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RE: Re: [OT] Shredders
- Subject: RE: Re: [OT] Shredders
- From: "Phil Harris" <phil@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 31 Dec 2005 22:25:32 -0000
I had a Fellowes PS80C-2 originally and managed to break it (the plastic
"teeth" that act as guides between the cutters broke away) and
this Rexel
one that I have now has lasted much better.
My "shreddings" just get whacked into the recycling bin...
Phil=20
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ukha_d@xxxxxxx [mailto:ukha_d@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
> Andy Davies
> Sent: 31 December 2005 20:07
> To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: [ukha_d] Re: [OT] Shredders
>=20
> Joining you in the anoraks corner...
>=20
> I've got a Fellowes PS60C-2 it cost about =A380 from Rymans online a
> couple of years back (had two cheaper Fellowes ones before but they
broke=
)
>=20
> What do you do with the shreddings? - some of mine end up in the
compost
> bin and the rest tends to go in the garden waste bins at the local
tip,
> although they do get funny about it.
>=20
> Andy
>=20
> David Buckley wrote:
>=20
> >Just putting on an anorak, I have a Fellowes PS80C-2 cross-cut
> >shredder, which produces shred sized 20x4 mm, and shred of this
size
> >is twice as large as is permitted for the least secure material
> >processed by the UK government.
> >
> >Decent shredders (read secure) are "expensive". But any
cross-cut is
> >better than a typical linear shreddder.
> >
> >
>=20
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> Yahoo! Groups Links
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