Tell us something we don't know.<>
Every other commercially available weight loss program I’ve ever seen advertised is just another scam.
leVieux
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Tell us something we don't know.<>
Every other commercially available weight loss program I’ve ever seen advertised is just another scam.
leVieux
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Were you Looking for the Chris Christie thread?Who can eat a whole human at one sitting?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thanks, but I'm not dieting to lose weight.<>
Well, ‘’Keto”, Adkins (Atkins) low-fat & lwo carb have all been scientifically debunked by actual Science.
Yes, one could lose weight with the first two; but the weight comes right back 98% of the time.
The studies were precipitated by Pennington’s dietary Scientists’ & others’ repeated long term failures using the Adkins style & ”Keto” or ”Modified Keto” schemes.
The current “very low SUGAR” diets with behavior modification from LSU Pennington Center and the U of Texas Dallas Med School have been shown to work long term.
Millions of $’s were spent in several long-term studies involving family/genetic studies, large group monitoring, historical studies, and actual food content analyses by University Biochemists.
Much has been debunked.
This info and the programs “Naturally Slim” (“NS”), “Wonder Health” (“WondR”), plus the commercially available “Noom” tend to use these principles to effect permanent healthy weight-loss. The first two are available via many employers’ “employee health programs”, paid for by the employers via U of Texas Dallas Group.
Every other commercially available weight loss program I’ve ever seen advertised is just another scam.
leVieux
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I'D STARVE TO DEATHIF I HAD TO USE CHOP STICKS TO EAT A MEAL!I use the Chinese diet. I can eat all I want but only get 1 chopstick.
Thanks, but I'm not dieting to lose weight.
I'm prediabetic.
Actually been "on the diet" for 8-9 years.
That's how you learn. Spent months perfecting the use in Japan. Some places you may get a spoon, but that's mainly for soup.I'D STARVE TO DEATHIF I HAD TO USE CHOP STICKS TO EAT A MEAL!
That's how you learn. Spent months perfecting the use in Japan. Some places you may get a spoon, but that's mainly for soup.
<>Jack Roush was ask by Chrysler to put a the 1st Cummins Engine in a Dodge/Ram Pick-Up
Truck..this was in the late 80s
I drove a 1/2 ton work truck with their diesel conversion around 1982 or 1983 and it was a 350 v8 that GMC decided to "convert". I would drive from Sherman to warehouses in Dallas though I'd have to add 2+ quarts of oil after every trip. Looking under the hood was a mess since it was just blowing oil from every gasket.<>
I had one of the first GMC pichups which had an actual Detroit Diesel engine.
GM had previously tried & failed to use “converted” gas engines to run on Diesel fuel, but they just couldn’t hold up.
I recall folks asking if it were a conversion; but no, it was an ACTUAL 6.6L Detroit Diesel 1982 GMC Pickup.
leVieux
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I thought the earlier ones were 6.2 liter Detroits then changed to 6.5 liter, then they added the turbo a few years after that.<>
I had one of the first GMC pichups which had an actual Detroit Diesel engine.
GM had previously tried & failed to use “converted” gas engines to run on Diesel fuel, but they just couldn’t hold up.
I recall folks asking if it were a conversion; but no, it was an ACTUAL 6.6L Detroit Diesel 1982 GMC Pickup.
leVieux
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THE EARLY CONVERTED DISELS WERE OLDS MOBILE 350 ENGINES AS A DIESEL ENGINE THEY WERE PURE JUNKLOTS OF PROBLEMS WITH THEM!I thought the earlier ones were 6.2 liter Detroits then changed to 6.5 liter, then they added the turbo a few years after that.
THE EARLY CONVERTED DISELS WERE OLDS MOBILE 350 ENGINES AS A DIESEL ENGINE THEY WERE PURE JUNKLOTS OF PROBLEMS WITH THEM!
IT WAS A GOOD ENGINE IF YOU USED IT FOR A BOAT ANCHORA friend of mine had one of those for a while, lol.
GM USED A LOT OF THEM IN THE LARGER VEHICLE LINES AS WELL AS 1/2 TON TRUCKS AND BLAZERS AND SUBURBANSA friend of mine had one of those for a while, lol.
This is waaay over my head. I have used church keys to open steel beer cans, but I was never tempted to use one as a coat hanger.<>
”Church Keys”
During the post-‘war era, when beer cans required steel-top piercing “beer can openers”; during the night times, the openers often turned into coat hangers via “molting”.
My Dad’s crew often complained about finding their homes filled with wire coat hangers, but not a can opener could be found.
In the old Texas of yore, the problem was even worse, as the “Blue Laws” prohibited sale of both beer and beer can openers on Sundays, the days of choice for picnics & beach trips.
When I first lived in Texas over a half-century back, one early lesson to learn was to make certain that one had both adequate beer and beer can openers, also known as “Church Keys”, by Saturday afternoon, every week.
leVieux
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