Speed, Accuracy & Efficiency=Profit-catapult

Brian Lawson lawsonic@global.co.za
Sun, 27 Feb 2000 14:41:25 +0200


One smells bad, the other is just bad


Brian Lawson
PTG Assc, MPT.
Johannesburg, South Africa

What´s the difference between POS and PSO?

Is the former one to be considered a chunk of fecal matter?  Is that right?



Kristinn Leifsson
Reykjavík, Iceland








At 16:27 26.2.2000 EST, you wrote:
>In a message dated 2/26/00 1:07:40 PM Pacific Standard Time, jfa19@IDT.NET
>writes:
>
><< Built for the TV show "Northern Exposure" and seen worldwide in two
> different episodes. In
> one episode we flung a 450 pound upright piano 100 yards. In the other
> episode we flung
> coffins into the middle of a lake. To get all the camera angles and
> shots for the piano episode,
> we flung 9 full size upright pianos. All nine pianos consistently landed
> in the same spot. We
> put a crash camera in the impact crater of one piano to get a shot of
> the piano coming
> straight down from about 250 feet in the air.
>
> Joseph Alkana   RPT
>  >>
>
>Kewl.  It's also kewl that nobody has yet said "PSO" in this thread.  I
like
>the idea of the Catapult at the Convention a lot.  Birdcages, square
grands,
>"Grand" spinets, aluminum plate Winter spinets, Ex player uprights, any
>player with the mechanism still in but which plays horribly, just about any
>cheap European piano, especially Irish, just about any Aeolian piano from
the
>era when they were gasping their last substandard materials and workmanship
>breaths, any piano with a bad brass flange rail or butt plates with all the
>center pins coming out sideways.  Every Horugel ever made.  Every Tokai
ever
>made.
>
>We have enough to get started.
>
>Bill Bremmer RPT
>Madison, Wisconsin
>
>




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