To Irving Patrick Freleigh Irving
I'm an old fart (compared to most of the posters on this board) so I'm talking about 1980's technology. Your baler doesn't sound like much fun to deal with either. If we forgot to push the ejection knob, you could let the machine cycle, push the ejection knob and it would eject the next go around. (The bales was wrapped in wire though and those suckers would break occasionally. I got more than one nasty lash mark from that.)
To Mark Healey
When I worked at the grocery store, we would put as many of the empty boxes that would fit on top of the carts, then crush the rest when were ran out of space. The bales of cardboard were also recycled, so in the '80's the boxes that people took their groceries home in probably ended up in the trash, while the bales were actually recycled.
I'm an old fart (compared to most of the posters on this board) so I'm talking about 1980's technology. Your baler doesn't sound like much fun to deal with either. If we forgot to push the ejection knob, you could let the machine cycle, push the ejection knob and it would eject the next go around. (The bales was wrapped in wire though and those suckers would break occasionally. I got more than one nasty lash mark from that.)
To Mark Healey
When I worked at the grocery store, we would put as many of the empty boxes that would fit on top of the carts, then crush the rest when were ran out of space. The bales of cardboard were also recycled, so in the '80's the boxes that people took their groceries home in probably ended up in the trash, while the bales were actually recycled.
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