Oil change on carpet, not the smartest thing you’ve done.So it became oil change on the ST followed by steaming & extracting a 16in perfect circle of oil that leaked out of that ******* *spill-less* bucket with the tap on it... the downside to a carpeted garage...
Now I have a 16in dia circle of VERY clean carpet. FFS.
Spill-less my ***.
I have two. One to use under the vehicle and another for the benchtop when working with leaky things.Oil change on carpet, not the smartest thing you’ve done.
You need a flotool drip pan.
I too have a 14 and got the letter. How long did the reflash take? I dread going to my local ford dealer cuz I will have to be shown the cabin air filter with the ever present leaf on top and all the other **** they will tell me it needs immediately.Entertained the Ford tech on his house call. Mobil tech reprogramed my 2014F150. Now I shouldn’t have one of the major transmission failures. Lead Frame breakage from self inflicted downshift into 1rst at 70mph. Ford was forced to do it free as breaking traction at speed can pose a safety risk. He set up sat nav & reprogrammed the ECM not to tell the trans that the speed sensor thinks we aren't moving! Otherwise owners would pay for the repair.
Yup. The old one had a piece rattling around in it.Evap purge valve?
I'm surprised it wasn't the little wing that the cable plugs into. IME they either rot or crack off, but then you're in Texas, with no salt or huge icicles.Yup. The old one had a piece rattling around in it.
Wow! Great progress. Those accumulated piles can be overwhelming. That's when I start a tally sheet for items put away. That way I can see progress along the way, and even if I don't finish.I've been living with this for awhile. All the every other week travel back and forth for my parents wore me out.
I am still lacking a lot of motivation but I got my **** in gear and started cleaning the two benches.
Before.
After.
Not perfect. I feel it's a good start.
Only stopped a couple times when I picked a tool up that dad had given me.
Your own serger, or customer? You are a true Renaissance Woman!Disassembled and reassembled a serger. Got it working. Gathered tools and hinges. Returned with only tools.
I've been doing oil changes in this garage for 12 years with no leaks/spills. I have a 2x3ft drip tray that gets used under vehicles when I'm doing an oil change. This happened after I was done & the bucket was by a toolbox. The issue isn't the carpet, it's the *spill-less* bucket.Oil change on carpet, not the smartest thing you’ve done.
You need a flotool drip pan.
I went with a simple reinstall of windows this morning, though I still may give the Penguin a hug at a later date.Embrace the penguin. It's a chance to learn something new, and get a faster bitbox, without spending a dime.
Judy's, but I use it, too.Your own serger, or customer? You are a true Renaissance Woman!![]()
Your sister and mother are running BSD, IIRC. And if you own a phone or tablet, you're running Linux/Unix of some flavor. Much of the world runs on some POSIX compliant system.I went with a simple reinstall of windows this morning, though I still may give the Penguin a hug at a later date.
In my mere 30 years of life, I've definitely been outpaced by technology, though I never was any good in programming class to begin with. My Dad suggested we try Linux when I was younger, but for whatever reason, we just didn't, and ended up a predominantly windows family (save for my sister and mother who are near-exclusively Apple fans). I'm not nearly as quick on the uptake now a days as I was when I had virtually unlimited free time back in my school days, so I really just need a machine that works right now for quick internet references, youtube, and on-the-fly design work in various forms of CAD. Oh and music, can't go without music. I have a love-hate relationship with bluetooth, so where I can, I do prefer using my surprisingly robust Logitech speakers (which coincidentally have to be approaching 20 years old).
Today while the computer is reinstalling Windows, I'm stripping some chair parts for my Aunt. I don't work very fast, unfortunately, but I'd like to get these done by Labour Day, so I can deliver them. I'm running low on Zip Strip though and since my Wife and I are nearing a week into our second bout of COVID(once every two years ain't bad, right?
) going out for supplies is a no-go right now. When I run out completely I'll go back to the band file and continue working on the legs/arms.












I went with a simple reinstall of windows this morning, though I still may give the Penguin a hug at a later date.
In my mere 30 years of life, I've definitely been outpaced by technology, though I never was any good in programming class to begin with. My Dad suggested we try Linux when I was younger, but for whatever reason, we just didn't, and ended up a predominantly windows family (save for my sister and mother who are near-exclusively Apple fans). I'm not nearly as quick on the uptake now a days as I was when I had virtually unlimited free time back in my school days, so I really just need a machine that works right now for quick internet references, youtube, and on-the-fly design work in various forms of CAD. Oh and music, can't go without music.
Back in the day, a significant chunk of MS was run on IBM AS/400. Bill Gates was quoted once as saying the only part of IBM he'd want to buy was the AS/400 division.Your sister and mother are running BSD, IIRC. And if you own a phone or tablet, you're running Linux/Unix of some flavor. Much of the world runs on some POSIX compliant system.
Rumor had it that at one time much of MicroSuck's server farm was Unix or Linux. I myself noticed some very penguin-y calls and page source when using their online systems.
Which could run AIX, among other things, IIRC.Back in the day, a significant chunk of MS was run on IBM AS/400. Bill Gates was quoted once as saying the only part of IBM he'd want to buy was the AS/400 division.
You can run FreeCAD on Linux, if you want old school. And TinkerCAD runs on a browser, for the quickly stuff.Don't know about your CAD, but everything else you mentioned is cheap and easy on Linux.
You want music, you can do it locally like you're used to on Windows, or you can set up a Linux media server on an old machine using free software like Emby, Navidrome, or Kodi, and stream your collection from anywhere.
That's all I'll say unless asked to continue, but PM me if you want some pointers any time.
I think onshape runs on Linux too.You can run FreeCAD on Linux, if you want old school. And TinkerCAD runs on a browser, for the quickly stuff.
It runs on a browser, so yes.I think onshape runs on Linux too.




This is with the new spyder set up?Be careful what you wish for.
I was complaining that my cold start issue was difficult to diagnose because it was sporadic. Well this morning it decided to change from a cold start issue to a no start issue.lol
I got spark, I got fuel pressure, I even have injector pulse. I know this because I took the intake off and hooked the spider injectors back up and cranked it over to see if they were actually spraying.
The problem seems to be each injector is barely spraying a slight mist. I don’t know if this is from a short injector width, or if the pressure is bleeding off somewhere.
It’s got 60 psi at the fuel rail where I screwed in my mechanic gauge, but the mist coming out of the injectors feels more like a can of Binaca fresh breath spray.lol
Just an OLD obd reader, doesn’t even have live data, mostly good just to get codes. I thought 60 was good, you think a new pump is the next ammo for the parts cannon? lolThis is with the new spyder set up?
60psi is the minimum fuel pressure on this set up, it much prefers the higher end of the spec 66psi.
What do you have to work with for a scan tool?
