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Charlie June 27th 05 10:07 PM

You make no sense...
Who ****ed in your Cheerios this morning anyway Ricky?

--

Charlie
Ham Radio - AD5TH
www.ad5th.com
Deep South 2 Meter SSB Net
www.deepsouthnet.net





"Rick Scott" wrote in message
oups.com...


Charlie wrote:
Yeah back in the early 80's.
-----------------------------
Path:



Oh Really, So you called me a liar that you knew nothing about headers.
So, now your saying that you were lying about that whole affair. Let
me refresh you memory. So you say your an early 80s Internet user ...
But in 2002 you claim to not know what the INTERNET was. And using an
At the IRS.GOV addy wasnt too bright either. Some from the 80s
Internet would know that. SO what gov or non profit system were you
using back in the "80s"


From: "CJ"
Newsgroups:
rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.policy ,rec.radio.amateur.equipment
Subject: W9INN Antennas Page now ONLINE!
Date: Wed, 8 May 2002 09:56:11 -0700
Organization: Posted via Supernews, http://www.supernews.com
Message-ID:
References:





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Hello Rick,
I have no idea what in the world you are talking about...what are
"headers" anyway?
Lord bless you and your family.....hope to catch you on the air one of
these days.
Here is the link you asked about Rick....
---------------
Cushcraft R7 / R7000 "black box" photo w/component values, schematic,
trap illustration, high SWR fix tips,
and R7 / R7000 assembly -and- installation manuals all downloadable at
this link.....

http://www.ab7sl.com/index.html?row1col2=r7.html
----------------

73 / DX de Charles
AB7SL - Ham Radio Pages
www.ab7sl.com




Charlie June 27th 05 10:08 PM

Hahahahaha!

OH YEAH

sweepstakes
- and -
sweepsteaks

Are just simple typos......give it a f__king rest moron...

--

Charlie
Ham Radio - AD5TH
www.ad5th.com
Deep South 2 Meter SSB Net
www.deepsouthnet.net





"Rick Scott" wrote in message
oups.com...


Charlie wrote:
Rick here is a cut and paste from your QRZ page for your callsign of N7HJ
Ricky J Scott
5 77th Pl SW
Everett WA 98203
USA


HERE is the snippet....
--
"The only contest I enter is Sweepsteaks (Both CW and SSB) so look for me
there. "
---
Do you prefer New York Strip or Black Angus Rib Eye?
Besides the logic processing you also need to work on spelling too...how
old
are you.. 9?
And don't say it's a TYPO cuz it AIN'T! Like I said always good for a
chuckle....


At least you can spell CW and SSB correctly....how long did those take to
learn Ricky?
--

Charlie
Ham Radio - AD5TH
www.ad5th.com
Deep South 2 Meter SSB Net
www.deepsouthnet.net



Ahhh Standard comeback there Charlie. Dive right to a Typo anywhere
you can find it and try to deflect from the truth.

Nice try.

Dont worry, I wont bother you again, as your still they same ole
charlie.

Just dont start promoting your Affiliate programs again and dont forge
headers again and you will not ever hear from me.

Good luck with your tower, but as a matter of principle, you might want
to save up a bit of rainy day cash for when the Insurance issue pops
up.

Let us know how the Power Company likes your Modification to thier
Power Pole. Ours issue tickets for Nails in them. Wonder how a tower
harness will go over.




gb July 2nd 05 12:24 AM

"Charlie" wrote in message
...

Our insurance man has added the structure to our list of covered items in
our policy so evidently it was OK for coverage.

Unfortunately, your local agent will have little or no input into any damage
or property loss claim that you may make -- that is the adjusters and claim
reps --
a whole another breed of cat (and not the domestic kind).
If you get into personal injury or loss of life - it gets complicated very
quickly. Fortunate that you don't have close neighbors.

gb



Rick Scott July 2nd 05 01:17 AM

Unfortunately, your local agent will have little or no input into any damage
or property loss claim that you may make -- that is the adjusters and claim
reps --
a whole another breed of cat (and not the domestic kind).
If you get into personal injury or loss of life - it gets complicated very
quickly. Fortunate that you don't have close neighbors.

gb


Yep underwriters are more than willing to add things to make more bucks.

Getting the claim later is an all together another proposition.

John July 5th 05 03:34 AM

If an agent, a representative of an insurance company, sells and the company
accepts a property then anything that happens (if fortuitous, or accidental)
to that property is covered as long as it falls within the policy language,
perils insured against and property covered.

The company can't come back AFTER a loss and deny payment because of
something not defined in the policy. They can't just make it up after the
fact.

73

"Rick Scott" wrote in message
...
Unfortunately, your local agent will have little or no input into any
damage or property loss claim that you may make -- that is the adjusters
and claim reps --
a whole another breed of cat (and not the domestic kind).
If you get into personal injury or loss of life - it gets complicated
very quickly. Fortunate that you don't have close neighbors.

gb


Yep underwriters are more than willing to add things to make more bucks.

Getting the claim later is an all together another proposition.




Ed Price July 5th 05 06:53 AM


"John" wrote in message
news:Wkmye.61939$%Z2.8135@lakeread08...
If an agent, a representative of an insurance company, sells and the
company accepts a property then anything that happens (if fortuitous, or
accidental) to that property is covered as long as it falls within the
policy language, perils insured against and property covered.

The company can't come back AFTER a loss and deny payment because of
something not defined in the policy. They can't just make it up after the
fact.

73


I'll bet that there's "language in the policy" that is sufficiently vague
and flexible such that the company can stretch a loophole for anything that
it wants. Maybe I'm too paranoid, but the insurance company expects that an
insured property is a normal and typical example of materials and
construction, and that due care was applied to the design. Further, the
property should be in compliance with local existing building codes and
standards.

If you wired half your house with lamp cord, never got a permit, and have no
record of inspection, do you think the company agent should know this by
himself? If the loss is big enough, and especially if there's some unusual
circumstances (fire inspector's report, neighbor's claims), then the
company's lawyers have plenty of room to work in. You may have the utmost
confidence in your own workmanship, but, if the insurance company is trying
to avoid a $500k claim, all they have to do is say "no." So then what
happens? You take the insurance company to court, and they ask you about
your experience in soils engineering, concrete construction, structural
engineering, calculation of wind loading, welding certifications, experience
with lightning protection, etc. They will cut you up into very small pieces.

Everything unusual about your property should be defined, and if your agent
is still eager to sell you a policy despite your "creative engineering",
then I would start to wonder why the agent is so desperate to sell policies.

--
Ed
WB6WSN
El Cajon, CA USA



an_old_friend July 5th 05 06:55 AM



John (nospam) wrote:
If an agent, a representative of an insurance company, sells and the company
accepts a property then anything that happens (if fortuitous, or accidental)
to that property is covered as long as it falls within the policy language,
perils insured against and property covered.

The company can't come back AFTER a loss and deny payment because of
something not defined in the policy. They can't just make it up after the
fact.


sadly they can try and then it becomes a matter of Lawyers and the
roullete game that involves


73

"Rick Scott" wrote in message
...
Unfortunately, your local agent will have little or no input into any
damage or property loss claim that you may make -- that is the adjusters
and claim reps --
a whole another breed of cat (and not the domestic kind).
If you get into personal injury or loss of life - it gets complicated
very quickly. Fortunate that you don't have close neighbors.

gb


Yep underwriters are more than willing to add things to make more bucks.

Getting the claim later is an all together another proposition.



Hank Oredson July 5th 05 04:42 PM

"Ed Price" wrote in message
news:Ifpye.27243$ro.18610@fed1read02...

"John" wrote in message
news:Wkmye.61939$%Z2.8135@lakeread08...
If an agent, a representative of an insurance company, sells and the
company accepts a property then anything that happens (if fortuitous, or
accidental) to that property is covered as long as it falls within the
policy language, perils insured against and property covered.

The company can't come back AFTER a loss and deny payment because of
something not defined in the policy. They can't just make it up after the
fact.

73


I'll bet that there's "language in the policy" that is sufficiently vague
and flexible such that the company can stretch a loophole for anything
that it wants. Maybe I'm too paranoid, but the insurance company expects
that an insured property is a normal and typical example of materials and
construction, and that due care was applied to the design. Further, the
property should be in compliance with local existing building codes and
standards.

If you wired half your house with lamp cord, never got a permit, and have
no record of inspection, do you think the company agent should know this
by himself? If the loss is big enough, and especially if there's some
unusual circumstances (fire inspector's report, neighbor's claims), then
the company's lawyers have plenty of room to work in. You may have the
utmost confidence in your own workmanship, but, if the insurance company
is trying to avoid a $500k claim, all they have to do is say "no." So then
what happens? You take the insurance company to court, and they ask you
about your experience in soils engineering, concrete construction,
structural engineering, calculation of wind loading, welding
certifications, experience with lightning protection, etc. They will cut
you up into very small pieces.

Everything unusual about your property should be defined, and if your
agent is still eager to sell you a policy despite your "creative
engineering", then I would start to wonder why the agent is so desperate
to sell policies.



Um ... let me guess ... you don't carry a general liability rider?
Or if you do, you were not careful to read the details?

They are not expensive, and will cover anything ... and can even
cover intentional neglegence by the owner. Every ham with a tower
(or a pool, or horses, or a big dog, or ...) should have one.

--

... Hank

http://home.earthlink.net/~horedson
http://home.earthlink.net/~w0rli



Ron July 5th 05 05:00 PM



Hank Oredson wrote:
"Ed Price" wrote in message
news:Ifpye.27243$ro.18610@fed1read02...

"John" wrote in message
news:Wkmye.61939$%Z2.8135@lakeread08...

If an agent, a representative of an insurance company, sells and the
company accepts a property then anything that happens (if fortuitous, or
accidental) to that property is covered as long as it falls within the
policy language, perils insured against and property covered.

The company can't come back AFTER a loss and deny payment because of
something not defined in the policy. They can't just make it up after the
fact.

73


I'll bet that there's "language in the policy" that is sufficiently vague
and flexible such that the company can stretch a loophole for anything
that it wants. Maybe I'm too paranoid, but the insurance company expects
that an insured property is a normal and typical example of materials and
construction, and that due care was applied to the design. Further, the
property should be in compliance with local existing building codes and
standards.

If you wired half your house with lamp cord, never got a permit, and have
no record of inspection, do you think the company agent should know this
by himself? If the loss is big enough, and especially if there's some
unusual circumstances (fire inspector's report, neighbor's claims), then
the company's lawyers have plenty of room to work in. You may have the
utmost confidence in your own workmanship, but, if the insurance company
is trying to avoid a $500k claim, all they have to do is say "no." So then
what happens? You take the insurance company to court, and they ask you
about your experience in soils engineering, concrete construction,
structural engineering, calculation of wind loading, welding
certifications, experience with lightning protection, etc. They will cut
you up into very small pieces.

Everything unusual about your property should be defined, and if your
agent is still eager to sell you a policy despite your "creative
engineering", then I would start to wonder why the agent is so desperate
to sell policies.




Um ... let me guess ... you don't carry a general liability rider?
Or if you do, you were not careful to read the details?

They are not expensive, and will cover anything ... and can even
cover intentional neglegence by the owner. Every ham with a tower
(or a pool, or horses, or a big dog, or ...) should have one.


Yes but you need everything first insurance with one company and then at
the maximum but the minimums. You pay dearly for a general liability
rider if you take it all into account. Yes you are protected.


Cecil Moore July 5th 05 08:44 PM

Hank Oredson wrote:
Um ... let me guess ... you don't carry a general liability rider?
Or if you do, you were not careful to read the details?

They are not expensive, and will cover anything ... and can even
cover intentional neglegence by the owner. Every ham with a tower
(or a pool, or horses, or a big dog, or ...) should have one.


.... or kids.
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp

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