More winterizing. Our front porch at the pub gets enclosed every fall, giving us four more four-tops (or two eight-tops) in heated spaces.
Plumbing the propane heaters is my job.
There are two more heaters in the other half of the porch behind me.
In the past, we've used twenty-gallon propane cans to feed the heaters, one for each side of the porch. Yesterday, the gas man came by to hook up two 250 gallon tanks to the porch. No more changing cans at 7:30 PM in ten-below weather!
When I decommissioned the heaters last year, I carefully labeled them for location and zip-tied the hoses to the heaters. When I went to install them this AM, the hoses somehow didn't fit. Took about an hour to get everything figured out. I have no idea what the hell happened.
The warranty-replacement air dryer from IR finally escaped shipping purgatory! About five minutes to get the old one out and the new one in:
Dry air again! I'm hoping IR lets me keep the dead one, as I think I can salvage parts from it and the one it replaced--which seemed to be broken in a different way--and make one runner for a spare.
One of our antique light shades for the porch broke when a coworker washed it:
It's the second time this globe has done this--the first time was years ago when I washed it the first time. The water was barely warm and the damned thing just split in my hands. It broke in a different place this time.
Fortunately, I've taught my coworkers that, if they save the parts, I can make it
whole again. It'll look fine from my shop. I barely even cut myself in the process.
Beer thirty, then some more knife sharpening.