Jim, the Corvette chose to give me a little followup job. The speedometer connection only works after everything warms up. At first it tells me I'm not moving and then tells me I'm driving erratically, going from 0 to 20 in a split second when the tach says I'm doing a flat 30mph. Eventually it settles down and gives a real reading. I was willing to live with that issue but when I parked the Vette in the driveway for an hour or so, it peed transmission fluid on the driveway. Not exactly lemonade from lemons but I'm going to drain the transmission, replace the ordinary pan with a shiny new aluminum one and refill it with old school B&M Trick Shift.Hi Bob.
Thought I'd stop in and see what's happening down your way. Did everything work as planned with the corvette. Loved those polished shafts they looked great. Went to the (****) shop today they didnt deliver very well. Mostly very old hardware and warped wood trim. Oh well!
I hope being cooped up all this time is not wearing on you too badly. I still have quite a list of projects to do so I'm still playing catch up with them so I'm doing pretty well. Keep smiling friend!
Sent from my SM-A102U using The Garage Journal mobile app
Sorry to hear the **** outlet didn't deliver. I limit my visits to the soft core Habitat for Humanity ReStore outlets. The closest one attracts mostly women but the one a dozen miles away has a large ******** guy section.
Andy, thanks for stopping by. My brother **** cast a huge shadow when it came to mathematics. He could do square roots in his head and felt bad that I couldn't. He didn't need to use the slide rule my father gifted him when he was 5 or 6 so he gave it to me as a crutch. It was the little one that didn't have a line in glass thing. He thought showing me how to use in once would imprint it in my mind. I was able to admire the joinery in the wooden "toy."Good reading as always, Bob.
I started engineering school totally clueless. My wife, a math major, had a one sided plastic slide rule she got in high school physics class. The cursor was about 1/8" wide. Nonetheless it got me through engineering school. She bought me a Post Versalog (it's around here someplace) my senior year but really too late to use it much. The toy rule carried the day.
I too lusted after an HP 35 but could never come up with $35 much less $350. I did manage an HP 49, 49 step programmable my first year out of college. You could do a lot with just 49 steps. I eventually bought an HP41C, with thermal printer and extra memory. Like the Versalog, too late to be of much use as I was mainly using programs on the company's minicomputer. We did take our gas hydraulics program for pipeline design to Tehran in 1977. It took a full box of cards. Our computer guy went along and the Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) managed to get us use of the twin 360's at the University of Tehran. We could start about 6:00PM and the operators left and told us to turn out the lights and lock up when we left.
Past that I'm lost around computers.![]()
My first electronic calculator was a gift from IBM. I saved IBM money by reformatting the Corporate Security manual so it used a fourth of the paper in each copy (30,000 copies each year) so I was given an "Excellence" award. The calculator could do addition, subtraction, multiplication and division with a memory function I was able to conquer in a matter of weeks.
I had an aha moment in an MBA Finance course. Accounting discrepancies divisible by 9 point to a transposition error. The vast majority of my math errors turned out to be from transposition and that problem lingers to this day. Phones with digital displays have all but eliminated my wrong number calls. My remaining fat **** mis-dials may be fixed with diet.
I don't want to mislead anyone about my computer knowledge. In 1981 I worked in the same off-site building as the core PC development team. I prepared a cost estimate for the documentation and it was rejected (actual cost turned out to be an order of magnitude more than my estimate). Four years later they put me in charge of the software side of the documentation. IBM didn't offer PCs in the Employee Purchase program for the first five years and I was unwilling to spend more for a PC than I paid for my '72 Corvette big block. Instead I bought a smart typewriter. The Quietwriter 7, with an adapter card to enable spell check and an adapter for the optional display head cost me $1,240.17 with a 0% interest loan to be paid back through a paycheck deduction. I know what I paid because I save receipts for my worst purchase decisions. The motherboard went belly up two decades later and a used replacement would cost more than a new laser printer.
Rian, taking care of stuff is a side-effect of poverty. Paying to replace stuff you didn't take care of really hurts.I love how you look after stuff that you have paid for it.
That slide rule looks pretty much immaculate
That isn't a photo of mine but mine was in at least that good shape when I gifted it to my son-in-law when he graduated from college with a PhD.
Michael, we returned from a fishing trip with three large Barracuda, thinking we would have a feast. A very kind friend told us they were not great eating and might have high levels of ciguatoxin from eating parrotfish. Told my son to bury them in the sand between the boat parking runways in the side yard. Woke the next morning to a complete blackout of the master bedroom window on that side of the house. Went outside to discover a billion black flies relaxing on every surface near what had to be the shallowest grave in history.With all that is going on nothing is trivial anymore.
I won the rat war, sunroom is clear with hot tub and no visitors. A few weeks ago buried bunker and porgies in my backyard. Well the masked bandits had a field day 10 holes in my garden couple of fishheads left.
My aunt who raised me was a PHD chemist at LIU what 16 year old kid did you know who had a keys to chemistry stockroom in the 70's? So all the latest and greatest educational stuff was brought home to play with. I had been setting up instruments since about 13 my aunt found her tech person, when computers came on line I was the only one to touch the chemistry computers. The paid IT staff was not allowed to touch them too many screw ups.
got to take child to school
Early in my tech writing career we had a support staff that was supposed to do all our final draft typing. These editorial assistants had to give up their IBM Executive typewriters and use Magnetic Tape Selectric typewriters. They showed their displeasure with the new machines by slowing down. The second time I missed a key schedule I started using their machines after they left for the day. I didn't get paid for overtime so no one complained and I never missed another milestone. Eventually they gave me my own machine to use. Turned out the editorial assistants were paid more than me because of my failure to meet deadlines. That machine helped double my salary in three years.
Mark, it's funny how my financial pain threshold has changed over the years. When it cost $2.50 to fill the car with gas, $5 was my threshold (didn't think twice spending that on something I wanted). When a similar fill-up started costing $50, my threshold became $100. Pretty sure I would still cringe a little buying that calculator.I think I paid $125 for my HP41CV back when I started working on my engineering degree. It seemed like a lot of money back then for a calculator, but it proved its worth.
My old calculator still works after all these years, but I found an app to allow me to use the very same calculator on my smartphone anytime I want (and I use it all the time!).
Gilr, if you ever worry you are keeping too many relics, dig around in your garage. If you have a dwell meter in a closet or drawer, you might be a relic hoarder. I was pretty proud of myself for throwing out my second, backup, dwell meter. My 1968 GTO was my first new car and unlike it's beater predecessors, required a dwell meter to set the points (OK, the points could be set with a feeler gauge but I failed to mention that to my wife). The Styrofoam box is a little beat up...Hi Bob, I thought I was the only one with one of those relics left. Also still have the HP 35 lying in a drawer in my office as well. Seems like yesterday when I last used them, but it was in the 70s which is now "forever" ago!
...but the meter, cables and accessories are still in good shape.
Tapio, nothing very cool going on. Citibank still requires phone calls so I can: "Press 4 to be ignored."Hi Bob! And Happy New Year! How have you been? Any cool projects?
I saw this and thought of you, there's a new challenger for a Florida man
Have a great week and stay safe![]()
My father told me not to use that nutcracker while he was in the room.

Cody, every time I looked at one of those calculators that cartoon balloon with swirling mathematical symbols formed at the back of my eyes. If I owned one it would be in a drawer with its alkaline batteries slowly destroying it.As I've been through several calculators in my youth, I've found that I forgotten most of what I used to know about calculators. It seems my task don't require much of a calculator besides simple math. I used to compete in Calculator competitions in my younger school days. Wasn't much except you know learn what the other weird button can do and become more efficient with that calculator. I recall it being a Casio I believe. But I'm unsure of the model. As I grew up I started drifting to the TI calculators and I've used the models from TI-82 to TI83Plus in High School, then Ti89 Titanium in College. Then when I prepared for my FE exam they only allowed Ti_30XS or lower for the test and so I've used the Ti-30XS from then on. Matter of fact, it's sitting right here on my desk as I type this.
JB, I do feel like I missed out on a fun career but I doubt I would have gotten to travel the world for IBM and AOL. I would have been the mediocre engineer among superstars. Instead I was the technical writer with a burning desire to learn about the newest stuff. You can't afford to let the people who make it work wander off. Writers are on the tiny totem poles.That is a very funny story Madison069, I have almost the exact same experience with calculators except I chose a Casio fx-115ES for my FE, it was the closest I could find to the Casio I'd been using since jr. high and all the way through college and as you said it is sitting beside me now and is used daily.
JB
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