Briancapecoral
Well-known member
Didn’t have the size I needed, drilled a hole in a few. Faster than going to the hardware store, and cheaper too. Wondering if anyone else has done this?
Pennies made since 1982 are copper plated zinc.Not for anything serious, just anchoring a small plastic shed down with some tapcon screws and they fit the space perfectly. They were not copper, I was kind of surprised when the shavings were silver.
I glued one to the short foot on the microwave. Handy and just the right thickness to stop the rocking.Been using a penny as a spacer/shim for a vial crimp for years. Seems the vials we had and the crimper were both at their limits and didn't crimp the aluminum seal quite tight enough. A washer would've worked, but the penny was in my pocket and now it lives with the crimper. Cheapest possible solution.
Haha. Now that you say that, I put one under the foot of a PC monitor at the station. Not sure if it is still there, there is one guy who would take it out because he doesn't know why it would be there.I glued one to the short foot on the microwave. Handy and just the right thickness to stop the rocking.
Seems ridiculous to me for a number of reasons.Didn’t have the size I needed, drilled a hole in a few. Faster than going to the hardware store, and cheaper too. Wondering if anyone else has done this?
Nope, just checked a bit ago. Some cheap ******* stole it.Haha. Now that you say that, I put one under the foot of a PC monitor at the station. Not sure if it is still there, there is one guy who would take it out because he doesn't know why it would be there.
A few years ago, the thumb rest on my son's clarinet broke at the bend. I ended up making a new one using the back plate from the original, and a modified nickel for the thumb side, silver soldered together. It's actually quite an improvement.A buddy used a Quarter to weld up a O2 sensor bung. He did it as joke to see if it could be done.
The copper layer on the post '82 Lincoln Memorial back pennies used to be pretty thick. On the shield back pennies it's so thin you can just about see through it.Pennies made since 1982 are copper plated zinc.
If you need copper (95% copper that is) find some older ones.
Years ago, I saw a chair like this, and wanted to make one:Washers cost less to make and are worth more.
There's about 1/2 cent worth of copper and they cost $.02 each to make...

