J
Jay Beattie
Guest
"Richard Sachs" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> snipped: " I tend to doubt it, but then I haven't had a
> chance to
compare different
> frames in this way and probably never will..."
>
>
> no disrepect intended, but you're right - you
> probably never
will, and
> since you don't handle the raw material, it makes it
> that much
harder to
> grasp how the human hand - the human element - comes
> into play.
in all
> fairness, i said earlier that i can't quanify it
> either (this
<is> rbtech,
> after all...), but i believe it is part of the equation.
> and, sorry - i know i shouldn't ask questions i don't
> know the
answer to -
> but i know we have a lawyer here - why is it that there
> are good
ones and not
> so good ones when the law is the law? i'm not trying
> to shift
gears here,
> but only to suggest that law - much like some frame
> building
assembly
> processes - is open to interpretation yet verdicts often
> depend on the
skill of the
> lawyer. apologies in advance if that analogy is just
> so bad!!!
Do not compare metal fab to lawyering. That is too scary.
The variability of result you get in lawyering has no
place in metal fab -- or gardening, or even bartending. --
Jay Beattie.
news:[email protected]...
> snipped: " I tend to doubt it, but then I haven't had a
> chance to
compare different
> frames in this way and probably never will..."
>
>
> no disrepect intended, but you're right - you
> probably never
will, and
> since you don't handle the raw material, it makes it
> that much
harder to
> grasp how the human hand - the human element - comes
> into play.
in all
> fairness, i said earlier that i can't quanify it
> either (this
<is> rbtech,
> after all...), but i believe it is part of the equation.
> and, sorry - i know i shouldn't ask questions i don't
> know the
answer to -
> but i know we have a lawyer here - why is it that there
> are good
ones and not
> so good ones when the law is the law? i'm not trying
> to shift
gears here,
> but only to suggest that law - much like some frame
> building
assembly
> processes - is open to interpretation yet verdicts often
> depend on the
skill of the
> lawyer. apologies in advance if that analogy is just
> so bad!!!
Do not compare metal fab to lawyering. That is too scary.
The variability of result you get in lawyering has no
place in metal fab -- or gardening, or even bartending. --
Jay Beattie.