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Cleanout - Old AV Receiver, DVD Player, IP Phone, Futurama Calendars, Computer Misc.


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PM if you want any of these items!

Located Riverstone NSW 2765.

Everything complete and in good working condition.

 

1. Champion RC12YC Spark Plug - $4

Suits many Briggs & Stratton small engines (e.g. 300 series). Has been run for about 10 minutes only.

champion-spark-plug.thumb.jpg.c5f8264ab5732808ee3b9188f3e1128b.jpg

 

2. Onkyo AV Receiver TX-DS797 6-Channel - $20

Gold colour. Includes RC-460M remote (no batteries) and radio antennas.

https://www.intl.onkyo.com/downloads/manuals/pdf/tx-ds797_manual_e.pdf

onkyo-receiver.thumb.jpg.6a35a9547f2945452e51999465011281.jpg

 

3. Onkyo DVD Player DV-SP404 - $5

Silver colour. Includes RC-608M remote.

https://www.intl.onkyo.com/downloads/manuals/pdf/dv-sp404_manual_e.pdf

onkyo-dvd.thumb.jpg.16f2668956db5e943b93eda384d819ab.jpg

 

4. Gigaset C470 IP DECT Cordless Phone - $20

Handset requires 2 x AAA 1.2V NiMH rechargeable batteries (not included).

gigaset-c470ip.thumb.jpg.64f8476c06c7a50daf101ced1368e0e1.jpg

 

5. Futurama Calendars - $50

Five calendars. 2006-2009 wall calendars and 2009 art calendar. 2009 wall calendar in original plastic wrap.

futurama-calendars.thumb.jpg.26651a0261a15ca5424e4ac42b0b2f42.jpg

 

6. Intel Core 2 Duo Processor E4400 - $5

LGA775. Includes stock cooler (never used).

https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/29753/intel-core-2-duo-processor-e4400-2m-cache-2-00-ghz-800-mhz-fsb.html

intel-e4400.thumb.jpg.a4cfbe815d6b30ae2e21af9e4e92f359.jpg

 

7. Billion BiPAC 7800N Wireless Router - $5

Includes ADSL line filters.

http://au.billion.com/index.php?files&type=item&action=63&cat=6

billion-router.thumb.jpg.3316c9faccce78feb62d788c540a551b.jpg

 

8. Lian Li PC-10 Computer Case - $10

Aluminium with plastic front bezel. Toolless design. Includes two small fans.

lian-li-case.thumb.jpg.3280c17b48b4cdef015a81744ca0f5fc.jpg

 

9. Small Computer - $50

Minimal power-on hours. Spent most of its life in storage.

Recently tested stable 24-hours Prime95 (In-place large FFTs). WD hard drive passed full media test (Data Lifeguard Extended Test).

*** Operating system software not included! ***

Case modified to fit full size power supply. Custom elastic suspension for up to three hard drives.

Antec NSK 3400 case with Corsair VX450W power supply.

AMD Athlon X2 4850e dual-core processor with Thermalright HR-01 Plus heatsink.

Corsair 2GB DDR2 800MHz RAM.

Gigabyte GA-MA74GM-S2H motherboard REV:1.0 with integrated ATI Radeon HD 2100 graphics.

Samsung HD502HI 500GB and Western Digital WD6400AACS 640GB hard drives.

computer-1.thumb.jpg.42d448baf152c67ea6f0e46d4bccdcab.jpgcomputer-2.thumb.jpg.b1f3e3d568941069da6601bda05d2f8b.jpg

 

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  • Latest Posts

    • I used to do that (sills with rubber jack block).. ... then I got side skirts, and there's no way for the jack to actually work there, the jack pad itself on the jack is too big. Is the answer to use a... smaller (?) jack? Hmmm.
    • I have too much trauma from every skyline I've ever seen having crushed jack points/pinch welds lol.    Yep, works 100%, it's what I use when I'm using the quick jack. Don't know why I can't also bring myself to do the same thing when I'm using a jack. I blame the skyline PTSD. 
    • The pinchweld is fine, even with a trolley jack, so long as you're not actually pushing on the pinchweld itself. More to the point, we shouldn't talk about lifting or supporting on the pinchweld, we should talk about using the sill "jacking points", which just happen to be adjacent to the pinchweld. I just have dense rubber blocks with grooves in them for each of the chassis stands and the trolley jack, that I use at the sill jacking points if/when I have to lift/support there. They put all the load onto the steel pad of the jacking point and not the pinchweld. As intended.
    • Makes sense.  I would do something different if I felt like there was a better option. Generally the only other area I'm happy to jack on is where I want to put the stand. The pinch weld is not an option for me for either the jack or stands, so very limited options overall.  Plus never having had an issue with doing this, has kinda reinforced in my mind that it's fine. I'd do it on any car without a second thought these days lol. 
    • I know on some cars it's explicitly endorsed in the service manual but a lot of them it isn't which is what gives me pause. I know a lot of cars also have you jack up the car by the radiator core support which is a lot easier to get to than some crazy deep section of the front subframe. I'm just reluctant to find out if any of that is really safe to do if not listed in the service manual. The FK8 has even the R-chassis beat in this regard, the front subframe jack point is almost fully behind the front tires and is surprisingly recessed into the car.
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