kaymccampbell
Well-known member
I've got both a rotor and an impact for the garden. I prefer the impact. Just something about the sound of an impact.
Dan, thank you, I placed an order for a 4-pack. I have used the gear-driven heads in several places but they have two flaws. First flaw is their relatively fine spray -- even mild breezes blow the spray around. Second flaw is the gear drive speed -- it rotates the head very slowly so it isn't obvious they are stuck when checking the system for problem heads. The two K-Rain heads next to my neighbor's yard got stuck and I didn't notice the problem until the grass started browning up. As a temporary fix I am replacing the big K2s with Mini PROs.Bob, you might want to look into these to replace those impacts.
https://store.rainbird.com/sprinklers/rotors.html?rotor_series=17317
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Kay, our system goes on at midnight and when the windows are open the sound of a half-dozen impact heads wakes me up and then puts me right back to sleep.I've got both a rotor and an impact for the garden. I prefer the impact. Just something about the sound of an impact.
Y'sguy, we've had underground systems for 45 years and I've worked hard to reduce the maintenance. Our last house had four gate valves I had to open manually and sequentially. I converted that system to an indexing valve, single solenoid valve and 7-day timer (inside the garage). Started with fixed heads that needed constant attention to keep grass from blocking them and ended up replacing them with cheap pop-ups. Second (current) house has similar indexing valve/solenoid valve/timer setup but with six zones instead of four. The pop-up heads are all Toro and I've been replacing the 4-inch heads with 6-inch heads so the grass has less of a chance blocking the spray. The big sections, front and back lawns are covered by rotators and impacts. Slowly but surely I'd like to replace the impacts with rotators but with bigger nozzles so they aren't as wind sensitive. If I do a few at a time it won't feel like an ordeal. Over the years my involvement has been reduced to about once a year replacing a head or three. I'm hoping these RainBird rotators are good enough because a set of four is less than $50.Bob, I have found over the years of owning two different sprinkler systems that the maintenance on them can be very annoying. And even if one buys and maintains it themselves it's cost of small items is crazy. At one point at my last home I swore that the system would be fine and then if I looked at it sideways it would act up and need some kind of replacement. I think it was just seeking attention! Those head unit prices really add up quick and then like you write, you get to dig them up while hunched over and try to glue or screw them back together. I watched a repair guy do it once and learned a trick of putting a 5 gal bucket over it while checking to keep from constantly getting soaked. I felt like I had defeated that monster! But, unfortunately it was only temporary.
Drives, I don't blame the realtor. $150,000 was a fair price and I would have taken it. Liane was dead set on making exactly $100,000 profit for some reason and of course the realtor believed an extra $13,500 was a reasonable goal. In a year we had maybe five open houses with no offers above $150,000. The second realtor didn't promise any particular price but had a buyer lined up in a month at the lower price.Bob: I won't defend Realtors as a group, but I'm guessing that story you mentioned where you had 150k offers without a Realtor and then listed with one for $165 to get your wife's price wasn't all the Realtor's fault. with commissions your 150 without any was pretty darn close. that said when you ask a person (Realtor, Appraiser, Bank or ??) to estimate the value of a home it's somewhat of a crapshoot if it's not brand new cause it's only worth what a buyer can or will pay.
The first piece of Real Estate I bought was a 1 bedroom condo with carport for $37k and I assumed a $36k VA mortgage and gave the seller a new BETA MAX recorder (yep I actually thought it was better made than a VCR, but VCR had the marketing and movies). sold little condo two years later for no profit so my bride and I could buy our existing home for $110k that we now pay close to 9k in taxes every year for the privilege to live here.
now about that lawnmower running over sprinkler heads? do we know the guy that does that? best of luck with the fix and did you invent that tool or was that another specialty tool you had to buy in order to work on your own sprinklers?
here's to another great weekend and yes you are still in my thoughts and I hope everything is ok.
Mark, thanks for the advice. I'm doing a few while sitting here typing. I know, TMI!Bob,
If you do the removal route, kegels are your friend. As soon as you make the final decision start doing them and continue for life. Incontinence was my biggest worry. The kegels will go a long way to helping with that issue.

Join the old ladies club. I've been doing them for 30 years.Mark, thanks for the advice. I'm doing a few while sitting here typing. I know, TMI!![]()


Uncle Willie, I would be happy if the battery in the '87 Corvette could be removed after removing just the tire. Not sure if anyone has ever taken the battery out the top but it doesn't look like fun.PTs have a horrible battery location. Chevy Astro's are horrible as well. The prize however, goes to the engineer that put them in the fender so that the tire has to be removed.


Uncle Willie, Cash for Clunkers sucked up a lot of the early C4s. Nice ones were selling for $5,000 but if you tried to trade in an '84 or '85 that needed any work or a paint job, the C4C program was a better deal. There's a crazy amount of forged aluminum in those clunkers. Not sure how they qualified as gas guzzlers because my '87 regularly got 30mpg on a trip when I kept it under a hundred.I haven't had too many scrap vettes, so I didn't think about them. I did have one junk c4, but that is it. I listed it online and a guy up north bought it for the frame. I never really even looked at it much. I did throw out my back opening the hood and couldn't work for a week though.
Drives, I don't live under any delusions. I could slip and fall, causing a clot and be dead the next day. Doesn't scare me, it's just part of why I do my best to enjoy every day.if it's any comfort my mother in law beat cancer about 6 or so years ago and my father in law just beat it (he had a form of lymp/Hodgkin's) and went of Cheemo about 4 months ago.
best of luck with everything and again hoping you come out the other side of this better than you went in.
interesting engineering with the batteries on your cars. I recall having to loosen the ****** bolts to change spark plugs on my old 1970 Mach 1 428 cobra jet probably cause I didn't want to spend the money for the correct tool.
BTW there was a time when people were filling in swimming pools with dirt (did you see Bobby made a bridge across his and has turtles swimming in it?) cause of the liability and limited value added to their homes and now with COVID and families being home more than a little swimming pools are in HIGH DEMAND.


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Bob, hot flashes are the best.Kay, if I choose the radiation treatments they include testosterone blocking hormones so I can have a taste of menopause.
Kay, it would be hard to recognize a hormone-related hot flash here in South Florida. I get hot flashes every time I go outside in the 8 months of summer.Bob, hot flashes are the best.
Ya know, I'd relocate that cruise control thingie, so I could top load the battery on the vette.
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Met with the urology oncologist/surgeon today and spent about an hour going over options. I will meet with the urology oncologist/radiation specialist in ten days. Leaning toward surgical removal of the prostate and a few lymph glands (my cancer is aggressive). Post surgery leakage won't be a problem as long as Liane holds off on the new carpet in the master bedroom (our elderly pug was a bit incontinent in her later years). The radiation option requires hormone therapy before and after the actual frying of the tumor. And, as mentioned earlier, radiation treatment makes surgery down the line (if there is a recurrence) more difficult. The other drawback to leaving the fried prostate in place is need for more headstand enemas and biopsies.![]()
I'd notch that brace, and put in a nice bent piece of 3/8 to open the hole.Kay, it would be hard to recognize a hormone-related hot flash here in South Florida. I get hot flashes every time I go outside in the 8 months of summer.
Relocating that cruise control thingie wouldn't fix the problem. When the ungineers designed the C4 Corvette the cowl shake was really bad. The fix was a pair of diagonal braces going from the frame to the cowl. The passenger side brace is pretty obvious. When they came out with the convertible in '86 it was even worse so they added a big X-frame to the bottom of the chassis.
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Kirk, I completely forgot to put fertilizer down on the lawn to prevent the rain. It was almost like I had waxed the car.Mother nature has a wicked sense of humor.

Thank you Drives. Ants are my friend. When you have ants, you don't have termites (they are mortal enemies). "Predator ants raid termite colonies and return home with their prey. Ants can't digest termites on their own, so they feed them to their larvae first. Once the ant larvae break down a termite's carcass, workers and queens are able to consume the insects."new plastic arbor looks great. we've found a few good solutions to ANT issues if you need them I'll post for you. some we bought on Amazon and some you can just pick up at HD or Lowes.
at least when it pours on you in Florida it's 80 degrees and not 40's like up here, but I agree that we are not ducks so letting it pass instead of getting out in it is best.
hope you are feeling ok and keep up the great work.
WordMan, thanks so much for the information. I feel like my time on this earth is precious and the less time I spend with doctors means more time with my family (and the Garage Journal). After the cardio ablation procedure, I'm real comfortable with the latest techniques. It's not like a few more scars will ruin my beach (beached?) body.I went with surgery (for the same reason, it leaves radiation as an option if you get a recurrence). The da Vinci surgical system is incredible. A few little incisions, and that's it.
My cancer was a Gleason 6 when tested at biopsy, but downgraded (upgraded?) to a 7 when a full biopsy was done after surgery.
The biggest hassle was the damned catheter you have to have for the first week. After that, I had few issues. All nerves were spared, so everything still works as intended. I did piss myself once, but otherwise, I'm 99.% continent. Occasionally I'll get a large drip when I squat down or move in certain ways, but this rarely ends up in my drawers. Instead, you get up and go pee and viola, all is fine.
The only time I have any real issue is when taking a muscle relaxant (for my tension headaches). I wear a piss-pad as I sleep a bit too soundly and will wake up having just given a small squirt. It's enough I would have damp drawers without the pad, but no more than that.
I had mine out 2 years ago this coming July.
Kay, it's not like I'm preserving a pure stock Corvette but having to pull that little side panel every five years isn't that big a deal. If I had to do it a lot more often, I would do as you suggest. As a brand new "adult" I remember pulling the battery in my '56 Chevy the week after I got out of the hospital. Even one handed, with my new stump wrapped in a Wonder bread bag, it took about 5 minutes to get the battery out.lI'd notch that brace, and put in a nice bent piece of 3/8 to open the hole.
Yikes, Bob you're phenomenal! This^^^ sounds like you didn't let even your then-new disability slow you down much. I can't imagine waking up missing an arm - and whatever other I'm-sure-significant injuries and just swallowing hard and moving forward. Granted it's not like you had a choice but I' afraid to admit I'd have probably spent way too much time feeling sorry for myself.....As a brand new "adult" I remember pulling the battery in my '56 Chevy the week after I got out of the hospital. Even one handed, with my new stump wrapped in a Wonder bread bag, it took about 5 minutes to get the battery out.l






Dan, as a die-hard car guy, you probably understand my excitement.Yikes, Bob you're phenomenal! This^^^ sounds like you didn't let even your then-new disability slow you down much. I can't imagine waking up missing an arm - and whatever other I'm-sure-significant injuries and just swallowing hard and moving forward. Granted it's not like you had a choice but I' afraid to admit I'd have probably spent way too much time feeling sorry for myself.
You're an inspiration Bob, you really are!
Kirk, to me, every tool is a good thing to have and with some, the more the better.Sounds like it's a good thing you have so many nailers.
Drives, I guess I could avoid this **** by avoiding doctors. Didn't end well for my grandfather. Most cancers are manageable if they are discovered early so I give my doctors that opportunity. I get that you dislike doctors and I'm sure you have stories to back that up. My experience was that given the chance, they can keep you alive after a train does everything possible to kill you. I had one bad experience with the substitute doctor who performed the "routine" appendectomy on me. Apparently he was ahead of his time with anti-mask, anti-wash-your-hands believer because he provided me with a life-threatening infection as a parting gift. At my request he didn't participate in the follow-up surgery.I’m sorry you have to go thru all the **** so to speak of all this medical stuff but sounds like you trust the plan so best of luck with that.
My daughter gets some of her motivation I’m sure from people like you. She’s never been able to walk but we had to duct tape her new tennis shoes cause she’d crawl down the sidewalk or into blackberries just to be with her friends and our other kids. Now at 30 she’s married, living on her own, driving, and I has a job managing about 100 people.
nice that your son and grandson are coming over to put the roof on and looks like you are prepared. The only nailers I tend to use are for molding but if I start framing things I’m sure having a couple bigger nailers will get purchased.





Craig, I'm doing fine and if my doctors hadn't told me I have cancer I would have no clue. I do have some after-effects from the biopsy but that's not a big surprise.Hi Bob, stopped by to see how your doing. Looks like you’re getting ready for war with all the guns
Continuing to follow along and keep you in out thoughts.
John, that story is way too common and very sad. My uncle had a persistent cough and couldn't take time off from his architecture business to see a doctor. When he started coughing up blood he found the time but the tumor had grown too large for chemo and radiation and was wrapped around his spine, making it inoperable. Discovered right before Christmas and he was gone by St. Patrick's day.Speaking of cancer, I just received a call from my buddy Steve back on Whidbey Island. He wanted to let me know that my friend Kenny has passed away. Story is that he ignored pain in his leg and ankle until he couldn't ignore it and found out he had cancer that had metastasized . He was a big tough guy, but an amazing person at heart. Great story-teller and always willing to help people out. He was gone in three weeks. Lost a really good one.
Drives, I guess I could avoid this **** by avoiding doctors. Didn't end well for my grandfather. Most cancers are manageable if they are discovered early so I give my doctors that opportunity. I get that you dislike doctors and I'm sure you have stories to back that up. My experience was that given the chance, they can keep you alive after a train does everything possible to kill you. I had one bad experience with the substitute doctor who performed the "routine" appendectomy on me. Apparently he was ahead of his time with anti-mask, anti-wash-your-hands believer because he provided me with a life-threatening infection as a parting gift. At my request he didn't participate in the follow-up surgery.
Your inconvenienced daughter is an inspiration to all of us. She's probably too sweet to put a "Hire the handicapped, we're fun to watch" sign on her desk. I wasn't that sweet.
EDIT: I don't like the term 'handicapped' because it comes from the English "Hand in Cap" to denote inconvenienced beggars who hoped a coin would be tossed in their cap. Inconvenienced to me is more accurate -- we can't do some things as well as others. Then again, everyone is inconvenienced by their inability to fly like a bird or sleep underwater like a dolphin.
These days almost all of my framing work involves construction screws driven in with 1/4" hex impact drivers. I have a big pneumatic framing nailer but I only use it for crude temporary outdoor structures. Now that lumber has become a luxury item I probably won't need that nailer for a long while.


Drives, I've had both and as bad as the carpenter ants are, subterranean termites are a different and frightening bug. Our house was built in 1988 and we bought it in 1996 (with a clean termite inspection). Discovered subterranean termite infestation in 2000 when one side of the garage ceiling dropped an inch. They destroyed all the studs in the front half of the wall so only the siding and stucco was holding up the roof. You're right about PNW termites being rare but the only state that doesn't have any termites is Alaska.Interesting that ANTS are your friends. In the PNW termites are rare but carpenter ants sure like to eat their share of our wood.
I just had a physical with our new doctor we waited over a year to get so I don’t hate doctors. I do tend to opt for other options besides pills, shots or surgeries. That said I have had a few good doctors and some that should have been working some other job.
take care and again wishing you the best in your battle and future. I think it goes without saying that this place is better cause you are here so hope you can be here longer than I am.

Uncle Willie, you seem to have found a way to get a good night's sleep. More accurate term would be a 8-hour coma from exhaustion.Since I have been busy I will just say howdy before I collapse into an exhausted fetal position for a fee hours.
WordMan, a big thumb up to your wife. Whatever life throws at us, we have a choice to live our best life or invite everyone to our non-stop pity party. Her choice of shirts is much better than mine. I was asked to stop wearing my favorite tee, the "Crocodile Catchers Club" from Australia, to the grandkid's birthday parties.My wife doesn't like the handicapped term so much, either, and she despises the modern term "differently abled" ("what the hell is that? I didn't get special powers when I lost the ability to walk properly!). Instead she calls herself "crippled."She also has a variety of shirts to have a laugh at herself.
I swear she laughs at stuff would make me cry.
