OP


Looks like an adult beverage "stove" condenser in the making with several donor flasks/vessels in the back ground. They look like stainless steel. What are they originally used for?Had to take a break from the house, Pat isn't feeling well so I'm keeping things quiet up there, Donnie is making deliveries for the PC shop so I get to play in my shop for a bit.
I have been wanting to build a new welding table for quite a while, I have collected enough stuff to get started, so today I took apart my old table. I built it about eight years ago as a temporary table to build some handrails! Man what a mess!
Gone.

Kirk, can you believe it, a real purpose built tableA real table? Cool.










Just chaps, as they are all, by definition, assless.He definitely got lucky on the injury, maybe you can get him some pink assless chaps as a prize?







No idea on Jim's setup, but my buddy in Kentucky went a couple of weeks on his after the Mayfield tornadoes a couple years back.How long will you be able to run on Generac Power for days or just fire it up for a few hours get the house warm the fridges cool and then shut down the power again.
Jim, just taking care of the parents.Sub, I'm like Buffett fan, I'm thinking a week or two, I have a 250 gallon dedicated tank, the only other propane appliance that we have is the cook stove in the basement that Pat uses for canning,
Kirk, you know how long this project has been hanging over my head, I will be so glad to Finnish this one.
Terry, I would have thought you would have been in Kentucky by now. They have the greatest.....water there!


Jim, I haven't had a dream about patterned floors for about 60 years. When my parents decided to finish the basement in 1956, Dad decided we needed a shuffleboard court -- a 12-foot long one. Had to cut the asbestos/asphalt tiles to fit the shuffleboard patterns and lines and it was rarely a one cut fit. We did learn to make the cuts a little generous (measure once, cut twice). I don't know how I've survived this long -- the siding on the house was asbestos shingles (not golf- or baseball-proof) and the steam pipes in the basement were wrapped with corrugated asbestos insulation. We 'heated' the basement for free in winter by removing the asbestos insulation and 'cooled' it in summer with a dehumidifier. The pan under the dehumidifier overflowed almost daily until we punched a hole in the floor and made a dry well.This is what they decided the floor should look like. This is traditionally what all masonic lodges should look like.