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Post by Harold on Jan 29, 2015 23:33:57 GMT
Nick are you serious your asking who nicked a car in Liverpool ? It would have been harder if you had asked who hasn't stole a car in Liverpool
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Post by Cheggy on Jan 29, 2015 23:36:07 GMT
Nick are you serious your asking who nicked a car in Liverpool ? It would have been harder if you had asked who hasn't stole a car in Liverpool Pmsl!
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Post by jonnyboy on Jan 29, 2015 23:41:22 GMT
PMSL Love the comments on this
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Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2015 23:42:43 GMT
Yes but a well know scallywag from the close nicked it from a local service station....
Come on H.....I know you know it - the reg..... L*** ***
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Post by scania on Jan 30, 2015 7:31:31 GMT
I remember in the early eighties we had a wooden telegraph pole behind the house with an aluminium pole braced to it and two aerials bolted to the top of the aluminium pole. One pointed to London for BBC the other pointed north for UTV (Ulster television), we also had a wire coat hanger mounted on a Christmas log sitting on top of the TV which brought in two local RTE Irish TV stations. After a storm the BBC aeriel broke off and took the eve gutter of the house with it on the way down. For a long time after that we had a ladder tied to the pole and we used to climb up, loosen a bolt with a vice grip, rotate the aluminium pole and one remaining Antenna to point at either London or Belfast depending on what program we wanted to watch. later we got very automated by replacing the ordinary bolts and nuts with Wing Nut bolts so that we didn't have to use a vice grip. We would often rotate it several times in a night. in those days other people around us were doing similar things, those were the eighties when things were adjustable, repairable, modifiable, interchangeable, reliable, hammerable, bangable, and everything could be fixed if you had a hammer, two screwdrivers and a vicegrip.
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Post by Harold on Jan 30, 2015 8:43:42 GMT
Yes but a well know scallywag from the close nicked it from a local service station.... Come on H.....I know you know it - the reg..... L*** *** L982 FKL and it was Jimmy Corkhill what did it
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Post by Cheggy on Jan 30, 2015 14:03:41 GMT
Yes but a well know scallywag from the close nicked it from a local service station.... Come on H.....I know you know it - the reg..... L*** *** L982 FKL and it was Jimmy Corkhill what did it Almost the same reg as the Patagonia Top Gear Special car that caused all the fuss. H982 FKL
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Post by jonnyboy on Jan 30, 2015 14:16:06 GMT
For that top gear remark you should receive a brucie bonus from FB!
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Post by Cheggy on Jan 30, 2015 14:25:37 GMT
For that top gear remark you should receive a brucie bonus from FB! It must be worth a fiver.
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Post by jonnyboy on Jan 30, 2015 14:37:45 GMT
At Least, small potatoes to FB he is probably on 200k a year
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Post by Cheggy on Jan 30, 2015 14:42:18 GMT
At Least, small potatoes to FB he is probably on 200k a year If I had 200 thousand potatoes I wouldn't blink an eye at giving away £5.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2015 15:16:16 GMT
Do you think that was a co-incidence - that Porsche with H982 FKL on it?
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Post by Harold on Jan 30, 2015 15:19:25 GMT
Well the BBC didn't re-register it, apparently it had that plate for 9 years or something like that before they bought it, but is the number plate the reason they bought that particular car ?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2015 15:24:32 GMT
Good question. H reg is what - 1990/91.......I wonder why the plate was only on it for nine years as well? If it was an import, I guess that would explain it.
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Post by Cheggy on Jan 30, 2015 15:27:43 GMT
Well the BBC didn't re-register it, apparently it had that plate for 9 years or something like that before they bought it, but is the number plate the reason they bought that particular car ? It would be one hell of a stunt that may have gone unnoticed by many viewers. I think it was purely coincidental.
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