h a l f b a k e r ySee website for details.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Even without a spanner, I think you'd get a better grip on a polygonal lid than you can on a circular one. |
|
|
There are special 'spanners' for opening bottles and jars with normal tops that would avoid you contaminating your comestibles with spanners last used to do-up your hub nuts. |
|
|
That link specifically states that the product uses magic. The original poster's idea doesn't, so I am bunning it. |
|
|
Would the circular threading be the same? |
|
|
For opening new jars, angle the tip of a knife under the lip of the lid and twist the knife slightly. It breaks the vacuum, making the jar much easier to open. |
|
|
Nutcrackers already work okay for opening most small bottle tops, but have a bun anyhow. [+] |
|
|
Also, if the manufacturers number the sides of your hexagonal bottle tops, and make them with a bump in the centre on the underside, they'd come in handy as six-sided spinners for the diceless. |
|
|
but real men (and me) like spanners |
|
|
tNA is probably worrying about that rat urine thing - rats don't piss on hub nuts just Cola cans. |
|
|
I just like this idea for introducing the verb
"to stuggle". |
|
|
I don't think this idea can claim that one. |
|
|
Top idea. Here's a six-sided bun [+] |
|
|
Thank you [maxwellBuchanan] - I had to
laugh at that one too - corrected ... and
now for the proper definition of: "to
stuggle" - a vain attempt at removing
beard stubble wth a blunt razor. |
|
|
Now, if only I had a magnetic knife rack with magnets strong enough to hold a huge adjustable spanner... |
|
| |