trammayo
Interested in vintage commercial vehicle, trams, t

Mick,
If your controller has led a semi-exposed life, have you tried rattling the switch, back and forth, a dozen times, and wanging the control knob full-range either way several times?
Rattling and wanging being highly technical terms, of course!![]()
PhilP
Are you saying that it won't work at all or just that it won,t switch off ?Also, my Aristo Crest Remote has succumbed to an ingress of moisture and is totally cream crackered!
Anybody know where I could get one please?
View attachment 278986
I've had it apart, cleaned it and dried it (Wife's hairdryer) - the train channel lights come on but won't switch off - the PCB looks like there is an amount of corrosion
Again, thanking in anticipation.
Are you asking for the technical equivalent of "cream crackered"?![]()
Are you saying that it won't work at all or just that it won,t switch off ?
Oh no, I offered this as a technical equivalentOK, so "cream cracker" referred to a very successful team of racers running early MG Midgets....
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Nice try Rhino, but it does not make sense that this is the source of the phrase "cream crackered", meaning exhausted, knackered, etc.
So I will substitute knackered, which is the common explanation of the phrase's origin since it rhymes.
Greg
(of course it's hard to beat Barney for being trouble, trouble >> Barney Rubble (trouble rhymes with trouble) (from the flintstones) >> just Barney
Oh no, I offered this as a technical equivalent
The cream cracker was a bit of a double entendre based on the colour and a certain British biscuit used for cheese and nibbles (made by Jacobs since 1885).
When we were first married, I had a Midget in Cream Cracker colours, but didn't really know much about the origin as that was in the days before Google was a twinkle in anybody's eye, Tim Berners-Lee hadn't had his great brainwave, and computers took up more space in the building than the Chairman's office
I suspect the phrase was drawn into Cockney rhyming slang a bit later, as use of the word 'knackered' for anything other than horses is probably post WW2 - although I'd have to check on that. EDIT - one online dictionary suggests the early '70s![]()
I did say for anything but horses - the horses knackerman goes back to the 1600s.No - way before that! The Knackerman would collect dead livestock when I started work on the farm in the early sixties. And, by the way, the cream crackers were made here in Ireland in 1885.
Interestingly, that car was first registered in Berkshire, BL being a Berkshire code, ( by coincidence, my elder sons initials, ABL, we actually lived in Berks when he was born although it soon changed to Oxfordshire, where he was actually born) .OK, so "cream cracker" referred to a very successful team of racers running early MG Midgets....
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Nice try Rhino, but it does not make sense that this is the source of the phrase "cream crackered", meaning exhausted, knackered, etc.
So I will substitute knackered, which is the common explanation of the phrase's origin since it rhymes.
Greg
(of course it's hard to beat Barney for being trouble, trouble >> Barney Rubble (trouble rhymes with trouble) (from the flintstones) >> just Barney