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Question:

Fuzzy, smaller than rrice grain, black & yellow horizontal striped, many legs, black head, beattle in blanket?

I found a tiny bug in my blanketI thought it was a bed bug so I checked the mattress and found no other bugsSo I took the little guy on an envelope and looked at him under a magnifying glass and compared him to bed bug pics and he looks too small to be a bed bug aand he looks fuzzier and looks like he has a bunch of legs and he has horizontal black and yellow stripesHe doesn't have wings and doesn't have pronounced anteniHe is slow moving and seems to move like a rolly pollie when they don't rollThe only bited we have r from mosquitos in nebraskaWe have four dogs and one sleeps on our bedWe live in coloradoAny ideas as to what little bugger I found? Is he harmless? Thanks

Answer:

FFS how many accounts have you got FFS? and to answer your question 1) it depends on the size of the peg 2) it depends on the size of the hole 3) if you've got a square dick see a doctorAlrighty big man, i'm back from my holidays, Sam and I are living together now and we are both happy as can beWe have a kitten called gizmo and our Flat is looking fairly completeHope everything has been good while I was away, I can see how much you missed me, lolSpeak to you soon.
It really depends on what tool you're talking aboutIf you're talking about hand files, then usually they're just referred to as round or square profileMost assume that files would be solid as opposed to being hollowActually, a hollow file probably wouldn't last too long, and I doubt too many manufactures would attempt to make these type of filesI'm not sure I understand your comment about iron round or square profile that has nothing insideIf there are such tools, and they could either be solid or hollow, I imagine it would be correct to identify them as either hollow or solidAlso solid, pure iron as opposed to solid, mixed material core, encased with iron would be appropriate terminologyHowever, there's a condition that erodes two metals when they touch each other, so the core material would have to be some kind of hybrid resin or other non-metallic material.
Larva of a carpet beetleThey are very destructive to animal fibers like wool(The legs you saw are actually setae, so-called hairs).

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