<VV> SOAP - No Corvair

Ken Pepke kenpepke at juno.com
Fri Aug 17 09:44:18 EDT 2012


Uh, me too!  Except, sometimes I keep a short end to take it to my wood shop!

Ken P
Wyandotte, MI
Worry looks around; Sorry looks back, Faith looks up.

************************

On Aug 17, 2012, at 9:27 AM, Bob Tarpenning wrote:

> I vote for this one.
> Bob T
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: virtualvairs-bounces at corvair.org
> [mailto:virtualvairs-bounces at corvair.org] On Behalf Of RoboMan91324 at aol.com
> Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 6:26 PM
> To: virtualvairs at corvair.org; ricebugg at comcast.net
> Subject: <VV> SOAP - No Corvair
> 
> James,  
> 
> When the soap in the shower gets too small to be convenient,  what I do is 
> "weld" the small piece of soap to the next full cake of soap.   While I 
> shower with the new full cake, I let the thin remnant of soap soak in  water
> in the soap holder on the wall.  By the end of my shower, the remnant  has a
> thin layer of soap "mush" on one side.  I press this onto the full  cake
> until the edges of the remnant "weld" to the large cake.  By the next
> shower, the mush has dried and the remnant is a permanent part of the new
> cake.  If the old remnant is the same kind and color of soap as the new
> cake, it isn't very obvious that they are "welded."  Even if the two soaps
> are different, the remnant is used up fairly quickly depending on how thin
> it  was when it was attached.
> 
> I suppose you could do the same thing with your small souvenir  soap from
> the hotel.  It won't have a smooth transition between the two  pieces of
> soap but it will work.
> 
> Doc
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~





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