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Between 485 & 705 SQ/FT Bob Heine's Auto Emporium

Workspaces between 485 and 705 squarefeet.

Wreckster23

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Joined
Aug 15, 2014
Messages
369
Location
Newburgh, NY
Shoot bob, I didn’t know you had the.. well in any case I wish you the best of luck showing who is boss round those parts.

Bad luck on the fall. Just recently lost footing with the hand truck, tried to use it to catch myself and it slipped further. At a point I just let go and plopped, little bruised on my side but that’s nothing, I hit the wheel.
 
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Bob Heine

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Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
You're just lucky your water table is so high there!

1734234714009.png


(Water table in this pic is inconsistent, they're just trying to show examples of features.)
@Squankum, a friend in our Corvette club was about 5'7" and real skinny when he served in Viet Nam. He got to spend a lot of his time over there crawling around those tunnels. Being in the tunnel was bad enough but not knowing who or what was waiting around the next bend must have been horrendous.
Holy **** Bob! I'm pretty damned sure you will still be here past Independence Day. But dayum, those meds scare the **** out of me just reading the side effects. YIKES!

:beer:
Dan, they scare me as well but knowing about the side effects is comforting. Some of what I'm going through isn't just me deteriorating, I've had some hot flashes but my most common side effects are the low potassium (leading to muscle cramps), swollen feet and legs (focus on sodium and take hydrochlorothiazide). I don't remember not having joint pain and Sunday was the first time I've had a headache and nausea in decades.
Hoping you heal up fast...that's quite a list of side-effects...anymore it seems like the side-effects list is longer than some of these drugs are worth!
Marc, I'm usually a pretty fast healer. I still have purple knuckles on my hand but that's been going on since before I quit taking Eliquis. I thought easy bruising was in my past but I guess it's that "I'm old" thing again.
Geeze Bob, you do look at bit like Steve Austin, but i wouldn't recommend running as fast as he did! Heal up quickly and keep us up to date on happenings!
@Mr.zippy, my 'running' days are behind me. I move more like the infamous Ruptured Duck these days. I'll let y'all know how I'm doing as I find out myself.
Glad to hear you’re doing ok after your fall. As for medication side effect, I plan to just wear depends to combat the **** leakage with cough. I look forward to scaring folks away with my stinky diapers. 🤢🤣😂
Cody, the indication of being old, really old, is not noticing the stink.
Bob
I am sorry to hear about your fall and Wishing you speedy recovery from the fall and also the effects of the cancer drugs.

My prayers are with you.

Ps
Excellent job on the organizing the tools, looks great.
@gman007, I've been lucky. In the past, my answer has been NO when the doctor or nurse asks "Have you fallen in the last 6 months?" Hopefully I can stay away from the nosy little busybodies until June 14, 2025.
Thank you on the organizing. Every little improvement makes me happy.
Bob, I hope no quick trips are in your future. 😳
Hope the Mrs. has a wonderful birthday.
Shorty, everything in my life seems to be in slow motion. I'm pretty sure I said "Ah $hit" 28 times on the way down. Only really fast thing in my life is the calendar. I swear I just bought a 2024 one the other day.
Good grief Bob you have had your share of bridges to cross! You have always managed to overcome what ever is placed on your path. The meds definitely have covered all their bases, big pharma, big lawyers.
My wife had Radial keratotomy on her eyes years ago prior to the lazer procedure. I sat with her while the surgeon (who was the go to guy for the province) explained or pointed out all the possible pitfalls and potential disadvantages of the procedure. I damn near got up and grabbed her by the hand to get the hell out of that office. Her vision was being corrected with contacts and or glasses so not life debilitating. But it freaked me out and not a common procedure at the time. She did it and it all worked out. 👍
Another time after going through breast cancer with a mastectomy, chemo and plenty of pharmaceuticals. She is on her regime of post operation drug cocktail and doing pretty well at least better. But one of the drugs was not playing nice and causing her much grief. She decided she wanted to discontinue the one drug or at least try another. Eventually she just discontinued the culprit with plenty of don’t do it from me, the kids and friends. But her and the Oncologist (sort of) eventually discontinued the drug and it all worked out.
I have an old school mate/1buddy that just had his prostrate removed, as we talked he asked if I had ever had any surgeries preformed. I thought for a moment and said all of mine have been self inflicted, car/work accidents so not health related. The items above and others my wife has had to endure were way over the top as she is disciplined, takes care of her health, eats responsibly, doesn’t drink or smoke, exercises. You know all the good stuff. Me not so much and probably have been pretty lucky. I‘m kinda laughing at the moment thinking that the wheels will just fall off one day 😂

I always find your thread interesting but don’t always have a chance to personally touch base but you just keep posting to your hearts content.
Emil, I know what you mean about the keratotomy. Liane discussed the procedure as well as Lasik with her eye doctor decades ago. The doctor suggested she wait until they were doing those procedures on every street corner. After her two retinal detachements and two cataract lens replacements she decided she liked her glasses just fine.

Liane suffers from fibromyalgia and osteoarthritis. She has managed her weight down to a low 20s BMI (mine is high 20s aka borderline obese). One of her unusual afflictions is cholesterol. Hers is always in the high 200s or higher. She smokes a half pack of cigarettes a day so all her doctors nag her about quitting. I know better, being quite sure she'll kill me the 8th day of withdrawal. To prove to her how bad smoking is for her, they put the oximeter on her finger and it rarely reads lower than 98%. When that didn't work her cardiologist sent her in for a C-test and she scored a 0 (yes, zero). Waited a few months and repeated the test and another 0. I think she's had the test five times. The cardiologist thought he had her when they did a carotid ultrasound in the office and found 75% blockage on both sides. She requested a second opinion and the hospital found no measurable blockage. She's always cold and really hates iguanas so I sometimes wonder how much reptilian DNA she has.

Yup, before my little run-in with the train I was only in the hospital once and that was because my mother was tired of me living inside her rent-free.
****** on the fall.

It is so sudden when we go from vertical to horizontal.

Arnica is good stuff in my experience.

Look after yourself and Liane.
Rian, I am not super prone to falling but I now lean on a wall or doorway to pull on my pants one leg at a time. Then there's skateboards and boy you aren't kidding about how suddenly we're looking up from where we were formerly standing.

Liane swears by the stuff but I still won't let her dip me in it every morning. Bruises are a badge showing you did something (good, bad, smart or stupid).

Liane keeps me on a short leash. Training another handyish man is not on her list. I tell her to quit around 1:00 in the afternoon so I don't have to carry her to bed an hour later.
@Squankum, I believe the lawyers have told the drug companies exactly how large the fine print at the bottom of the commercial needs to be to stall lawsuits. Always wonder who "contains no [lead, arsenic, mercury, ground glass, animal byproducts]" protects.
I have fallen on ice twice in the past 15 years -- it's amazing how cartoonish it can be. The last time, both feet just flew out in front of me and I landed nearly flat.

Insult to injury: I had dampened the driveway hosing something off an hour before sundown on a winter day. All my fault!
I fell a lot learning to ice skate as a kid but the only ice I encounter in Boca Raton is in cube form so it's more like a Lego hazzard.
I've said it before, but I'm not the one to start it! GJ needs a "show us your prosthetic limb(s) thread."
Probably get more action if you add "...back and athletic supports."
It's a shame when the kids today try to imitate their role models from the teevee.

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Jay turned 74 this year so he's still a youngster. When I was ten I would have called him five years, seven months and ten days younger but that was when each birthday was a huge deal. Now plus or minus a decade is meh.
 
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Bob Heine

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Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Shoot bob, I didn’t know you had the.. well in any case I wish you the best of luck showing who is boss round those parts.

Bad luck on the fall. Just recently lost footing with the hand truck, tried to use it to catch myself and it slipped further. At a point I just let go and plopped, little bruised on my side but that’s nothing, I hit the wheel.
@Wreckster23, it runs in my family. My mother's father died of prostate cancer complications a month before he turned 79.

I too was hanging on to the hand truck and landed on the wheel, which probably slowed my head's trip to the sidewalk.
 

drivesitfar

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 23, 2013
Messages
36,055
Location
Pacific Northwest
Sorry to hear about the fall and hope you heal quickly. Just curious if you still like your little tire inflators and since your thread really is active I can’t find the link you provided.

Heres to a great Christmas and 2025 to you and your growing family!!
 
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Bob Heine

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Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Sorry to hear about the fall and hope you heal quickly. Just curious if you still like your little tire inflators and since your thread really is active I can’t find the link you provided.

Heres to a great Christmas and 2025 to you and your growing family!!
Drives, all healed up already.

Bought the first inflator as a test and it topped off 12 car tires with plenty of battery power left. Came with a zippered hard case and was $49.99 back in August. It's on sale for 20% off ($39.99) at the moment. I have never heard of the brand (APRUT) but it has a 4.3 out of 5 rating.
It worked great so I decided to buy a second one. This time I scrolled a little further and found an almost identical inflator for $16.99. I ordered two. They are currently on sale for 7% off ($28.00) at the moment. I not only have heard of the brand but purchased a number of tools from them (VEVOR) and these have a 4.5 out of 5 rating.
The Cadillac doesn't have a spare tire. It has a 12 compressor and a can of tire sealer so it didn't need one of these inflators. I keep one VEVOR in the Corvette and the other in the PT Cruiser. The APRUT stays in the garage and I grab it all the time to inflate a leaky tire on my garden cart.

Wishing you a great Christmas and a happy 2025. The mob is meeting at our son's house for bagels and omelettes this coming Sunday morning (his wife works every day through the New Year, including Christmas and Boxing Day).
 
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Bob Heine

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Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
When the pool pump timer crapped out last Sunday I ripped it off the wall. It appears one of the wires got real hot and melted the spade connector and scorched the plastic housing. Color me unimpressed.
Second Timer Replacement 1.jpg
I already purchased the new Intermatic mechanical timer but it's bigger than the electronic one and smaller than the original Intermatic. All three have different mounting holes so I filled the old holes with caulking and gave it time to skin over before touching up the section of wall. It's still wet so it's a little darker. That's all I did on Monday.
Second Timer Replacement 2.jpg
It's time to chlorinate and pressure wash the north side of the house because green algae is growin and staining the stucco. Having participated in this rodeo before, I thought all the parts and tools needed for the job. Turns out the Klein Tools stripper doesn't work well on 10-gauge stranded wire so I had to retrieve old reliable. I also printed out some 8x10 color photos of the original wire connections.
Second Timer Replacement 3.jpg
Only one of the four conduits is ridgid (the one that goes from the big transformer to the underwater light fixture). Therefore I started wit that one.
Second Timer Replacement 4.jpg
The other three conduits are 'flexible' Liquitite units so I was able to get them through the appropriate holes. Only one had to be disconnected at both ends.
Second Timer Replacement 5.jpg
Once all four conduits were attached and their cables fit into the box, I decided to save my knees and grabbed a retired shower seat.
Second Timer Replacement 6.jpg
Now the fun starts. Cut the crimped on spade terminals off the wires and replaced them with the appropriate crimped on ring terminals. This time the wires shouldn't move once clamped down.
Second Timer Replacement 7.jpg
Referring to the two color photos to be sure the right wires reached their intended terminals, I tightened them all down and slid the timer into the case. Determined the primary mounting screw location, drilled a hole and pressed a plastic expansion plug in the hole. Screwed it down with a stainless screw. Installed the protective cover over the wiring and called it done.
Second Timer Replacement 9.jpg
Collected all the tools and put everything away just as it started raining.
Second Timer Replacement 10.jpg
Walked in the kitchen and Liane announced "We have a problem. The A/C thermostat indicates it's 83°F in the house even though the set point is 76°F. I suggested I climb into the attic and check the air handler and condensate level (turns off system if water gets too high). Liane suggested it was getting dark and I had just spent three hours installing the pool pump timer. It can wait until tomorrow. My protests resulted in me opening the sliding doors, closing their screens and opening several windows around the house (also screened). At the time it was 76°F (and 95% humidity) outside so we turned on all the ceiling fans and went to bed at the usual times.
 

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Bob Heine

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Messages
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Boca Raton, Florida
The next (Wednesday) morning is Liane's birthday and one of our grandchildren and his wife wanted to bring a cake to celebrate. It was still raining so I couldn't look at the A/C condenser unit outside. One of our family members bought birthday candles that can't be blown out so after everyone took a turn trying to blow them out, we resorted to putting them in a bowl of water. A couple floated to the top and set themselves on fire but eventually we won the battle. Payback may be some fertilizer spread on some lawns that are uncomplimentary to their owners. At 1:00 in the afternoon I removed four screws (after pulling the fuse slug next to the compressor. Three screws hold the cover on and the third attaches a strap that holds the condenser [capacitor] to the inside panel. Grabbed my spare capacitor from a shelf in the garage (along with a spare relay) and hooked up the capacitor. The original one has two connectors but my replacement had three. The plugged the wires to the C and Herm connections and after putting the fuse slug back in its box, I turned on the A/C. Problem fixed and a new 2-connector capacitor will arrive on Monday. Instead of a $400 service call I fixed the problem with an $11 part.
IMG_6281.JPG
I closed the house back up and let the A/C run until it reached 78°F. Pulled the fuse plug, screwed the capacitor back to the rear wall and installed the cover. Job done until another capacitor craps out.
 

madison069

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Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Messages
4,211
Location
Monroeville, PA
Cody, the indication of being old, really old, is not noticing the stink.

Unfortunately, I'm all too familiar with how the older someone gets, the less they can smell. It seemed like my grandparents' house suffered from natural gas leak that nobody else could detect. My grandparents couldn't smell it, and my dad and uncles worked in the oil field, so their sense of smell most have been killed off some by the environment of their workplace. I kept telling them that there is a smell in that house, but I didn't know what it was. When I was cooking one day I couldn't get the burner to light fast enough and that's when I got a whiff of the gas, and it finally clicked on what I was smelling in my grandparents' house. So, I took a spray bottle of soapy water to all of the gas lines and sprayed it all down. When I showed my dad the 6-7 leaks in their house, he cut the gas off and we took the time to fix all of the joints. I was around 12-13 years old when I did this, and my grandparents must have been in that house for 2-3 years by then. After that day the house never did smell like natural gas anymore and they started listening to me when I said, "I smell something."

My wife is convinced that due to my hearing loss and being my eyesight isn't the greatest, that my sense of smell is overcompensating for the missing senses. She also knows my sense of taste is escalated also, so I enjoy the different flavors of food and isn't a fan of bland food. So, because of this gift I usually can detect something faster than others if it's smell related. Something tells me that as I age and my hearing and eyesight keeps diminishing, my sense of smell won't be disappearing as fast as others experience. Which could be a curse if I end up in a nursing home. I'll be the guy with 30 diffusers going in his room to combat the smell of the nursing home. Which might be a good thing as I combat the smell of my own self.

Matter of fact, as I'm sitting in my office I'm smelling cookies from the front offices right now. I'm going to investigate that smell now. :giggle:
 

driftpin

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Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,304
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
Bob, about the nursing home, and the air purifiers, we use those too. When family comes to visit, we thoroughly clean her room, close the door, and leave the purifier on high for the duration. There are other air purifiers in the spare b.r.'s and the dining room.

When I was working on fire-rescue here south of you, there was a nursing home, a big one, in the city. We were in/out of there frequently, and the aroma/odor (choose one) of discharged urine was always prevalent. It actually was kept clean, but the number of elderly residents and the constant need to change bedding despite the oversight of the care staff somehow didn't keep up with the demand. This was a place where people needing more-advanced medical care were housed. Some were ambulatory, some were bedridden. I believe the bedridden were the source of the ammonia odor. One of the signs of neglect of patients is a rash in the groin and buttocks from lying in discharged urine. If we were called to transport someone to the hospital, and it wasn't a medical emergency, we would always get the staff to change their diaper, and to clean them. It made the drive to the hospital less of a discomfort for the patient. If it was a medical emergency (loss of consciousness, EKG showing a likely M.I. (heart attack), CVA, or other issue requiring immediate transport) we opened the windows in the rescue unit and made-haste.

I am always amazed at your accomplishments and diagnosing issues, and then your comprehensive write-up. You are one of the best posters on the GJ, and here's hoping you're around for many more years of repairs and writing.

My friend who's a HVAC master license-holder in Wellington (western Palm Beach County FL for you out-of-towners) is my 'what do I do now' contact, once I've run through my knowledge of fixing our AC's. We work together on diagnosing things wrong on our motorcycles.

We just did our rear yard renovation, and now have the same hole in the ground, w/new gunite to change the layout, and diamondbrite for the finish. We added a heater and a spa off the deep-end. Both got LED lighting, which has about 15 different programs to light the pool and the spa. At night, it's fun to watch the colors change. Our pump is a Pentair multiple-speed 1-1/2 HP w/a timer, and I removed the old Intermatic timer which served for decades w/no issues before the current pump. The old incandescent pool light, a Hayward 'big eyeball' w/a chrome plate on brass bezel, in a SS bucket, was junked. The new lighting is much more fun to watch in both the pool and the spa. I also repaired our Hayward Navigator pool robot, and it does a good job on the pool. The #1 thing helping us with the pool is to my mind, the saline chlorination system, which I mentioned before. Here is a beautiful blonde having fun at the pool/spa. Not yet a year old.

blonde at the pool.jpgCookie at the pool-spa spillway.01.jpg
 

gman007

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Joined
May 17, 2017
Messages
2,749
Location
West Michigan
Bob
Nice job fixing the AC. I was going to ask why do you have spare cap at hand but then rattle_snake answered that question. Well I guess there are some advantages of living in a cold climate :).

As strange as it might sound to some, my wife and I prefer the cold to heat and even when we retire we do not anticipate moving to a warmer climate. As they say to each their own.
 

Craptain

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Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
4,031
Location
Tampa Bay FL
Bob
Nice job fixing the AC. I was going to ask why do you have spare cap at hand but then rattle_snake answered that question. Well I guess there are some advantages of living in a cold climate :).

As strange as it might sound to some, my wife and I prefer the cold to heat and even when we retire we do not anticipate moving to a warmer climate. As they say to each their own.
It doesn't sound strange at all. What is strange to me are the people who move to warm places like Florida and then hide in the A/C with the thermostat turned down to the low 60's. I generally keep the temperature in the middle to high 70's during most of the year.
 

driftpin

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Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,304
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
Bob
Nice job fixing the AC. I was going to ask why do you have spare cap at hand but then rattle_snake answered that question. Well I guess there are some advantages of living in a cold climate :).

As strange as it might sound to some, my wife and I prefer the cold to heat and even when we retire we do not anticipate moving to a warmer climate. As they say to each their own.
50+ years ago, I moved from north of I-94 in S.W. MI to S.E. FL and I have never regretted it. I still visit friends in MI and I like visiting MI any time of the year, but I really appreciate being in FL during the winter. I wasn't a habitual, frequent outdoor sports activities person when I lived north of the Mason-Dixon Line.
 

Squankum

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Joined
Mar 28, 2011
Messages
7,847
Location
Southeast
It doesn't sound strange at all. What is strange to me are the people who move to warm places like Florida and then hide in the A/C with the thermostat turned down to the low 60's. I generally keep the temperature in the middle to high 70's during most of the year.

About a generation ago, a lot of wealthy folks who had moved to FL for the winters but grew to hate the heat and humidity decided to move to the mountain town of Asheville, NC, where no bad weather ever happened again.
 

Trapps

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The Detroit Zoo
Sorry to hear of the fall, Bob. Hoping for a speedy recovery.

While not familiar with Arnicare, I've been using a similar product (very effective for pain and bruising) for decades called Hirudoid which some Australian friends had introduced us to in the late 80's. At that time it wasn't available here, so they would bring several tubes back from each trip they made home.

Love the X1/9 by the way!
 
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Bob Heine

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More than three decades ago we were blessed with our first grandchild. It was easy to shop for Christmas presents and thinking what we thought was a great present would be appreciated by kids of a third generation. Not sure exactly when it changed but by the time five or six of the grandchildren were attending sixth grade and up at school, we noticed a change. Their schoolmates were showing up with iPods and Nintendo Gameboys while we were gifting lots of inexpensive toys. I got tired of the disappointed looks and decided to give the older grandchildren money. At first (early 2000's) we gave the older children a token gift and fifty one-dollar bills. Eventually we upped the presents to $100 each and switched from singles to a single C-note (after one of the teens commented how good singles were at the strip clubs). I put each bill in a Christmas card with their name on the envelope and a little note inside.

I still give money at Christmas seeing the cards end up in the trash with the tissue and wrapping paper, I decided to cut back a little and just print something on a plain white C6 envelope. I gave myself lots of time to make the envelopes and it turned out it was a good thing. My Epson printer doesn't like envelopes and when one jams in the printer, the subsequent envelopes have ink smears or stripes. Neither my Epson nor Canon ink jet printer has a pre-set for a C6 envelope, although my HP Laserjet does. At first I tried to custom print each of the 23 envelopes (some family members still get presents (from Santamazon) because they "don't need the money."

Because our son and daughter-in-law do all the holidays at their house and she's a [junior] nursing supervisor, Christmas happened on Sunday, the 22nd and was a brunch celebration. It was just the immediate family so only 25 people. By Saturday morning I had a pile of horribly printed envelopes with our "Spirits of Christmas" tree as the subject.
Christmas Spirits.jpg
The majority of the decorations on the tree that year were airline-size bottles of liquor. The local Crown Liquor store gave me a mixed case of 50 for a really good price when I told them what I was doing. Entertaining was great, with friends dropping by during the holidays. Told them to decide for themselves what they'd like to drink and untie it from the tree. Holiday decorations were real easy to put away in January with a mostly bare tree.

I determined that the Brother P-touch label maker would make short work addressing the envelopes. By Saturday evening I was sure I had made up an envelope for everyone and even made two personalized Happy Birthday cards for two family members whose birthdays fall on the 27th and 28th. Woke up early Sunday morning with a sick feeling I had forgotten someone. Went through the pile of envelopes and sure enough I was one short. We're all set to go and Liane is at the door. When I say "Just a minute" and actually succeeded in printing the best envelope of the bunch and the final label.
Unfortunately, I'm all too familiar with how the older someone gets, the less they can smell. It seemed like my grandparents' house suffered from natural gas leak that nobody else could detect. My grandparents couldn't smell it, and my dad and uncles worked in the oil field, so their sense of smell most have been killed off some by the environment of their workplace. I kept telling them that there is a smell in that house, but I didn't know what it was. When I was cooking one day I couldn't get the burner to light fast enough and that's when I got a whiff of the gas, and it finally clicked on what I was smelling in my grandparents' house. So, I took a spray bottle of soapy water to all of the gas lines and sprayed it all down. When I showed my dad the 6-7 leaks in their house, he cut the gas off and we took the time to fix all of the joints. I was around 12-13 years old when I did this, and my grandparents must have been in that house for 2-3 years by then. After that day the house never did smell like natural gas anymore and they started listening to me when I said, "I smell something."

My wife is convinced that due to my hearing loss and being my eyesight isn't the greatest, that my sense of smell is overcompensating for the missing senses. She also knows my sense of taste is escalated also, so I enjoy the different flavors of food and isn't a fan of bland food. So, because of this gift I usually can detect something faster than others if it's smell related. Something tells me that as I age and my hearing and eyesight keeps diminishing, my sense of smell won't be disappearing as fast as others experience. Which could be a curse if I end up in a nursing home. I'll be the guy with 30 diffusers going in his room to combat the smell of the nursing home. Which might be a good thing as I combat the smell of my own self.

Matter of fact, as I'm sitting in my office I'm smelling cookies from the front offices right now. I'm going to investigate that smell now. :giggle:
Cody, Shamus (blind son of our neighbors' in New York) was a great example of compensation. His hearing was good enough so he could ride a bicycle around our neighborhood (we lived on a cul-de-sac). He new he was getting to the edge of the street by the sound of the thicker gravel and he sensed obstacles like parked vehicles and telephone poles. I believe he had a great sense of smell as well because he knew it was me, the kids or Liane who came to the door when he rang our doorbell.

Somehow Liane has a more sensitive sense of smell than I do even though she still smokes. From three feet away she asks how many cloves of garlic I minced. Obviously she senses I've doubled or tripled what the recipe calls for.
Glad to see I'm not the only one that now keeps a spare capacitor or two in stock!

Always nice to have a small win!
@fouckhest, somehow A/C components have a lifespan measured in hot Sundays. When it's 90°F and 85% humidity you don't want to call for service at night or Sunday.
Nice HVAC fix Bob.
Gotta have extra caps on hand if you live in hot climate. Electrolytic capacitors do not age well, and even worse at higher temps.
You're right Justin. The one I put in lasted all of two days. Fortunately we've been having cool temperatures so a little heat is needed at night to maintain 79°F (once the sun goes down Liane needs extra warmth to be able to move).
Agreed! Prior to getting our new heat pumps, I started buying caps that were made in the USA. Those lasted MUCH longer than their Chinesium counterparts.

:beer:
Dan, the one that arrived today is Chinesium so I'll be doing a deeper dive to find the right one made in the USA. The spare I had was from our previous system, which was a dual capacitor (three lugs). This one is just like the original (which was the factory one and made in China) with only two lugs.
Bob, about the nursing home, and the air purifiers, we use those too. When family comes to visit, we thoroughly clean her room, close the door, and leave the purifier on high for the duration. There are other air purifiers in the spare b.r.'s and the dining room.

When I was working on fire-rescue here south of you, there was a nursing home, a big one, in the city. We were in/out of there frequently, and the aroma/odor (choose one) of discharged urine was always prevalent. It actually was kept clean, but the number of elderly residents and the constant need to change bedding despite the oversight of the care staff somehow didn't keep up with the demand. This was a place where people needing more-advanced medical care were housed. Some were ambulatory, some were bedridden. I believe the bedridden were the source of the ammonia odor. One of the signs of neglect of patients is a rash in the groin and buttocks from lying in discharged urine. If we were called to transport someone to the hospital, and it wasn't a medical emergency, we would always get the staff to change their diaper, and to clean them. It made the drive to the hospital less of a discomfort for the patient. If it was a medical emergency (loss of consciousness, EKG showing a likely M.I. (heart attack), CVA, or other issue requiring immediate transport) we opened the windows in the rescue unit and made-haste.

I am always amazed at your accomplishments and diagnosing issues, and then your comprehensive write-up. You are one of the best posters on the GJ, and here's hoping you're around for many more years of repairs and writing.

My friend who's a HVAC master license-holder in Wellington (western Palm Beach County FL for you out-of-towners) is my 'what do I do now' contact, once I've run through my knowledge of fixing our AC's. We work together on diagnosing things wrong on our motorcycles.

We just did our rear yard renovation, and now have the same hole in the ground, w/new gunite to change the layout, and diamondbrite for the finish. We added a heater and a spa off the deep-end. Both got LED lighting, which has about 15 different programs to light the pool and the spa. At night, it's fun to watch the colors change. Our pump is a Pentair multiple-speed 1-1/2 HP w/a timer, and I removed the old Intermatic timer which served for decades w/no issues before the current pump. The old incandescent pool light, a Hayward 'big eyeball' w/a chrome plate on brass bezel, in a SS bucket, was junked. The new lighting is much more fun to watch in both the pool and the spa. I also repaired our Hayward Navigator pool robot, and it does a good job on the pool. The #1 thing helping us with the pool is to my mind, the saline chlorination system, which I mentioned before. Here is a beautiful blonde having fun at the pool/spa. Not yet a year old.

blonde at the pool.jpgCookie at the pool-spa spillway.01.jpg
Philip, one of the deals we made when we got married was that Liane would be home to see the kids off in the morning and be there when they came home. We both grew up with both parents working full-time and when we figured out how much it would cost to have babysitters, a second car, fancy clothes and everything that went with a job and career, it became a no-brainer to live on less but be present in our children's lives. That way I could focus on working as many jobs as needed or as many hours as needed to support the family. Once in a great while Liane wanted something extra, like new carpeting or drapes and she'd get a job for a few months to make extra money. It made her feel good but it cost us every time she took a paying job.

My retirement came real early (left IBM when I was 50) and the 6-week job at AOL that lasted four years allowed us a little extra cushion so we could afford the $10,000 pool patio/diamondbrite refinish. What you did in your backyard was way beyond that and would mean cashing in an investment or two (reducing our long-term cash flow). At this point in our lives a couple of grand to convert from chlorine tablets to a salt water pool system falls into the solar panel category -- good chance we'll be gone before payback.
Bob
Nice job fixing the AC. I was going to ask why do you have spare cap at hand but then rattle_snake answered that question. Well I guess there are some advantages of living in a cold climate :).

As strange as it might sound to some, my wife and I prefer the cold to heat and even when we retire we do not anticipate moving to a warmer climate. As they say to each their own.
@gman007, I understand your love of the colder weather. My grandparents moved from Sweden and Norway to Northern Alberta then Wisconsin and eventually to southern New York. They retired to Vermont and lived six miles from town on a dirt road that rarely got plowed. My Scandinavian genes make me more comfortable in the cold. In the Hudson Valley I didn't wear a coat to work until it got below 0°F. I was better off a little chilled than bundled up and sweating.
It doesn't sound strange at all. What is strange to me are the people who move to warm places like Florida and then hide in the A/C with the thermostat turned down to the low 60's. I generally keep the temperature in the middle to high 70's during most of the year.
Andrew, we moved to Florida in 1975, in the days of "The Oil Crisis" and got really scared. Our house in New York had oil heat and added extra insulation in the attic to control our heating costs. I installed a DIY central air system in the house and used it during the hottest days of the summer. Our oil and electric bills totaled around $100 a month (oil on the budget plan). Got the first electric bill in Florida and it was almost $100. It was November and I was imagining electric bills bigger than our mortgage ($312 a month). The first summer we had $200 to $300 electric bills and when the weather cooled off we decided to hold off on running the A/C for as long as possible. Unless we had visitors, the A/C didn't get turned on for three years.

Instead of A/C, I installed ceiling fans in every room (except the two bathrooms, which had squirrel cage blowers). Saved a ton of money living like that (if you're hot, take a dip in the pool and the ceiling fan will cool you off). By the third year, my wool suits needed to go to the cleaners to get rid of the mildew smell so often that the de-humidification the A/C would provide became a break-even. We keep the house between 78° and 80°. I know when it hits 80 because fluid begins dripping from my forehead. A degree cooler and I stop sweating while motionless but 78° allows me to walk around in dry clothing.
50+ years ago, I moved from north of I-94 in S.W. MI to S.E. FL and I have never regretted it. I still visit friends in MI and I like visiting MI any time of the year, but I really appreciate being in FL during the winter. I wasn't a habitual, frequent outdoor sports activities person when I lived north of the Mason-Dixon Line.
Philip, I've adjusted about as well as I can and I love our life in Florida. In our younger years we took a cruise or two every year and vacationed in the islands in the between seasons (April-May and September-October). Trips to Great Britain, Spain, Greece and Scandinavia were as easy to arrange as a trip to Australia or a round the world flight with stops in multiple countries, including two weeks in India. It's 23 miles south to Ft. Lauderdale or 23 miles north to Palm Beach International airports and for some trips to Europe and Mexico it was cheaper to fly out of Miami International, still only 47 miles south. Cruise ships leave the Ports of Palm Beach, Everglades (Ft. Lauderdale) or Miami.
About a generation ago, a lot of wealthy folks who had moved to FL for the winters but grew to hate the heat and humidity decided to move to the mountain town of Asheville, NC, where no bad weather ever happened again.
@Squankum, I am convinced disasters of some kind lurk everywhere. Getting away from the sweltering 90-degree Florida weather doesn't mean you'll miss out on those 100°+ heat in the midwest. I remember a cold snap one winter in Florida when Anchorage, Alaska was warmer than Miami, Florida.
And then came Helene!
Andrew, then there are those who moved back to New Jersey and New York in time to greet Sandy.
Sorry to hear of the fall, Bob. Hoping for a speedy recovery.

While not familiar with Arnicare, I've been using a similar product (very effective for pain and bruising) for decades called Hirudoid which some Australian friends had introduced us to in the late 80's. At that time it wasn't available here, so they would bring several tubes back from each trip they made home.

Love the X1/9 by the way!
Mark, I'm almost fully recovered. A couple of enthusiastic hugs on Sunday from our grandchildren reminded me my ribs were still tender where I hit the hand truck tire.

I may have invited someone to purchase my kidney but Google AI responded to my query about the two products:

"Hirudoid gel and arnica gel are both topical treatments that can help with pain and inflammation, but they have different active ingredients and uses:
  • Hirudoid gel
    Contains heparinoid, an active substance with anti-inflammatory, anti-clotting, and fibrinolytic effects. Hirudoid gel is used to treat superficial thrombophlebitis, bruising, and hematoma. It can be applied to the skin up to four times a day.
  • Arnica gel
    Contains arnica montana, which is used to treat a variety of conditions, including bruises, sprains, muscle aches, joint pain, and inflammation from insect bites. Arnica gel may also help with wound healing, superficial phlebitis, and swelling from broken bones.
A pilot study found no difference between the effectiveness of Hirudoid and arnica creams in treating pain and bruising associated with dialysis-related infiltrations."

I really miss the X1/9. By 1995 it had reached its lowest value (they stopped selling the Bertone in 1987). Parts were harder to find and when the clutch master cylinder gave up, even the folks at Bayless Lancia-Fiat (before they were bought by Midwest) didn't have one in stock. Liane talked me into junking the car because I was commuting between Florida and DC at the time and didn't have the time for three elderly cars. A year later we bought the house we're in now and the Fiat would have fit nicely with the other three cars (on dollies and turned sideways at the back of the 3-car garage).
Merry Christmas Bob!, I wanted to say best wishes for this season for you and Lian and to hope that we ll have a safe and comfortable new year.
Your stories and experiences have added much to my life and, I am pretty sure, many others.
Be well, my friend.
Alan, thank you so much. The GJ is my hangout and I really like the people who hang out as well. I hope your Christmas is Merry and your new year brings happiness.
Hope you're already on the mend from the fall, Bob. Arnica is good stuff.

Thanks for all the advice and stories this year, best wishes for your health in 2025, and I sincerely hope you and Liane and the extended family have a very Merry Christmas!

xmas
Nick, Liane swears by the stuff and these days bruises show up out of nowhere.

It has been a good year and we had a wonderful time with the family Sunday. I'm actually glad we celebrated on Sunday. Seems like there were very few drunks 'Noggers on the road and we can relax and cook the standing rib roast we bought last Christmas. Pretty sure sitting in the freezer for 12 months dosen't count as 'aging.'

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and yours.
 
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Bob Heine

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Messages
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Location
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Much as I'd like to visit all the threads I "Watch" and wish everyone Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, I've somehow fallen behind on my watching to the point that it's backed up to two pages. Please know I truly appreciate everyone on this forum and the time we share. It's an hour past my bedtime "And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless us, every one!"
 

Prospecter

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2015
Messages
2,443
Location
Maine
Much as I'd like to visit all the threads I "Watch" and wish everyone Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, I've somehow fallen behind on my watching to the point that it's backed up to two pages. Please know I truly appreciate everyone on this forum and the time we share. It's an hour past my bedtime "And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless us, every one!"
And we appreciate your visits when you have time. Merry Christmas.
 

kitdoctor

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Joined
Oct 30, 2010
Messages
532
Location
Sunshine Coast, Australia
Odis, I've never hit the jackpot but in 2004 I bought 100 shares of Costco for $48.15 a share. Twenty years later it has gone up a bit, closing at $992.61 on Friday. The real estate thing frightens me because you have to take on debt and hope there isn't another 2008 bump in the road.
The next bump in the road is due 2026 (for property). My canary in the coal mine will be home builders stocks peaking in 2025. A nice 20 year repeat would be the broader stock market tanking in 2027.
 
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