Ok, Rustins it is. (I'll just have to disturb that moth in my wallet, grumpy though it gets)
Mailee - that link: G3 followed by G10?
Wet wet-and-dry? I take it that means damp rather than sopping wet, and avoid water getting to the ends or underside? Not like on a car, where you can work with a constant stream if you want to?
(This is all terrifically helpful - thanks again. Woodwork was the only subject I'd actually do voluntarily at lunchtime & after school. Why didn't I take it up properly? Rue! - Thank god, in a way, for the redundancy!)
Mailee - that link: G3 followed by G10?
Wet wet-and-dry? I take it that means damp rather than sopping wet, and avoid water getting to the ends or underside? Not like on a car, where you can work with a constant stream if you want to?
(This is all terrifically helpful - thanks again. Woodwork was the only subject I'd actually do voluntarily at lunchtime & after school. Why didn't I take it up properly? Rue! - Thank god, in a way, for the redundancy!)