Careful what you throw away. I cleaned my garage in 1998 and threw away
the compete history of the Competition Department. I had every letter and
the answer from the company for a period of 9 years and I tossed it cause I
figured no one would ever care or be interested, including me. Then seeing
the barrel was not full I also tossed out four note books of dyno records on
all the engines I had done. That gave me enough room for the parts I needed
to keep to fix the garden water drip system. Oh yeah, then I decided five
years later to write a book. Good thinking Kas. (yes, the roses are grand)
----- Original Message -----
From: "William G Rosenbach" <wgrosenbach@juno.com>
To: <mjb@autox.team.net>
Cc: <fot@autox.team.net>
Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2004 9:09 AM
Subject: Re: Chuck it!
> Mark,
> Can a person have too much of that kind of stuff?
> If you keep it, you will never need it.
> As soon as you get rid of it, you'll need it!
> Bill
>
> On Wed, 4 Feb 2004 02:28:45 -0700 "Mark J. Bradakis"
<mjb@autox.team.net>
> writes:
> > I'm working on cleaning up the shop. It seems like an infinite task
> > of shuffling various bits of rusted, corroded metal from here to
> > there
> > and back again. What should I keep, and what should get thrown in
> > the
> > dumpster? How many rusted flywheels should one keep on hand? How
> > many
> > corroded brake rotors? How many dented and dirty valve covers?
> >
> > What would you keep, and what would you toss?
> >
> > mjb.
> >
> >
>
> ________________________________________________________________
> The best thing to hit the Internet in years - Juno SpeedBand!
> Surf the Web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER!
|