/2023 19:32:03
86 forum posts
1 photos

I liken Sam Fox to one of those Ferrari look a like kit cars with a VW engine - all show and no go. Well not for the likes of most of us!

Nicholas Farr22/06/2023 20:24:46
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3988 forum posts
1799 photos

Hi, well I have no interest in Wimbledon or any other such sports, and have no wish to read about fashion, and I'm not at all interested in who or how many people go and watch it, or their dress codes.

Regards Nick.

Harry Wilkes22/06/2023 21:11:06
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1613 forum posts
72 photos

Been out in the sun to long wink

H

lee webster22/06/2023 22:00:21
383 forum posts
71 photos

I often wear a short skirt whilst in the workshop. Some might say that a 70 year old man shouldn't. But it's my workshop and I will wear what I like. Plus, it lets a bit of air circulate on a hot day. So, I for one would be interested in the fashions at wombledon this year.

JA22/06/2023 22:29:04
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1605 forum posts
83 photos
Posted by lee webster on 22/06/2023 22:00:21:

I often wear a short skirt whilst in the workshop. Some might say that a 70 year old man shouldn't. But it's my workshop and I will wear what I like. Plus, it lets a bit of air circulate on a hot day. So, I for one would be interested in the fashions at wombledon this year.

Lee, surely this is a new topic! If it becomes one I would happily contribute!!

JA

Nigel Graham 222/06/2023 22:51:16
3293 forum posts
112 photos

And why not? As you say, it's your workshop.

" ..... interested in the fashions at wombledon this year. "

Freshly-ironed white boiler-suits and safety glasses? Grease-top caps for the umpires?

I used to know someone who wore skirts (his wife's old ones) at home, and a kilt in public; but that was because shingles on his legs made wearing trousers painful for him.

.

Yes, they could well have misconstrued "model" but you'd think the word immediately after would make them stop and think. Perhaps the mailing office were using AU-I. Especially in these more sensitive times: though I don't recall young ladies draped langorously over the shiny new lathes in past years at Alexandra Palace or Harrogate. Maybe I was visiting the wrong sales-stands.

No crust-free cucumber butties, strawberries-&-cream and Pimms there, either.

phillip gardiner23/06/2023 06:14:20
22 forum posts

Ralph Lauran can give me some of his fortune so i can build another model loco mate i think he is fantastic.

Mike Poole23/06/2023 10:17:18
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3676 forum posts
82 photos
Posted by lee webster on 22/06/2023 22:00:21:

I often wear a short skirt whilst in the workshop. Some might say that a 70 year old man shouldn't. But it's my workshop and I will wear what I like. Plus, it lets a bit of air circulate on a hot day. So, I for one would be interested in the fashions at wombledon this year.

You have spoiled my day Lee, luckily you didn’t provide a picture but a 70 year old in a short skirt is something I wouldn’t wish to see but my imagination is quite good even in cases where I wish it wasn’t. I will have to move swiftly on to something engineering that is interesting.

Mike

Circlip23/06/2023 11:04:08
1723 forum posts

'Freshly ironed white boiler suits?' De rigueur for engineering officers in RN.

Regards Ian.

Edited By Circlip on 23/06/2023 11:04:25

Graham Meek23/06/2023 11:08:36
714 forum posts
414 photos

What is the Wimbledon Tournament? Is it held on the common?

Regards

Gray,

Dave Halford23/06/2023 11:24:30
2536 forum posts
24 photos
Posted by Graham Meek on 23/06/2023 11:08:36:

What is the Wimbledon Tournament? Is it held on the common?

Regards

Gray,

It's about how long you can keep a Womble in the air with a paddle like thing.

Neil Wyatt23/06/2023 11:37:59
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

Now I'm waiting for someone's article about restringing a tennis racquet yourself to appear in my inbox...

Neil

Mick B123/06/2023 11:46:26
2444 forum posts
139 photos
Posted by lee webster on 22/06/2023 22:00:21:

I often wear a short skirt whilst in the workshop. Some might say that a 70 year old man shouldn't. But it's my workshop and I will wear what I like. Plus, it lets a bit of air circulate on a hot day. So, I for one would be interested in the fashions at wombledon this year.

Well, I like to say something positive where appropriate (if that's the word...)

You're obviously not a member of the glowing-chip/cubic-inches-per-minute-metal-removal group... wink

Nick Wheeler23/06/2023 12:04:32
1227 forum posts
101 photos
Posted by Neil Wyatt on 23/06/2023 11:37:59:

Now I'm waiting for someone's article about restringing a tennis racquet yourself to appear in my inbox...

Neil

Perhaps the server is down?

Being serious: a series of occasional and short articles on similar jobs would be entirely suitable for MEW. I bet most of us have some interestingly random repairs from family/neighbours/etc to show.

Nigel Graham 223/06/2023 23:17:18
3293 forum posts
112 photos

Oh, it won't be the racquet stringing itself we'll be reading about, but the machine someone has built to carry that out....

In fact the "occasional short articles" on what might be called "Domestic Engineering" would be in the spirit of when Model Engineer was the Model Engineer & Electrician.

I have a couple of bound volumes now a bit over 100 years old (no they were not new to me), and include a method for re-seating the scullery water-tap, a link-motion device that plots your pulse from the wrist, and a trigger-focus hand-torch!

The tap was unscrewed from the pipe, dismantled and mounted on an improvised, wooden Keats plate on the lathe's faceplate. A later item in the volume cites that, and shows how to make a simple tool to reseat a ball-cock without needing remove it from the lead pipe to which it had been soldered - adding a wry comment about the cost of engaging a plumber. Nowt new there then.

The pulse-plotter uses a smoked-glass plate I think, and the writer gives the equation for the pulse: lots of trigonometry.

The torch, of right-angled pattern, uses the trigger to alter the distance between the bulb and convex lens.

.

This same volume also gives the description of a miniature traction-engine, apparently freelance but looking in the photo of roughly 4" inch scale size, with a dryback firebox. The author is a Mr. Briggs. I wonder... was this the original Briggs Boiler?

.

There are also darker items in ME&E of that time... It was in 1917, still in World War One, and many model-engineers used their skills as out-workers for armaments production, making shell-case components. Various articles give ideas for the techniques.

.

One former fellow club-member, a sidesman in his local church, used our society workshop to repair a processional cross damaged by over-enthusiastic brass-cleaners; and to make acrylic replacement centres for ornamental roses stolen from an altar cross. The thief must have thought the red glass originals were rubys! We decided the society needed an extra "E" , not for "Experimental" but "Ecclesiastical" .

I have made odd pieces of caving equipment, the last being a manual winch whose reel side-frame parts were cut from scrapped miniature-railway bar-rail.

.

Now, what natty little number shall I wear to the club track tomorrow? One must look one's best when replacing sleepers.

 

Edited By Nigel Graham 2 on 23/06/2023 23:20:45

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