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Re: 304/T19/D300 swap



Thanks Mike,
I appreciate the advice.  I was not thinking of an increase in possibility of injury due to the temp of the floor, but rather just the comfort factor.  Granted, concrete is never a comfortable backrest, but a cold one is even worse.:(
Thanks for the advice, I will keep it in mind.
---
Layda,
Tark
'77 Terra 345/T19/D20
   Survivor of '98 Scout Nationals
'80 Scout II 304/T19/D300
   Clean machine





On Tue, 09 Mar 1999 08:05:50   MikeIIDC wrote:
>Jeff-
>
>I feel for you, IH Brother!  Noone does the simplest project more often than I!!!  Takes me about five tries to get my points set right!  Don't even ask me about tranny/engine stuff!  However, as the back-cracking health care professional that I am studying to be, I would simply like to warn you to be very careful!  You are performing exactly the kind of thing that could set you very HIGH at risk for a back injury!  As if rolling around on the floor with several hundred pounds of iron/metal are not risky enough, the cold floor is going to put you at VERY high risk, as your muscles will want to contract/shorten, and if you pull/move/roll any of the heavy parts, you will be lengthening, then contracting them very specifically.  If the wrong ones get recruited to help at the wrong angle, as less than perfect form can cause to happen, you could get an ouchy!
>Anyway, I know we're all adults, and I am not trying to gain business-I don't know where you live and I am not even out of school-but I have finally seen enough examples of how screwy back problems can get, and don't wish that on anyone!  Please be careful!
>
>Michael
>
>Jeff wrote:
>
>> It will be about 0 tonite, rolling around on a cold garage floor with no heat at 0 degrees is not so appealing, it think its going to warm up as the week progresses.
>
>
>
>


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