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Re: Rougtero Water Screw




Simple standard sewars.  
re: Who says the water is clean?  Its certainly fresh water.  And with
as much surface water as there is, there'll be plenty of currents around
to keep recycling it.  Besides, populations aren't large enough, or
industrialized enough to screw up the water enough that it isn't drinkable.

Wright

> The reason you want the water screw is pretty simple. You want running water
> vs having to pump water. Showers instead of baths, toilets that aren't just
> holes into as sewer, etc, etc... Plus who says the water is clean? Fairly
> clean yes. Plus what about those who don't live on the shore ( unlike Red
> Dirt and it predecessor ).
> 							Greg
> 
> > From furmansj@expert.cc.purdue.edu Thu Oct 29 13:38:57 1998
> > Date: Thu, 29 Oct 1998 13:39:22 -0500 (EST)
> > From: Jevan Furmanski <furmansj@expert.cc.purdue.edu>
> > To: Steve Ames <steve@ns1.cioe.com>
> > cc: khelek@ns1.cioe.com, gmlist@cioe.com, jedi@ecn.purdue.edu
> > Subject: Re: Rougtero Water Screw
> >
> > This water screw crap is what had DiVinci convinced that he could fly.
> > Well, he couldn't and this technology isnt as far reaching as people are
> > making it.  Especially since all the water on Jearn is clean and fresh.
> > There isn't a need for water screws really.  Maybe a shallow well or two.
> >
> > Jevan
> >
> > On Thu, 29 Oct 1998, Steve Ames wrote:
> >
> > > > Actually Waterscrews were in use by the Egyptians, Romans, and Greeks.
> > > 
> > > Sure... but there's only one on Jaern... especially one large enough
> > > to server a town (or city in Karfelon's case). The sealing tech alone
> > > is worth the price of admission. One step from learning how to use
> > > pressure properly :)
> > > 
> > > 							-Steve
> > > 
> >
> >
>