I could not agree more. Much better than to wish you had done it right first
time around (by which I mean doing it to the standard you will be happy with)
than to look at it over your ownership and wish you'd done it differently.
I think that rather than to have been giving you advice on how to meet the
time schedule, it is exactly right that it is the schedule that seems to be
the problem.
----- Original Message -----
From: Mark and Kathy
To: healeys@Autox.Team.Net
Sent: Tuesday, December 21, 2004 7:16 PM
Subject: Re: Best way to degrease, Advise
Try not to let your "fun" hobby take over your life. When your hobby
becomes your life the "fun" goes away.
Maybe its time to rethink your time schedule and bring the unit back to
your
house, clean it up as needed , then return it to the painter when time
allows again. You can clean it at your leisure and above all your still
dealing with an understanding painter and not one that may be a bit perturb
from the inconvenience of the extra cleaning and space that is taken up.
Your patience will pay off when you look back in hind sight at the time
when
you hurried through this pretty major event and took your time and got the
job done to your satisfaction.
Just a bit of advice from a past "Hobby Crammer".
Thankfully I did my cramming on MGs and TRs and left my patience for my
Healey. :) Its so much more fun and enjoyable at a slower pace.
Mark
----- Original Message -----
From: "57 Healey" <57healey@gmail.com>
To: "Rick Swain" <grain@auracom.com>
Cc: "Healey List" <healeys@autox.team.net>
Sent: Tuesday, December 21, 2004 1:04 PM
Subject: Re: Best way to degrease an engine bay
> The engine is soon to be out. Time is exactally the problem, as he is
> finding the cleaning job bigger than he anticipated (read more $$$ for
> me to spend) and it needs to be done quickly as it is taking up shop
> time (one man operation). I have a week or so before it becomes an
> issue, but I need to figure out my plan soon.
|