How big do you want to print them, and how much money do you have to spend? Are you primarily prntniig B W or color? Will you be prntniig massive quantities for sale or just a few?There are far too many options for a simple answer.
Peter,Guard your heaven with care.I am tleireny with you on the joys of grass-cutting with an ancient ATCO.It was almost a lifetime’s ambition to own a mower with a ride on seat, notwithstanding that my lawn was too small to make it practical. One day at a nearby auction, I bought a 24inch Atco, then some 30 years old, like yours similar to the one used by Her Majesty. I had to replace a few items, like the engine(!) , but it cut the grass magically, always started first time, turned on a sixpence, and I just loved it.You can tell from my use of the past tense, that this tale has a darker side.Came the day, the admiring folk who had looked after my ATCO (now ca 50 years old, and having earnt them a comfortable living), had to tell me that the essential parts now needed were no longer available. What was I to do, but realise my even more deeply held lifetime’s ambition to buy a 24inch ATCO mower with Royal warranty etc., but this time, a NEW one!? A mere couple of thousand pounds or so later, there it was, in gleaming British Racing Green, ready to go.After a fashion it does admittedly still cut nice swathes of two-tone green up and down my lawn, providing the time of year suits its temperament. However : it has an electric start, too weak to do so; it takes several pulls of the back-up system, to burst into life; (in addition it capriciously stops every so often just to set me the task of re-starting); the throttle can only really be set when stationary; it will not even turn on a half-crown, and actually scuffs the grass if you turn too quickly; it has a counter-intuitive safety system, such that the more you hold on and try to pull it back, the more it powers away from you; after 50 years of unremitting R&D and development since its predecessor, it is still frightfully picky over grass length and dampness. My revenge on it has been to buy a Mountfield rotary, that has the impudence to cost a fraction of the price, cuts any length or wetness of grass, more or less, and leaves swathes, albeit only 20 inches wide, that a casual observer would take for the real ATCO thing.Beware your lifetime’s ambitions for they may be fulfilled.Harry
Ciężko byÅ‚o znaleźć ten artykul w google, strona ciekawa, zasÅ‚uguje na wiÄ™kszy ruch. Pozycjonowanie w 2015 staÅ‚o siÄ™ skomplikowane, jest coÅ› co ci siÄ™ napewno przyda, poszukaj sobie w google – niezbÄ™dnik dla każdego webmastera
🙂
How big do you want to print them, and how much money do you have to spend? Are you primarily prntniig B W or color? Will you be prntniig massive quantities for sale or just a few?There are far too many options for a simple answer.
Peter,Guard your heaven with care.I am tleireny with you on the joys of grass-cutting with an ancient ATCO.It was almost a lifetime’s ambition to own a mower with a ride on seat, notwithstanding that my lawn was too small to make it practical. One day at a nearby auction, I bought a 24inch Atco, then some 30 years old, like yours similar to the one used by Her Majesty. I had to replace a few items, like the engine(!) , but it cut the grass magically, always started first time, turned on a sixpence, and I just loved it.You can tell from my use of the past tense, that this tale has a darker side.Came the day, the admiring folk who had looked after my ATCO (now ca 50 years old, and having earnt them a comfortable living), had to tell me that the essential parts now needed were no longer available. What was I to do, but realise my even more deeply held lifetime’s ambition to buy a 24inch ATCO mower with Royal warranty etc., but this time, a NEW one!? A mere couple of thousand pounds or so later, there it was, in gleaming British Racing Green, ready to go.After a fashion it does admittedly still cut nice swathes of two-tone green up and down my lawn, providing the time of year suits its temperament. However : it has an electric start, too weak to do so; it takes several pulls of the back-up system, to burst into life; (in addition it capriciously stops every so often just to set me the task of re-starting); the throttle can only really be set when stationary; it will not even turn on a half-crown, and actually scuffs the grass if you turn too quickly; it has a counter-intuitive safety system, such that the more you hold on and try to pull it back, the more it powers away from you; after 50 years of unremitting R&D and development since its predecessor, it is still frightfully picky over grass length and dampness. My revenge on it has been to buy a Mountfield rotary, that has the impudence to cost a fraction of the price, cuts any length or wetness of grass, more or less, and leaves swathes, albeit only 20 inches wide, that a casual observer would take for the real ATCO thing.Beware your lifetime’s ambitions for they may be fulfilled.Harry
Ciężko byÅ‚o znaleźć ten artykul w google, strona ciekawa, zasÅ‚uguje na wiÄ™kszy ruch. Pozycjonowanie w 2015 staÅ‚o siÄ™ skomplikowane, jest coÅ› co ci siÄ™ napewno przyda, poszukaj sobie w google – niezbÄ™dnik dla każdego webmastera