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#1
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To All:
Returning from my latest stay at the hospital I find Google has acquired ISP.com, my internet service provider. In doing so it has trashed my e-mail. If you are awaiting a reply, I'm not even aware you've tried to contact me. I'm told ISP/Google will get things all fixed up... someday. In the meantime you can try using the alternate . No progress on the Chugger project -R.S.Hoover |
#2
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On Sep 5, 7:40*pm, " wrote:
To All: Returning from my latest stay at the hospital I find Google has acquired ISP.com, my internet service provider. *In doing so it has trashed my e-mail. *If you *are awaiting a reply, I'm not even aware you've tried to contact me. I'm told ISP/Google will get things all fixed up... someday. *In the meantime you can try using the alternate . No progress on the Chugger project -R.S.Hoover How about a progress report on yourself. Some of us are concerned.. Ben. |
#3
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On Sep 5, 7:07*pm, stol wrote:
How about a progress report on yourself. Some of us are concerned.. ------------------------------------------------------- Dear Ben (and the Group), Since being diagnosed on 14 June 2008 I have lost about thirty pounds. With the pain under control I have graduated from a walker to a pair of canes; then from two canes to one and within the last two weeks to no canes at all. Moving carefully, I can cover a cane-free distance of about 120 feet keeping within the patio. If I add a rest-break between each round I can do that as many as four times per day. Get me to a Box Store and latch me to a cart, I can examine the available lumber although I can't lift nor load. Clean me up nice, you can't even tell I'm sick... until you see me struggling to open a door for my wife... or pick up the Sunday paper. But there is obvious improvement in this area as well. I can now lift a full mug of coffee without shaking like a paint mixer. This period has proven to be a good time to sharpen tools, audit drawings, glue-up prop-blanks and so forth. And while I CAN do those things, I can't do them for very long -- ANY physical activity quickly depletes my store of energy. There were several experiments in progress at the time I was diagnosed with cancer. Most of them had to be abandoned. An exception was the experiment in which I coated pieces of door-skin plywood with low-viscosity epoxy resin. The epoxy bonds with the paper-thin outer lamination of the door-skin and alters its properties in a number of ways. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Overall I think it's fair to say I'm a pretty lucky fellow. -R.S.Hoover |
#4
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On Sat, 6 Sep 2008 11:02:47 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Sep 5, 7:07*pm, stol wrote: How about a progress report on yourself. Some of us are concerned.. ------------------------------------------------------- Dear Ben (and the Group), Since being diagnosed on 14 June 2008 I have lost about thirty pounds. With the pain under control I have graduated from a walker to a pair of canes; then from two canes to one and within the last two weeks to no canes at all. Moving carefully, I can cover a cane-free distance of about 120 feet keeping within the patio. If I add a rest-break between each round I can do that as many as four times per day. Get me to a Box Store and latch me to a cart, I can examine the available lumber although I can't lift nor load. Clean me up nice, you can't even tell I'm sick... until you see me struggling to open a door for my wife... or pick up the Sunday paper. But there is obvious improvement in this area as well. I can now lift a full mug of coffee without shaking like a paint mixer. This period has proven to be a good time to sharpen tools, audit drawings, glue-up prop-blanks and so forth. And while I CAN do those things, I can't do them for very long -- ANY physical activity quickly depletes my store of energy. There were several experiments in progress at the time I was diagnosed with cancer. Most of them had to be abandoned. An exception was the experiment in which I coated pieces of door-skin plywood with low-viscosity epoxy resin. The epoxy bonds with the paper-thin outer lamination of the door-skin and alters its properties in a number of ways. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Overall I think it's fair to say I'm a pretty lucky fellow. -R.S.Hoover ************************************************* ************************ veeduber I have several friends who have beaten the big "C". Hope you can also. You talk about doorskin. I have used it a lot in my radio controled model planes (large and small) and have found it to be what I would describe as brittle. Will ur epoxy treatment make it more flexible and not snap and break so easy when stessed? Have a good week end and luck in your fight. Big John |
#5
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On Sep 6, 2:16*pm, Tech Support wrote:
You talk about doorskin. I have used it a lot in my radio controled model planes (large and small) and have found it to be what I would describe as brittle. Will ur epoxy treatment make it more flexible and not snap and break so easy when stessed? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Yes, as a general rule. But grain orientation has a lot to do with it. Also, you'll need to experiment with your resin. I used 'MAS Epoxy,' from Jamestown Distributors partly because of its water-like consistancy but mostly because it's what I had on hand, left over from a kayak project. I've also experimented with TitebondIII, Weldwood 'Plastic Resin' and a vinyl-ester that was on hand If possible, you should test the part in full-scale. Doorskins are rather shoddy goods when it comes to plywood and don't even come close to the load-handling capabilities of real plywood. This can result in test-strips or coupons passing your tests with flying colors only to see the actual component de-laminate when subjected to the actual load. -R.S.Hoover |
#6
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" wrote:
Dear Ben (and the Group), Since being diagnosed on 14 June 2008 I have lost about thirty pounds. I learned last week that a friend of 25+ years has stage IV throat cancer (he is just 47.) He is undergoing radiation treatment and had the usual loss of appetite and weight loss. But he said his doctor gave him samples of a drug that increased his appetite and greatly improved his mental outlook, if not his prognosis. I believe it was one of the progesterones that is described: http://www.cancerbackup.org.uk/QAs/L...d_faqs/QAs/599 May want to ask your doctor about it. |
#7
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On Sep 6, 5:59*pm, Jim Logajan wrote:
May want to ask your doctor about it. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Thanks for the heads-up. I'll raise the point during my next appointment. But as dramatic as a 40lb weight loss may sound, it has not reached the debilitating stage. I presently weigh 184-1/2. I played high school ball at 185 and the Danang snap-shots at... http://bobhooversblog.blogspot.com/2...t-history.html ....I weighed 167, thanks to a bout with dengue fever. Right now, what bugs me is being unable to do anything in the way of useful work, since the chemotherapy appears to feed off the muscle mass. -R.S.Hoover |
#8
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On Sat, 6 Sep 2008 11:02:47 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Sep 5, 7:07*pm, stol wrote: How about a progress report on yourself. Some of us are concerned.. ------------------------------------------------------- Dear Ben (and the Group), Since being diagnosed on 14 June 2008 I have lost about thirty pounds. With the pain under control I have graduated from a walker to a pair of canes; then from two canes to one and within the last two weeks to no canes at all. Moving carefully, I can cover a cane-free distance of about 120 feet keeping within the patio. If I add a rest-break between each round I can do that as many as four times per day. Get me to a Box Store and latch me to a cart, I can examine the available lumber although I can't lift nor load. Clean me up nice, you can't even tell I'm sick... until you see me struggling to open a door for my wife... or pick up the Sunday paper. But there is obvious improvement in this area as well. I can now lift a full mug of coffee without shaking like a paint mixer. that is a fair ******* bob. that means you'll have to use lightweight plastic spoons to actually stir the coffee. I suppose it's a case of one step forward and two stirs backward :-) I looked up your condition in my medical reference. you dont want to know. suffice it to say that you are doing extremely well. extremely well. hang in there mate. Stealth Pilot |
#9
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On Sep 7, 5:26*am, Stealth Pilot
wrote: I looked up your condition in my medical reference.... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Medical references usually come in two flavors, one intended for physicians, which describes the drugs & dosages needed to treat a particular malady, and another that describes the NURSING requirements. You don't see a lot of the latter because people with multiple myeloma tend to die off pretty fast. But with regard to the NURSING aspects of those who don't, describing us as cast-iron *******s is being kind. The drugs most effective against tumors tend to be poisons. While they nibble away at the tumor they are also known for altering your emotional state, This leads to a Catch-22 situation where you tend to alienate those who are trying to help you. With only one tumor's-worth of experience, I've no easy answers with regard to my treatment but I know for damn sure I'd be a lot easier to live with -- and to treat -- if I were capable of doing useful work. -Bob |
#10
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On Sep 7, 2:26*pm, " wrote:
With only one tumor's-worth of experience, I've no easy answers with regard to my *treatment but I know for damn sure I'd be a lot easier to live with -- and to treat -- if I were capable of doing useful work. -Bob Well Mr. Bob if its useful work you want you'll need to put your thinking cap on and perhaps create some aircraft plans and such for us lesser mortal's.LOL. Glad your home from the hospital, look into a macrobiotic diet as an aid to getting your strength back. Joe |
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