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On 5/17/2024 1:27 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:Having never owned a power lawn mower I had no idea of the price range or style. It seems they start around $40 and many are rectangular, a less complex shape than I recall.On Thu May 16 19:42:55 2024 Tom Kunich wrote:Show us a photo, Tom. You should know that it's pretty rare for anyone here to accept your judgment on anything factual.On Thu May 16 14:47:41 2024 Frank Krygowski wrote:>On 5/16/2024 11:00 AM, Tom Kunich wrote:>On Wed May 15 22:32:43 2024 Frank Krygowski wrote:>On 5/15/2024 5:11 PM, Tom Kunich wrote:>On Wed May 15 13:12:45 2024 AMuzi wrote:>Why wouldn't you just launder the bag and either repair it>
or sew a new one? Most I've seen are a very simple pattern.
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Because it was sucked into the blades and is now irreparable.
"... or sew a new one?" It's not rocket science.
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-- - Frank Krygowski
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Frank, it would be really nice if you even had a clue what you were talking about. My guess is that you never even sewed on a new button on you shirt.
I'm not an expert. But I've sewn repairs on clothing, done clothing
alterations, and done many other projects involving sewing. In fact,
I've designed and sewn two of my own handlebar bags.
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-- - Frank Krygowski
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Frank, maybe you noticed that I have a hard time holding my temper when people say stupid things. Having a lawn mower bag get sucked under the mower and the bag demolished by the blades is hardly in the same class as you sewing some light canvas into a handlebar bag. If it was repairable I would have. Your comments without EVER laying eyes on it insults yourself. Don't sound like Liebermann, the expert at everything he knows nothing about.
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I just went down in the yard and looked at the damage. There is a 12" square hole missing in a bag heavy enough to be grass proof. There is NO fixing this damage but I suspect that Liebermann, Flunky and you can hold different opinions while knowing nothing about it.
About the heaviness of the bag: One sewing project I completed was to make two cylindrical bags, maybe 30 gallons each, of heavy canvas to haul clipped branches, weeds, etc. during gardening projects. (Bike content: I used junk bike tires sewed into the lip of the open rim as stiffeners to hold the bags open.) I'd say that project was way trickier than patching your mower bag.
I understand that you're not capable of fixing it. But that speaks more to your lack of ability than to the difficulty of the project.
It's not rocket science.
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