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View Full Version : Fill up time/prep for apocalypse


AlexD333
28-09-2014, 22:49
Thought id get some fuel today :thumbs

jims-terrano
28-09-2014, 22:55
Just a little then, how much a litre does that work out at?

AlexD333
28-09-2014, 23:35
Well, it was 160 litres and it set me back £111 so pretty good all in all :thumbs

jims-terrano
28-09-2014, 23:37
That does sound good.

supergnome
29-09-2014, 08:44
Do you pump it in or use a funnel? If its a pump, which type, as I'm fed up with spills down the bumper. David.

Banshee
29-09-2014, 08:47
Thought id get some fuel today :thumbs

I was paying £12.95 for 20 litres of that the weekend from Costco :sly

So i'd have got the same amount for £102.40 so I'd have saved £8.60 on your price :thumb2

rustic
29-09-2014, 09:42
...as I'm fed up with spills down the bumper. David.

Ahhh...
that's why Alex removed his bumpers, for the first time I can start to understand him...:eek:

:lol:lol:lol

Lazy-Ferret
29-09-2014, 11:40
Ahhh...
that's why Alex removed his bumpers, for the first time I can start to understand him...:eek:

:lol:lol:lol

:lol:lol:lol

I was paying £12.95 for 20 litres of that the weekend from Costco :sly

So i'd have got the same amount for £102.40 so I'd have saved £8.60 on your price :thumb2

And the good news with the Costco ones, is not only is it cheaper, but it comes in the plastic cubbies in a cardboard outer, which is not only easier to pour, as you can fit a spout, but much easier to dispose of the empties as well... Win, Win, Win, I call that...:lol:lol

Banshee
29-09-2014, 11:58
And the good news with the Costco ones, is not only is it cheaper, but it comes in the plastic cubbies in a cardboard outer, which is not only easier to pour, as you can fit a spout, but much easier to dispose of the empties as well... Win, Win, Win, I call that...:lol:lol

Oh yes!!!!! The cardboard goes in the re-cycling bin and the plastic cubies get the tops cut off, split down the sides diagonally and get Russian Dolled :thumb2, get about 10 in one bin bag then and that's well easy to dispose of whether it be the neighbors bin or a cheeky communal one somewhere :augie

Fez_uk
29-09-2014, 12:03
Why not stick the plastic in the recycling too?

Banshee
29-09-2014, 12:12
Why not stick the plastic in the recycling too?

We've had a big argument with the council, the gits have been getting wise to me Russian dolling them and chucking them in with the normal rubbish, I've tried the re-cycling as well and they just take them out and dump them back on the floor outside the house

When I rang the council to see what they were playing at they then told me that this had already been reported to them and that a letter had been sent out to our address. We have now been warned that what we bin is classed as "industrial waste" and if I try to dispose of it in that manner again then we'll be fined for the removal of it :doh

I'm not even going to bother arguing, it's my moms house I just want an easy life, it's not drama to me bin bagging them and keeping them in the back until I find a fair sized bin that I can sling them in :sly

Lazy-Ferret
29-09-2014, 12:32
I am obviously very lucky, I just stick them out, as is, for the recycling guys to take. So far, touch wood, no issues. Mind you, I only really do one a week, if that.