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Winging it's way Home!

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    Winging it's way Home!

    There's a clickbaity title for ya.

    The story here is that I have a collection of 11 customer projects, that for whatever reason I've never been able to return to their proper owners.

    Several of them, involved contact through an .edu or .mil email address, that expired before the project could be completed. Presumably the fellow graduated, went on to a new posting or a new job or a new city, and the temporary address was deleted after he left. Others I simply lost track of one way or the other.

    What happened in many, if not most of these cases, was I'd have some question about the mod, and I'd send them an email asking about it. Well, I of course can't just sit around and wait for a reply, so I'd move on to something else- and I very much admit that my early project scheduling involved a LOT of squeaky wheel lubrication. The noisiest guy usually got moved up the list.

    So what would happen is I'd run across the project later- days, weeks or months, depending on my schedules- wonder about the progress, and check to see if I missed a reply. I'd usually send more inquiries, and after I'd "collected" four or five such orphans, I'd periodically send off snail-mail inquiries, which usually worked. (Not everyone- in fact, very few people, supplied a phone number.)

    Eventually I gathered a total of 11 such orphans- not all markers, some where just bodies or parts. Multiple emails went unanswered- or worse, bounced back after the address was disabled- and I'd get no reply to snailmail. Even certified letters would either vanish into the void or would come back as "undeliverable".

    Now, on the positive side, the newest one of those 11 has a 2003 postmark. I eventually got a more and more solid handle on my workflow, and more and more people would include a phone number, and fewer and fewer would use "expendable" college or work-supplied addresses.

    I know I re-tried the certified letter thing at least twice- though the most recent of those was probably '07 or '08.

    Anyway, I've always wondered what to do with them. By all legal rights and really, even by most moral rights, I'd done my due diligence, and the stuff became "mine" a decade and a half ago. BUT... that never felt right. Yeah, some of these have been sitting around since the term "hanging chad" meant something, and it's not like I had gone into hiding. I've had my domain name and that same email address since something like 1999, I've been widely active under the same screen name on dozens of boards, still have the same snail-mail box, etc.

    But it still didn't feel right to sell them or even just add them to my own collection. So there they sat, and I figured they'd be right there and auctioned off for pennies on the dollar at my inevitable-yet-epic estate sale.

    But then...

    Just a few days ago, once this place came back online and people- including myself- started posting again, I got a PM from a freshly-registered type, with one post to his name at the time, asking me if I remembered a Taso Typhoon pump that he'd sent in to have a barrel fitted.

    I said yes. I remembered both the gun, the name and the mod. This gun, point in fact:



    It was a simple mod, just turning the end of a barrel to fit the body, a slip-fit kind of like the old Bushmaster pumps. But he also wanted an old Automag backbottle ASA mounted to the trigger guard, much like the CCI Phantom vertical ASA.



    I can't recall precisely what happened- I've slept since then - but that faint bell that rang in the back of my head thinks I had a question about mounting the Automag ASA. Which uses comparatively large 1/4"-20 bolts, which would have forced me to drill holes that would have nearly sliced the trigger guard in half.

    I believe I sent him an email suggesting we get a Phantom part and install that- would have been maybe $25 and change. (As you can see, he sent parts in trade, which we'd arranged beforehand. But I'd have had to buy the ASA, and thus would have had to charge him for it.)

    I very likely then set the gun aside, and moved on to the next project. And probably found it later, checked, as I said, for a response, tried again, waited again, etc.

    I can no longer read the badly-faded postmarks on the stamps (remember those? ) of the package, there's no delivery confirmation number (I don't think they even offered such a service back then) and as you can see, no date on the letter. But I believe this project arrived around 2001 or 2002. I'd used the then-new-to-me Logan to turn it, and I think I picked that up around then.

    So it's been sitting here- languishing, really- for maybe as long as nineteen years.

    But, as of Friday morning, it will be winging it's way home.

    Finally.

    And I can't tell you how much I wanted to use the old joke. The one where the older guy is going through his closet, and finds a suit. he realizes he hasn't worn that suit in twenty-five years, so decides to try it on. Once he puts it on, he finds a claim ticket in one of the pockets- a ticket for a pair of shoes he'd dropped off at a shoe-repair shop... 25 years ago.

    On a whim, he checks the Yellow Pages (hey, like I said, it's an old joke )and to his surprise, finds the shop is still in business. So he takes the claim ticket downtown to the shop, and is further surprised to to see the original owner and his sons still run the place.

    He hands over the ticket and inquires if the shoes are even still there. The proprietor digs through his old ledgers and yes, by jove, the shoes are indeed still there!

    The proprietor hands the ticket back and says "they'll be ready next Thursday".



    Doc.
    Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
    The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
    Paintball in the Movies!

    #2
    That's amazing, hahaha. Good on you for holding on to it.

    Comment


      #3
      While reading this the "99 bottles of beer" shanty came to mind.

      "11 markers on the wall, 11 markers, hand one down pass it around, 10 markers on the wall...."


      "When you are asked if you can do a job, tell 'em, 'Certainly I can!' Then get busy and find out how to do it." - Theodore Roosevelt

      Feedback Link - https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...del-s-feedback

      Comment


        #4
        Awesome to hear that he's gotten back in touch with you.
        This post reminded me that i sent you a big PM the day the old site was hijacked.
        Going to PM you again now for my project gun you have. 😉

        Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk


        Last edited by SETHZILLA!; 07-18-2020, 01:53 AM.
        "What could go wrong?" - Sethzilla!

        Member of WORR BOYZ pump paintball team
        Playing since 1986: Stock, Pump, Mech, Electro, tourney, but now mostly rec.

        Feedback:
        https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...lla-s-feedback

        WTB:
        https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...-wtb-wgp-parts

        Comment


          #6
          Originally posted by Jordan View Post
          Did Manike ever get his PGPs?
          -No, I basically ruined I think it was three of the PGPs trying to make just one the way I wanted it. After... I think it was what, five years? and no little bad blood, I basically sent Simon my first Vee-Twin body kit, at the time worth about a grand, in some attempt at compensation.

          He wasn't happy, I wasn't happy, I'm sure it cost me a lot of business and it cost me Simon as a friend. It was basically just a bad deal all around.

          BUT, I still have the letter Simon sent me along with the PGPs, clipped just to the left of my workbench, as a daily reminder not to screw up like that again.

          Doc.
          Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
          The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
          Paintball in the Movies!

          Comment


            #7
            Wow, I forgot about the infamous PGPs. What were they supposed to be, anyway? What does the letter say?

            Comment


              #8
              The story of those was that back around 1999 or so, Simon send me a box of old PGPs- 12, I think?- that he'd gotten from a long-closed field. The deal was basically I'd make him two semiauto spring-fed pistols in exchange for the rest- keeping in mind that back then, long before things like even the PT Extreme, let alone the TipX, etc. a holsterable, 12-gram semiauto pistol was something of a holy grail.

              Now, even back then this was nothing new- Palmer, of course, had been doing it for a while, and it was a popular home-shop mod. The trick was that almost everyone either modified the lower tube into an LPR, or actually cut it away to install a 'bulkhead' to which a conventional LPR could be screwed in. That required a separate remote line, or a back-bottle 12-gram changer, etc.

              The trick I'd come up with and wanted to use, was to add a separate LPR, basically a fourth tube under the 12-gram chamber. AND I wanted either internal or solid, fixed air lines. That is, I didn't want any more external LPR hoses than absolutely necessary.

              Well, when I started, the purely internal air passages weren't going to work. So I came up with a piece of hard brass tubing that would actually get soldered to the body, to run air from the chamber to the LPR, and then a second from the LPR back to the grip frame. And my pigheaded insistence on trying to make THAT work, come hell or high water, is what basically derailed the entire thing.

              As I said, I destroyed three of the guns trying to make one work. That's very tricky soldering to get everything lined up, and not block the tube with solder. At least one of them I misdrilled the hole for the tube which ruined the body.

              Anyway, months rolled on, turned into a year, turned into two, then three, etc. Keeping in mind I had a shiny new business that I was trying to keep afloat, that I really didn't have the experience for. I started saying back then that I needed a business manager- lock me in the shop to do the work, and have him/her/them actually handle the office work, orders and so on.

              What was worse was I kept getting frustrated by my attempts, and the more frustrated I got, the less I wanted to work on them. No, not the best mindset for a small business, especially a one-man operation, but there it was, nonetheless.

              Long story short, Simon, not unnaturally, simply got angrier as time went on. He was overall extremely patient, but even he ran out of patience. Finally, I'd offered him the very first Vee-Twin body kit I'd made (double-barrel 'Cocker body, for those not in the know) which, as I said, at the time was worth about a grand. Simon was, as I recall, seriously not happy with the deal, and really, neither was I, but both of us wanted that particular albatross off our necks.

              I've always wondered if he ever assembled that kit...

              The letter doesn't say much- it's the letter he included with the pistols when he sent the crate. Just says he made sure to send the one out of the whole mess (he'd bought more than the ones he sent me) that had the lowest serial number. The last two paragraphs talked about a VHS tape he'd also included, and wanted back, showing a very brief demo of his early powered loader patent- which I think eventually became the Odyssey Halo? Not sure on that one, I've slept since then.

              (Funny side story on the tape- my player tried to eat it. I had to crack open the case and transplant the physical spools into a new cassette. The video was privileged information back in the day, and I always wondered if he thought I was trying to play fast and loose with it, somehow. )

              Anyway, as I said, the worst part about all of it is that it cost me Simon as a friend. I strongly suspect he still thinks I'm a jackass.

              Doc.
              Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
              The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
              Paintball in the Movies!

              Comment


                #9
                A long time ago, the DocsMachine forum was an everyday website visit for me. I came across a TASO Typhoon which would've been great to use for modified stock class. In the late 90's, SC Village would host 12-gram pump games and the turn-out was impressive. Unfortunately the TASO Typhoon did not come with a barrel and I needed to help. So I contacted Doc and worked out a deal to trade my Smart Parts Wooden Grips (WGP/AGD frame style) for some machine work. I sent everything to Doc and then lost contact with him. I believe it was because he was receiving so much work and web traffic, that he must've overlook the deal. So I kept trying to reach Doc through forum postings and emails, and could not get anywhere. At one point I was bitter, not because of the TASO Typhoon, but because of the Smart Parts wooden grips which became irreplaceable. The local style of paintball changed, so the focus shifted away from 12-gram pump games. And life moved on.

                The stay-at-home situation brought out a lot of old hobbies, especially a focus paintball. On Reddit, you'll find people like me who started to get back into purchasing new paintball equipment. So I started to visit MCB again, until the site went down.

                After the rebirth of MCB this past month, I noticed Doc was an actively posting and thought I'd send him a message, asking if he recalled anything about a PMI Tagmaster (Which I believe was the marker because of the undercooking-nelson style design. He responded immediately. I didn't realize it was a TASO Typhoon until after he confirmed a few details). After so many years, the TASO Typhoon made its way back, along with a barrel that was machined to fit. And a comic book to keep me entertained.

                I'm glad to be back in the paintball community again, and it is good to see Doc is still active as well. I'll be sending him a lot of Tinkerer's questions to keep me staying-at-home.

                Comment


                  #10
                  Originally posted by Hooptie View Post
                  So I contacted Doc and worked out a deal to trade my Smart Parts Wooden Grips (WGP/AGD frame style) for some machine work.
                  -Oh, those. I thought you meant the .45 frame style, which is why I mentioned the fancy Rainmaker. If they were the WGP/AGD style, chances are very good I still have those on my Sydarm. I was a big fan of those or the LAPCO style fingergroove grips, as they fit my big hands better.

                  Glad to see it finally made it's way home. Like I said, keep track of it- that's still the one and only TASO Typhoon I've ever seen.

                  Doc.
                  Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
                  The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
                  Paintball in the Movies!

                  Comment


                    #11
                    I like how the 2 versions of the story paint a different pictures.

                    Glad it made it home regardless.

                    Comment


                      #12
                      Hi Doc, I sent you a PM recently. Did you get it?
                      "What could go wrong?" - Sethzilla!

                      Member of WORR BOYZ pump paintball team
                      Playing since 1986: Stock, Pump, Mech, Electro, tourney, but now mostly rec.

                      Feedback:
                      https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...lla-s-feedback

                      WTB:
                      https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...-wtb-wgp-parts

                      Comment


                        #13
                        Originally posted by DocsMachine View Post

                        I've always wondered if he ever assembled that kit...

                        Not only has it been assembled I have been shot by it.

                        Comment

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