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Originally Posted by PhantomChaos
(Post 3693268)
I'm feeling it now.... :drink::drink::drink::drink:
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Originally Posted by Panther
(Post 3693161)
Well thanks. lol
To be honest, not feeling like it was back when... I've definitely spent a lot of time on this site adding content and accruing well over 10K posts. Either the site and the persona has changed or I've changed. Either way, life is good! :ernaehrung004: |
Originally Posted by Expensive Date
(Post 3693498)
The only thing thats stays the same is that things will always change. I think that for the most part we as a group are not as trusting as we once were. There are some real scumbags in this industry.
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Originally Posted by Expensive Date
(Post 3693498)
There are some real scumbags in this industry.
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Originally Posted by Comanche3Six
(Post 3693609)
Sunkins spawn....
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Originally Posted by expensive date
(Post 3693498)
the only thing thats stays the same is that things will always change. I think that for the most part we as a group are not as trusting as we once were. There are some real scumbags in this industry.
yup!! |
I might have posted this before but to those new here is my opinion on how this happened, it very much reminds me of something else.
When I was a cop there was a pursuit on the other side of the precinct, I went ahead to intercept. He was stopped before I got there and outside of the car cuffed. There were about 5 other units there, myself and one other guy were searching the car the guy who was cuffed was standing by the rear of his car. I then hear another cop say he has the gun on him, he hade a loaded 9 in the small of his back, could have easily killed a couple of us that day how did this happen? because everyone thought the other guy searched him because he was cuffed......Why is this the same? Because Chris was around here a while he always surrounded himself with credible people. So every one thought he has to be legit we all thought the other guy searched him. |
With all the Pantera info floating around......
I miss this thread!! |
Ttt
Originally Posted by Chris Sunkin
(Post 2711602)
When I rolled my TG over the embankment, the 4 10K straps held on. Didn't help much- everything was destroyed, but the trailer stayed firmly stuck to the boat.
Originally Posted by Chris Sunkin
(Post 2707752)
I live in Ohio and travel the state extensively. Wouldn't be a problem for me to swing by and convey a message.
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Deleted...
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Originally Posted by Expensive Date
(Post 3693769)
I Because Chris was around here a while he always surrounded himself with credible people. So every one thought he has to be legit we all thought the other guy searched him.
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Originally Posted by Chris Sunkin View Post
When I rolled my TG over the embankment, the 4 10K straps held on. Didn't help much- everything was destroyed, but the trailer stayed firmly stuck to the boat. or "When I rolled my imaginary TG over the embankment, the 4 10K straps held on. Didn't help much- my fantasy was destroyed." |
Originally Posted by TexomaPowerboater
(Post 3750038)
All they had to do was see the guy was posting every saturday and sunday during the summer weekends. People with money like he was pretending to have don't have the time to nor do they want to keyboard boat all day.
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Originally Posted by TexomaPowerboater
(Post 3750038)
All they had to do was see the guy was posting every saturday and sunday during the summer weekends. People with money like he was pretending to have don't have the time to nor do they want to keyboard boat all day.
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Oh ya. The Great Wall of Sunkin. Good times.
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Originally Posted by pasquesi
(Post 3750098)
He was home managing the installation of the "normandy beach" I beam installation to keep the locals from riding on his lawn.:evilb:
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Originally Posted by Indy
(Post 3750316)
They must erect a shrine around it on Memorial Day weekend.
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Be careful he might swing by and convey a message
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Message recieved.................... He Lies .................................. Lot's .......................................
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1 Attachment(s)
Lol.
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Originally Posted by CigDaze
(Post 3750651)
Lol.
|
Originally Posted by CigDaze
(Post 3750651)
Lol.
|
http://www.mccookracing.com/articles...oidRipoffs.htm
How to Avoid Getting Ripped-Off at the Cybermarket by Chris Sunkin These are a few things I have picked up over the last few years as I deal more and more in the "cyber marketplace". There's not one of these actions that are unique or unfamiliar to any of us but I make it a RULE to do on each and every transaction. Here's the first one: "Who do you trust?" That's an easy one for me. We all have folks in our lives that we'd give $20 to no questions asked, knowing with all confidence you're going to see it. Some of us are even lucky enough to have a few folks we'd give $500 (or more) with the same confidence. That's the test I use. I ask myself, "would I hand this person $500?" If not, they go into the second group: the group that needs due diligence before performing a transaction. This is why I wrote "RULE". If you make rules for yourself and consider them to be rules, you're much less likely to "bend" them and make a mistake. Second: Know who you're dealing with. Even if it's off a website, a message board or an online auction, ask the seller for a name, address and phone number. On big transactions, I ask for a fax of a driver's license. If a guy won't send this info, there must be a reason and I'm gone. Now that you have the information, CONFIRM IT! A simple call to directory information will let you know if it's legit. While you're there, dial the number and say hi. Maybe you just made a thousand dollar deal with this guy's 15-year-old pothead kid. You'll know after the call. Here's another great tool: http://www.langenberg.com. You can look up everyone on this. Remember, kids can now build complete websites. Just because someone looks like a big business doesn't mean they are. Check everyone out unless you trust them implicitly- make no assumptions unless you have the money to burn. While I'm online, I can easily search the county that the seller lives in and in a minute know if he has a criminal record. I figure if a guy does it once, he just may do it again. I don't hire felons and I don't trade with them. Third: Documentation, documentation, documentation. Every email, auction result page and everything else gets printed and stapled together. If I have a phone conversation, those notes get sent to the other party, either by e-mail, fax or mail. I avoid a lot of misunderstandings this way- even if there's no malice intended on either part. If we both understand the same thing, we're likely to avoid problems. I go into some details, such as "This is what I understand the condition to be... (And write the seller's description in detail)" Sometimes what someone says doesn't look as good to them when they're reading it. Plus, if things go bad, you have proof and evidence of an agreement- in some circles this is known as a contract. Contracts are useful if you ever want to enjoy that other magic word- judgment. There are lots of creative ways to get and collect on judgments and I won't go into them here. Suffice to say that no details make judgments unlikely. No judgment often makes collection unlikely. OK, so we've made our deal and we both have a clear understanding of what's expected of each other. Time for.. Fourth- Payment. This is a no-brainer. USPS money orders sent via USPS priority mail with delivery receipt. If you pay this way, you just got your own private, nationwide police force in the deal- the Postal Inspector's Service. Soliciting funds for goods and not delivering is fraud. Use the mail and it's POSTAL FRAUD. Fraud is a local thing and the police in Ludowici, Georgia are unlikely to get too interested in some local boy clipping a Yankee for a couple hundred bucks. Mail fraud is a Federal crime and these boys don't screw around. If you did the first steps and documented everything, paying by Postal MO and sending it confirmed delivery is handing it to these guys on a silver platter. Anyone who doesn't want to accept payment in this form KNOWS this is a sure-fire way to end up doing time. I had a fellow in Atlanta get funny on me a year or so ago. Lots of excuses for not sending the package, no response to calls or email. The last e-mail told him about the part where cashing those Postal MO's and refusing to send the item was a Federal crime and I was filing charges in 72 hours. Of course, I didn't hear from him so I did as I said I would. It's an easy form to fill out and you staple all the copies right to it. 2 weeks later, I received a Western Union wire of funds and an apology, asking that I let the Mail cops know he did what they asked. Here's the thing- I made it absolutely simple for the Postal Inspector boys. I had everything on paper- both his and mine. There was absolutely no question on this one and they could clear one quick and easy. I did the tough parts for them and handed it to them "on a silver platter". Fifth- know the law. A bit of research on State-level laws can be very helpful. A few years back, I got clipped for about a grand from a guy I knew in Connecticut. He was an acquaintance and a business associate. I made the mistake of confusing friendliness for friendship. Familiarity can be dangerous. Anyway, Mr. Deadbeat was slow to send a check and when it did come, it bounced. I called him and he ducked me for a bit but I finally caught him. More excuses and a sob story. I hung up and called the local police station. Amazingly, they were happy to help. The faxed a form and I filled it out, had it notarized and sent it back. They went right out and hooked him. About 3 hours later, I got a call from Mr. Deadbeat's wife begging me to drop the charge and have her husband released from custody. Apparently Connecticut has some very strict check bouncing laws. Wife managed to make it to Western Union and hubby was home for dinner. It's funny how handcuffs and bars eliminate obstacles to locating funds. I know Florida is that same way. I'm happy to say that no one I know that uses these techniques has ever lost a dime on a transaction. That doesn't mean it won't happen at some point. There are crooks out there that can and do catch smart, diligent people all the time. The really good ones are usually trolling for a big-ticket score so I figure I'm safe. The one's we usually run into trying to knock off $500 in a knife scam are usually amateurs and penny-ante guys. The last thing... Most of the people I talk to that got clipped got caught being greedy or doing something they knew they shouldn't be doing. Greed can make smart people really stupid. Ask a cop; they'll tell you hundreds of amazing stories. "Too good to be true" and "hurry before you miss it" are typically recipes for disaster. *** :party-smiley-004: |
http://www.mccookracing.com/raceTips.htm
Submitted by Chris Sunkin There are many factors to consider when selecting a fuel. Most of them would require a chemist experienced in hydrocarbon fuels to help you decipher In short, there are many ways to formulate a fuel through selection of base product to a whole catalog of additives and processes that enhance certain attributes The easiest way is to select the right fuel is to visit the VP fuels website No other fuel provider has focused more energy on the 2-stroke motorcycle community than VP They have some new, oxygenated fuels that really add performance. Octane is just one measure of how a fuel will behave Too much octane without adequate compression will definitely hurt performance Octane is the fuel's resistance to combustion. Compression of the fuel/air mixture reduces a fuel's resistance to combustion and given enough pressure, the resultant heat will cause combustion on its own That's the principle behind a Diesel engine as well as the root cause of detonation Detonation is sometimes helped along by deposits in the combustion chamber Anyway, back to octane- if your octane rating is too high, your compressed fuel/air mixture is going to be harder to light via the spark plug That means that your effective ignition timing- that is, the point not where the spark hits but where the mixture ignites, will be retarded Simply advancing the ignition point in a fixed timing engine will compensate at high RPM but will kill the lower RPM power. As far as changing fuel/air ratios with race gas- you'd probably see a minor change depending on the fuel you used It could go either way, richer or leaner, depending on the fuel It wouldn't be anywhere near as pronounced as if you went from 32:1 pre-mix to 40:1, maybe a couple percent. In the end, there are only a few choices- make a compromise and use a fuel that's formulated for a high-efficiency 4-stroke that is required to meet your local emissions regulations (local pump gas) or use a fuel specifically formulated for your exact application (VP or other 2-stroke specific fuel. Home-brew fuel blends are likely to do more harm than good It's unlikely you'll get the best results through random experimentation. :helmet: |
McCookRacing.com Contributing Editors:
Chuck Davis #40 Raphael 'Tag' Hargrove III #366 Steve Clark #309D Fred '900' Guidi Dave Russell #832 John Nicholas #12 Charlie Oxford #20E Rich Fogel Terry Frazier #71E John Putkey #253 Fritz Guenther #22T Al Conte #48J Giles Nelson #665 Bruce Rounsaville #9J Marcus Fresco #88L Mark Hayzlett #85M Perry Sconzert #99D Stephen Gautreau #999 Tom Long #20B Robert Haag #74Y Stu Osborn #657 'Firko' Mark Firkin #53 Randy Smith #24 Mark Jarecki #45Q Rick Doughty Joe Abbate #43F Siege #306 Joey Poole #962 P.J. Read #357 Nigel Hollingsworth #356 Michael McCook #41 George Lookenbill #84 Chris Sunkin ;) |
Originally Posted by 99fever27
(Post 3751193)
http://www.mccookracing.com/articles...oidRipoffs.htm
How to Avoid Getting Ripped-Off at the Cybermarket by Chris Sunkin These are a few things I have picked up over the last few years as I deal more and more in the "cyber marketplace". There's not one of these actions that are unique or unfamiliar to any of us but I make it a RULE to do on each and every transaction. Here's the first one: "Who do you trust?" That's an easy one for me. We all have folks in our lives that we'd give $20 to no questions asked, knowing with all confidence you're going to see it. Some of us are even lucky enough to have a few folks we'd give $500 (or more) with the same confidence. That's the test I use. I ask myself, "would I hand this person $500?" If not, they go into the second group: the group that needs due diligence before performing a transaction. This is why I wrote "RULE". If you make rules for yourself and consider them to be rules, you're much less likely to "bend" them and make a mistake. Second: Know who you're dealing with. Even if it's off a website, a message board or an online auction, ask the seller for a name, address and phone number. On big transactions, I ask for a fax of a driver's license. If a guy won't send this info, there must be a reason and I'm gone. Now that you have the information, CONFIRM IT! A simple call to directory information will let you know if it's legit. While you're there, dial the number and say hi. Maybe you just made a thousand dollar deal with this guy's 15-year-old pothead kid. You'll know after the call. Here's another great tool: http://www.langenberg.com. You can look up everyone on this. Remember, kids can now build complete websites. Just because someone looks like a big business doesn't mean they are. Check everyone out unless you trust them implicitly- make no assumptions unless you have the money to burn. While I'm online, I can easily search the county that the seller lives in and in a minute know if he has a criminal record. I figure if a guy does it once, he just may do it again. I don't hire felons and I don't trade with them. Third: Documentation, documentation, documentation. Every email, auction result page and everything else gets printed and stapled together. If I have a phone conversation, those notes get sent to the other party, either by e-mail, fax or mail. I avoid a lot of misunderstandings this way- even if there's no malice intended on either part. If we both understand the same thing, we're likely to avoid problems. I go into some details, such as "This is what I understand the condition to be... (And write the seller's description in detail)" Sometimes what someone says doesn't look as good to them when they're reading it. Plus, if things go bad, you have proof and evidence of an agreement- in some circles this is known as a contract. Contracts are useful if you ever want to enjoy that other magic word- judgment. There are lots of creative ways to get and collect on judgments and I won't go into them here. Suffice to say that no details make judgments unlikely. No judgment often makes collection unlikely. OK, so we've made our deal and we both have a clear understanding of what's expected of each other. Time for.. Fourth- Payment. This is a no-brainer. USPS money orders sent via USPS priority mail with delivery receipt. If you pay this way, you just got your own private, nationwide police force in the deal- the Postal Inspector's Service. Soliciting funds for goods and not delivering is fraud. Use the mail and it's POSTAL FRAUD. Fraud is a local thing and the police in Ludowici, Georgia are unlikely to get too interested in some local boy clipping a Yankee for a couple hundred bucks. Mail fraud is a Federal crime and these boys don't screw around. If you did the first steps and documented everything, paying by Postal MO and sending it confirmed delivery is handing it to these guys on a silver platter. Anyone who doesn't want to accept payment in this form KNOWS this is a sure-fire way to end up doing time. I had a fellow in Atlanta get funny on me a year or so ago. Lots of excuses for not sending the package, no response to calls or email. The last e-mail told him about the part where cashing those Postal MO's and refusing to send the item was a Federal crime and I was filing charges in 72 hours. Of course, I didn't hear from him so I did as I said I would. It's an easy form to fill out and you staple all the copies right to it. 2 weeks later, I received a Western Union wire of funds and an apology, asking that I let the Mail cops know he did what they asked. Here's the thing- I made it absolutely simple for the Postal Inspector boys. I had everything on paper- both his and mine. There was absolutely no question on this one and they could clear one quick and easy. I did the tough parts for them and handed it to them "on a silver platter". Fifth- know the law. A bit of research on State-level laws can be very helpful. A few years back, I got clipped for about a grand from a guy I knew in Connecticut. He was an acquaintance and a business associate. I made the mistake of confusing friendliness for friendship. Familiarity can be dangerous. Anyway, Mr. Deadbeat was slow to send a check and when it did come, it bounced. I called him and he ducked me for a bit but I finally caught him. More excuses and a sob story. I hung up and called the local police station. Amazingly, they were happy to help. The faxed a form and I filled it out, had it notarized and sent it back. They went right out and hooked him. About 3 hours later, I got a call from Mr. Deadbeat's wife begging me to drop the charge and have her husband released from custody. Apparently Connecticut has some very strict check bouncing laws. Wife managed to make it to Western Union and hubby was home for dinner. It's funny how handcuffs and bars eliminate obstacles to locating funds. I know Florida is that same way. I'm happy to say that no one I know that uses these techniques has ever lost a dime on a transaction. That doesn't mean it won't happen at some point. There are crooks out there that can and do catch smart, diligent people all the time. The really good ones are usually trolling for a big-ticket score so I figure I'm safe. The one's we usually run into trying to knock off $500 in a knife scam are usually amateurs and penny-ante guys. The last thing... Most of the people I talk to that got clipped got caught being greedy or doing something they knew they shouldn't be doing. Greed can make smart people really stupid. Ask a cop; they'll tell you hundreds of amazing stories. "Too good to be true" and "hurry before you miss it" are typically recipes for disaster. *** :party-smiley-004: When did he write that ? Unphuckinbelievable |
Originally Posted by 99fever27
(Post 3751193)
http://www.mccookracing.com/articles...oidRipoffs.htm
How to Avoid Getting Ripped-Off at the Cybermarket by Chris Sunkin These are a few things I have picked up over the last few years as I deal more and more in the "cyber marketplace". There's not one of these actions that are unique or unfamiliar to any of us but I make it a RULE to do on each and every transaction. Here's the first one: "Who do you trust?" That's an easy one for me. We all have folks in our lives that we'd give $20 to no questions asked, knowing with all confidence you're going to see it. Some of us are even lucky enough to have a few folks we'd give $500 (or more) with the same confidence. That's the test I use. I ask myself, "would I hand this person $500?" If not, they go into the second group: the group that needs due diligence before performing a transaction. This is why I wrote "RULE". If you make rules for yourself and consider them to be rules, you're much less likely to "bend" them and make a mistake. Second: Know who you're dealing with. Even if it's off a website, a message board or an online auction, ask the seller for a name, address and phone number. On big transactions, I ask for a fax of a driver's license. If a guy won't send this info, there must be a reason and I'm gone. Now that you have the information, CONFIRM IT! A simple call to directory information will let you know if it's legit. While you're there, dial the number and say hi. Maybe you just made a thousand dollar deal with this guy's 15-year-old pothead kid. You'll know after the call. Here's another great tool: http://www.langenberg.com. You can look up everyone on this. Remember, kids can now build complete websites. Just because someone looks like a big business doesn't mean they are. Check everyone out unless you trust them implicitly- make no assumptions unless you have the money to burn. While I'm online, I can easily search the county that the seller lives in and in a minute know if he has a criminal record. I figure if a guy does it once, he just may do it again. I don't hire felons and I don't trade with them. Third: Documentation, documentation, documentation. Every email, auction result page and everything else gets printed and stapled together. If I have a phone conversation, those notes get sent to the other party, either by e-mail, fax or mail. I avoid a lot of misunderstandings this way- even if there's no malice intended on either part. If we both understand the same thing, we're likely to avoid problems. I go into some details, such as "This is what I understand the condition to be... (And write the seller's description in detail)" Sometimes what someone says doesn't look as good to them when they're reading it. Plus, if things go bad, you have proof and evidence of an agreement- in some circles this is known as a contract. Contracts are useful if you ever want to enjoy that other magic word- judgment. There are lots of creative ways to get and collect on judgments and I won't go into them here. Suffice to say that no details make judgments unlikely. No judgment often makes collection unlikely. OK, so we've made our deal and we both have a clear understanding of what's expected of each other. Time for.. Fourth- Payment. This is a no-brainer. USPS money orders sent via USPS priority mail with delivery receipt. If you pay this way, you just got your own private, nationwide police force in the deal- the Postal Inspector's Service. Soliciting funds for goods and not delivering is fraud. Use the mail and it's POSTAL FRAUD. Fraud is a local thing and the police in Ludowici, Georgia are unlikely to get too interested in some local boy clipping a Yankee for a couple hundred bucks. Mail fraud is a Federal crime and these boys don't screw around. If you did the first steps and documented everything, paying by Postal MO and sending it confirmed delivery is handing it to these guys on a silver platter. Anyone who doesn't want to accept payment in this form KNOWS this is a sure-fire way to end up doing time. I had a fellow in Atlanta get funny on me a year or so ago. Lots of excuses for not sending the package, no response to calls or email. The last e-mail told him about the part where cashing those Postal MO's and refusing to send the item was a Federal crime and I was filing charges in 72 hours. Of course, I didn't hear from him so I did as I said I would. It's an easy form to fill out and you staple all the copies right to it. 2 weeks later, I received a Western Union wire of funds and an apology, asking that I let the Mail cops know he did what they asked. Here's the thing- I made it absolutely simple for the Postal Inspector boys. I had everything on paper- both his and mine. There was absolutely no question on this one and they could clear one quick and easy. I did the tough parts for them and handed it to them "on a silver platter". Fifth- know the law. A bit of research on State-level laws can be very helpful. A few years back, I got clipped for about a grand from a guy I knew in Connecticut. He was an acquaintance and a business associate. I made the mistake of confusing friendliness for friendship. Familiarity can be dangerous. Anyway, Mr. Deadbeat was slow to send a check and when it did come, it bounced. I called him and he ducked me for a bit but I finally caught him. More excuses and a sob story. I hung up and called the local police station. Amazingly, they were happy to help. The faxed a form and I filled it out, had it notarized and sent it back. They went right out and hooked him. About 3 hours later, I got a call from Mr. Deadbeat's wife begging me to drop the charge and have her husband released from custody. Apparently Connecticut has some very strict check bouncing laws. Wife managed to make it to Western Union and hubby was home for dinner. It's funny how handcuffs and bars eliminate obstacles to locating funds. I know Florida is that same way. I'm happy to say that no one I know that uses these techniques has ever lost a dime on a transaction. That doesn't mean it won't happen at some point. There are crooks out there that can and do catch smart, diligent people all the time. The really good ones are usually trolling for a big-ticket score so I figure I'm safe. The one's we usually run into trying to knock off $500 in a knife scam are usually amateurs and penny-ante guys. The last thing... Most of the people I talk to that got clipped got caught being greedy or doing something they knew they shouldn't be doing. Greed can make smart people really stupid. Ask a cop; they'll tell you hundreds of amazing stories. "Too good to be true" and "hurry before you miss it" are typically recipes for disaster. *** :party-smiley-004: |
Sunkin's little apachelizard brain was working overtime on that novel. :wizard:
Thanks for this one, Nick. Google is forever. http://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/a...nkingoogle.jpg |
Originally Posted by catastrophe
(Post 3751225)
Have never seen that one.
When did he write that ? Unphuckinbelievable ed |
I was just reading a old thread where some deadbeat had declared bankruptcy and was on here asking how to get a loan for a gofast. When the guy was chastised for being a POS Sunkin jumped right in and helped pummel him until a couple of long time oso'ers admited THEY were bankrupt at one point too and then he was kissing there azz saying it was OK, this guy is a frickin Chameleon!!!!!
|
Originally Posted by articfriends
(Post 3751439)
I was just reading a old thread where some deadbeat had declared bankruptcy and was on here asking how to get a loan for a gofast. When the guy was chastised for being a POS Sunkin jumped right in and helped pummel him until a couple of long time oso'ers admited THEY were bankrupt at one point too and then he was kissing there azz saying it was OK, this guy is a frickin Chameleon!!!!!
|
Originally Posted by thirdchildhood
(Post 3751441)
Got the link? I'm bored. :)
The OP deleted a bunch of stuff after he started threatening CNC for ripping on him but the Sunkin "wisdom" was left for posterity!!!:evilb: That is typical Sunkin, jump on the band wagon spouting off as if he was Bruce Williams handing out advice! |
Originally Posted by articfriends
(Post 3751466)
http://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/i...-after-bk.html
The OP deleted a bunch of stuff after he started threatening CNC for ripping on him but the Sunkin "wisdom" was left for posterity!!!:evilb: That is typical Sunkin, jump on the band wagon spouting off as if he was Bruce Williams handing out advice! Sad how many people seemed to worship the ground this clown walked on......... |
Originally Posted by articfriends
(Post 3751439)
I was just reading a old thread where some deadbeat had declared bankruptcy and was on here asking how to get a loan for a gofast. When the guy was chastised for being a POS Sunkin jumped right in and helped pummel him until a couple of long time oso'ers admited THEY were bankrupt at one point too and then he was kissing there azz saying it was OK, this guy is a frickin Chameleon!!!!!
somehow that thread and what was said between us might have the reason I was asked by him to be on the Board at SOS and one of the first few to resign. |
Originally Posted by cosmic12
(Post 3751619)
Ouch! I remember that one. And I am still boatless.
somehow that thread and what was said between us might have the reason I was asked by him to be on the Board at SOS and one of the first few to resign. |
Originally Posted by jayboat
(Post 3751280)
Sunkin's little apachelizard brain was working overtime on that novel. :wizard:
Thanks for this one, Nick. Google is forever. http://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/a...nkingoogle.jpg |
2 Attachment(s)
Still no pool, and that looks like a pretty small Apache. Just sayin.... :drink: :drink: :drink:
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thats a 21ft apache scout
|
1 Attachment(s)
2013 and nothing has changed
Even after ripping the alignment company a new A hole for 75K. |
Originally Posted by Level III Chaos
(Post 3885480)
Still no pool, and that looks like a pretty small Apache. Just sayin.... :drink: :drink: :drink:
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