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What did you do "IN" your garage today?

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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
Back to fighting with the kitchen refrigeration ****. We have three refrigerated prep tables and a set of refrig. drawers under the flattop. Last night, all of them decided to take a break. I've done what I can--make sure the condensers and evaporators are clean an unobstructed, fans running, compressor running, etc. One condenser had a piece of aluminum foil completely covering the coils--duh. Another had a paper towel, almost completely covering it. We'll see if removing those and cleaning the coils helps any.

The third one trips the breaker when it calls for cooling. It's on its own 20A circuit, so this is bad. Pros called.

What gets me about this "commercial kitchen" equipment is what a pile of **** and bad design they are! Three of them have the thermostat/temperature monitors hidden behind the equipment--the kitchen staff are supposed to be monitoring that constantly. The condenser coils are hard to access. It's a commercial kitchen--things are greasy and the coils need to be cleaned weekly at the least. One of the prep tables had a condenser that was so hard to access that I finally just cut a hole in the side of the case.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
A decade or so ago, I took a nasty fall while solo mountaineering and broke a leg. Today I fixed it.

54895315625_4b44270251_o.jpg

Fortunately, the leg was on one of my tripods.

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What was left of the broken QR paddle.

That Nyloc sits in a depression in the tripod leg, making it impossible to use anything but a thin-wall 8mm socket. Do I own a thin-wall 8? Hell no. But a 5/16" fits well enough and I do have a P&C 1/4" drive thin enough to reach.
 

sparky 1971

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 9, 2018
Messages
7,994
Location
Central Iowa
Instead of my usual procrastinating until the weatherman says it's gonna snow and snow a lot, I pulled the ATV in and changed the oil, greased it, pulled all four rear tires off and put the chains on, put the snow plow bracket and lift mechanism on, and pulled the blade out so it's ready to go. Hopefully I won't need it for a couple of months, but I'm actually ready ahead of time for once. Then, I decided there's no more lawnmowing going to happen this year so I put the fuel stabilizer in the tanks, drove them around to get it mixed and into the carbs, and tarped them up behind the garage. I'll see them again in April. I hide from the phone when I'm not working so I didn't have it while in the garage. Photos are obviously taken after I was finished.
 

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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
Instead of my usual procrastinating until the weatherman says it's gonna snow and snow a lot, I pulled the ATV in and changed the oil, greased it, pulled all four rear tires off and put the chains on, put the snow plow bracket and lift mechanism on, and pulled the blade out so it's ready to go. Hopefully I won't need it for a couple of months, but I'm actually ready ahead of time for once. Then, I decided there's no more lawnmowing going to happen this year so I put the fuel stabilizer in the tanks, drove them around to get it mixed and into the carbs, and tarped them up behind the garage. I'll see them again in April. I hide from the phone when I'm not working so I didn't have it while in the garage. Photos are obviously taken after I was finished.
Jeez, that's boring. The real fun is waiting for three feet of snow and a 40 knot blizzard to do the work.
 

sparky 1971

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 9, 2018
Messages
7,994
Location
Central Iowa
Jeez, that's boring. The real fun is waiting for three feet of snow and a 40 knot blizzard to do the work.
Been there, done that for the last 10 years. Two, maybe three, years ago, even with the axle locked and five sandbags in the bed, I couldn't get enough traction to get up the hill and into the garage until I got the chains on the two rearmost wheels. The front rear tires have to come off to get the chains on and it's faster to pull the rear rear tires. No more.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
Been there, done that for the last 10 years. Two, maybe three, years ago, even with the axle locked and five sandbags in the bed, I couldn't get enough traction to get up the hill and into the garage until I got the chains on the two rearmost wheels. The front rear tires have to come off to get the chains on. No more.
I surprised myself by changing to my winter tires last year before I had to do it in the snow.

Probably a one-off.
 

sparky 1971

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 9, 2018
Messages
7,994
Location
Central Iowa
I surprised myself by changing to my winter tires last year before I had to do it in the snow.

Probably a one-off.
I try to religiously put the snow tires on my service truck and the tire chains on the passenger side floorboard by the second weekend of November I hope we don't get one of the rare early November blizzards since I talked myself out of it today. Everything else in the fleet is a 4X4 with all terrain tires year round.
 
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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
I try to religiously put the snow tires on my service truck and the tire chains on the passenger side floorboard by the second weekend of November I hope we don't get one of the rare early November blizzards since I talked myself out of it today. Everything else in the fleet is a 4X4 with all terrain tires year round.
Weather is calling for heavy snow above 4,000' tonight. I live at 3,750, so probably heavy slush. Did I get the tires changed?
 

Motorman55

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2016
Messages
2,646
Location
South Jersey
Loaded up the 4x6 trailer with the 1st load of tool donations for the NJ Fire Museum. Included in this trip was the big Skat Blast cabinet, a few buckets full of tools, a vintage heavy duty hand truck and some misc stuff then loaded up the car with the blast cab's vacumn, a bunch of tools, and a vintage Kennedy Machinist tool box. Once there the guys helped me unload everything, talked a bit then headed back home.

Once home I had to rearrange and put away everything I moved out to get to the donated stuff including shifting the Handy motorcycle lift with the '74 XLCH Sportser still on it, back into place. I used the big Mayhew Dominator bar to pry it inch by inch across the floor.

I can see more floor space now. I was actually able to ride the big '74 FLH Harley into the garage. Next load goes up to them on the 15th.
 
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SMOKEYBEAR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
461
Wrapped up the front brakes on the dually, test drive went as expected, double checked the new lines for leaks and such, all is well. Pedal feels 10x better.

Started on the rear... It's a damn work out. I have it torn down, I thought I had every thing I needed. Wrong. Caliper pins frozen, broke one, tried to fix it, failed. Parking brake shoes were smoked and was able to find some in town. I need to order some new pins and 1 caliper bracket. I bought the truck used from PA, they have way more salt, winter, snow and ect there, so no real surprise. It is a bunch of heavy duty work. It's giving my big Milwaukee impact and I a test. I feel like I have every tool I own out.

Sears I used to live by was going out of business years ago when I lived in Tidewater Va, on sale I snagged impact inverted Torx socket..used them for the first time today. Rotor to hub bolts.
 

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niget2002

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
11,213
Location
Josephine, TX
Youtube tv lost espn. So to make it easier for me to drop youtube tv, I need to get local channels working ota again. I mounted the small antenna I have in a window. It kinda works, but I'm thinking I'm going to get a larger outdoor antenna to mount on the roof of the shop. The metal building is screwing with the signal, plus we're a bit far for the antenna to be so low.
 

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,598
Location
Upstate New York
Youtube tv lost espn. So to make it easier for me to drop youtube tv, I need to get local channels working ota again. I mounted the small antenna I have in a window. It kinda works, but I'm thinking I'm going to get a larger outdoor antenna to mount on the roof of the shop. The metal building is screwing with the signal, plus we're a bit far for the antenna to be so low.
Look into a Gray-Hoverman antenna. They're very directional, but **** in the signals, even from multiple reflections and refractions. I built 3, with reflector grids. They're in my attic. There's tons of plans, including some made from old exterior antenna elements.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
What are you using for a player these days?
Hell, I can't pronounce it!

MIC jumble of letters.


I've probably owned fifteen different players over the years. My favorites were the Nomad--my first--very intuitive UI and controls--the scroll bar was sweet--and the various Cowans I had--utterly horrible UI and controls, but the sound quality from high-sample rate MP3s was awesome. Cowans were made in Korea, no longer seem to exist.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
I'm guessing no... still an hour or so of daylight!

and DLST tomorrow!
Actually, it's back to Standard time tomorrow. Sleep in an extra hour (yeah, right), wake with the sun up and it gets dark an hour earlier.

Bunch of friends stopped by last night--talk story 'til early morning--and I'm feeling strangely uninspired to do anything resembling physical labor today.

Sorted camera gear into an old pack to make carrying stuff upstairs next week to do the food photography easier; put out a few brushfires around the pub. Got more custom settings on the new camera set where I like 'em. Played with the new computer and camera re-learning shooting tethered. Realized I ordered the wrong camera for this purpose, but it's an awesome camera and will work just fine.

Shopping around for used Vanagons trying to decide if it's better to buy a good used one or have my old (no longer) trusty rebuilt. Living where I do makes the later difficult.
 

rd65

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2017
Messages
2,818
Location
Granite Falls, WA
A few small projects in the shop. Got the under sink water heater mount installed. Cleaned up the opening for the sink in the county top. Replaced a couple screws in the Craftsman chainsaw. Shortened a drill bit to use as a pilot bit for hole saw. Also ground a flat in the shank for the set screw.
 

nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
32,032
Location
Coronado, CA
After showing the new helper what i wanted him to do and pointing out where the materials were located, both the main helper and i went to look at a problem in another city, We then went to the Industrial Hardware and purchased replacement twist drill bits,

When we returned to the shop we found that the new helper had completed one task and was actively engaged in the other. This kid shows real potential.
 

larry4406

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2006
Messages
19,510
Location
Northern Virginia
The dogs like to urinate on our rolling gate, so it causes a lot of rust issues. As such, I spent the day cutting, welding, grinding, priming, painting, and generally fabricating a section of my rolling gate.

Before
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After
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Tell me you doubled the gaug eof the metal used!

Also you can *** a little section of electric fence wire, and eliminate the problem! They may do it again, but only once!
I agree a small section of electric fence would be an ideal solution.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,951
Location
Far NE Oregon
Oh, boy! I get to reset every clock in the facility!

Enough already. Just stop it. Knock it off. You can't change time (time can change you).

If you want to get up an hour earlier in the summer, talk to your boss. Don't ram it down my throat.

PS: When Ben Franklin so famously proposed something like Daylight Savings Time, he was writing satire.

Get off my lawn!
 

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,308
Location
The Badlands
Oh, boy! I get to reset every clock in the facility!

Enough already. Just stop it. Knock it off. You can't change time (time can change you).

If you want to get up an hour earlier in the summer, talk to your boss. Don't ram it down my throat.

PS: When Ben Franklin so famously proposed something like Daylight Savings Time, he was writing satire.

Get off my lawn!

I rest everything but one as soon as I got up. one in the bedroom. (SWMBO's alarm not included) 2 analog in the "ofices" (Mine an hers) 2 digital in the kitchen, adn one more analog in the entry.

Got an noon alarm set for verify the alignment of the hands on two of the analog. (I stopped playing with taking them sown and fussing witk the knob on these battery driven movements, just move the hand where it needs to be...)

Oh **** the thermostat needs to be done...
 
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