This is my personal channel for gaming videos, let's play videos, and vlogs if you are interested in my personal life! Currently I am spending a lot of time playing PlayerUnknowns Battlegrounds, but I also love all strategy and 4X games.
I used to get it real bad as a kid now I barely get it at all. Some people literally take baths with it to build immunity for landscaping i know a guy personally who did it and he never gets it anymore.
Great experiment. Too bad you can't build up an immunity to urushiol (the oil). The more exposure, the more susceptible you are to it as your body tries harder to fight it off.
Nope not how it works i uses to get it real bad as a kid now I barely get it at all. Some people literally take baths with it to build immunity for landscaping i know a guy personally who did it and he never gets it anymore.
I don't believe that's correct. Per the rules, "hunt allocation and action roll", the shadow player must put a minimum of 1 eye dice into the hunt box if "one or more" fellowship dice were used to move the fellowship last turn. So it's simply a mandatory minimum of one dice, regardless of how many free people dice were used to move the fellowship.
The Turkish ones look much better but def look a little sus quality wise. I’m not super into barefoot shoes… I just want a regular shoe that has a toe box that is more similar to a barefoot toe box.
Everyday essentials has an issue fitting Olympic bars and holders. They go on fine but dont come off easy. The tolerance of the weight being a few pounds off is pretty common for budget plates in general. Even moving up to a better know cheaper brand like titan or cap will yield the same issue. Iron plates are the cheapest option for stuff commonly in a titghter tolerance or shell out for calibrated plates.
I’ve been interested in the Birchburies and Carats, but I’m concerned about durability. For those prices in a dress shoe, you can get a very high quality shoe that is stitched sole and can be resoled. I’m assuming these cannot be resoled and I’ve had mixed experiences with barefoot shoes where they are only glued to the sole, not stitched. I’ve had brands where the adhesive falls apart in six months or less. I’d be interested to see you longer term review.
Some people may want to close their microwave while pressing the release lever to stop the loud door latch click, but this will/can cause the switch to be pressed back further without a shim stopping it from working the next time. Cheers
I bought a pair of those Feelbarefoot shoes and mine are much better made than the ones you show here. Everything is cut more cleanly, stitched better, the leather soles are at least twice as thick (took several wears to break in, etc. That is strange that the quality can vary that much. Sorry you had that experience.
@@bmarlow1 Barefoot dress shoes are silly, though. I work in finance. If I wore these shoes, I’d probably end up in a conversation with HR about professional attire. I’m just being real here.
Though it might be ok if you wore socks like the guy in the video. But how could you wear socks if they’re supposed to be bearfoot shoes? That’s a bit confusing to me. 🤔
@@damnjustassignmeonecool. That doesn't make them silly. Shoes that squeeze your toes together that promote orthopedic issues in the name of fashion is what's silly
@@damnjustassignmeonethe very concept of barefoot shoes shouldn't make sense to you then. Shoes are literally the definition of not being barefoot The concept is to keep your feet as barefoot as possible, so your feet can move the way they're meant to move. All while keeping us safe from sharp objects, harder than natural surfaces and being socially acceptable in the modern world
The problem with formal minimalist barefoot shoes is, that they always look like clown shoes. I prefer wider regular dress shoes and minimalist shoes in less formal circumstances.
That’s the way I’d go if you work in a more traditional work environment. No problem wearing whatever in your personal life, but you don’t want to stand out at work.
UPDATE: If this doesn't work, It's much easier to simply REMOVE THE SWITCH ALTOGETHER! The microwave appears to continue working fine, I'm not exactly sure what the downsides are, feel free to post here (maybe the microwave won't turn off if you were to open the door mid cycle?)
When you say "remove" do you mean like loose wire, no switch attached, or do you mean wires attached to switch, but not in the housing to interact with the door?
@@edensgardenshed9622 I mean how else are you supposed to see when it is done if you don't leave the door open while it cooks? Jks, there are like 4 switches that act as redundancy to ensure the microwave can't be on while the door is open. Removing the switch all together doesn't disable that safety feature. There was a repair manual jammed into the side of the button face frame that maps out the circuit logic and how the switches work with it. If you are curious about how this switch affects the circuit take a look at it - as a layman who isn't handy was able to understand it. The long and the short of it is this switch is made to break the circuit and without it, there is no break when the switch is removed. Replacing the switch will only lead to another broken switch, bc the seat for the switch was poorly designed.
@@elliottbradshaw6856 mine turns on and runs when i shut the door so will be checking it out soon. Been unplugged for a month deciding whether to replace or repair.
I understand this can help, but it won't fix the situation if there is significant wear on the door latch ramp or microswitch actuators. Check older posts; people report the problem returning and say they have removed the monitor switch altogether!!