It’s never too late to learn. Of course, I’m not saying you must learn, but if it is something you want to do, it’s absolutely never too late.
It’s never too late to learn. Of course, I’m not saying you must learn, but if it is something you want to do, it’s absolutely never too late.
Precisely. You don’t pay an electician to dig a hole. You don’t let a machine operator do electrical work, and so on.
Mighty car mods did a similar project with a Nissan Silvia rather than a Miata, if anyone is interested.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLp0KnUFYB--g_NcNczfkXW_T7izPjMHcI&si=4P77qrv9FgxNjoSE
For me that would be Spiderbait’s cover of Black Betty
Sounds like a cool dude. Modern systems are far too complex to make in a home workshop, but hydraulics are simple at heart if you can use a little logic.
I’m a hydraulic fitter. I repair and maintain hydraulic systems, primarily on earthmoving equipment.
Ships are much more efficient than cars. Having said that, this wouldn’t have a huge range, nor is it terribly big by container ship standards.
Ok, so the point I was originally trying to make was that claiming a yacht as an entertainment expense was less attractive. Would you agree?
Yeah, so to simplify, written off at a different rate.
My vote is definitely for fire. Learning to first contain and sustain, then how to create fire. Everything else follows on from that.
Cooking food probably started us down a path to become as intelligent as we are today.
And the light allowed us to have free time at night to try new ideas.
And the warmth allowed us to spread out of Africa.
They would have to justify how it is a part of the companies operations. In theory at least.
So a private jet to fly your execs to business meets? Ok.
A yacht? Maybe for entertaining customers? I don’t know about the US, but here in Australia entertainment expenses are written off at a lower rate than other business expenses.
It can do. But your feet do work outside of woods and fields too.