How well do you read threads before replying

What do you do?

  • Read OP and all replies thoroughly

    Votes: 26 33.3%
  • Read OP and most replies thoroughly

    Votes: 13 16.7%
  • Read Op Thoroughly, skim the replies

    Votes: 13 16.7%
  • Skim the OP, skim all the replies

    Votes: 4 5.1%
  • Just answer based on thread title

    Votes: 1 1.3%
  • I prefer Blue Cheese.

    Votes: 21 26.9%

  • Total voters
    78
Many times I have wanted to use a quote from multiple answers, How precisely do you make a book mark ? Sure there are others who would make use of this operation if they new how to.
 
Click on this
multiquote_40b.png
right hand side after Rely With Quote

I did, and all I got was this lousy tee shirt.
 
I almost always read the whole thread before replying. If it's a long one, I tick the "Multi-Quote" buttons (to the right of "Reply With Quote") to bookmark posts I want to reply to. Then get to the end and hit the main "Reply" button at the bottom, all the posts I want to reply to are quoted. Sometimes I split them into several reply posts if they don't fit well together. Quite often I remove one or two that I no longer need to reply to having read those that came after them.

Pete
I've learnt something today - always wondered what the "+ button was for.
To answer the original question - not always, especially if it's a long thread. I've no objection to widening the discussion it would be pretty boring if everyone stuck to the point and you often learn things from the digressions.
 
Is there a foiling version of the Anderson 22 yet?

They built some foiling, half size (11 foot) prototypes but they were nowhere near as fast as the non-foiling original so they gave up on the concept. I think some guys found a use for the old prototypes, they raced round the cans and named them "Moths" or something... ;-)
 
They built some foiling, half size (11 foot) prototypes but they were nowhere near as fast as the non-foiling original so they gave up on the concept. I think some guys found a use for the old prototypes, they raced round the cans and named them "Moths" or something... ;-)

I couldn't imagine one of them being as fast as an Anderson 22, even in the hurricane force winds that Anderson 22s treat with disdain.
 
Did you ever fly on Concord? Something I never had the chance to do I would sail a Anderson 22 but...

At Mach 2 concord was slightly faster at Mach 2.04. I suppose you could go to New York without and scary night passages...
 
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