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Between 265 & 485 SQ/FT Nick's Two-Car Detached Vdub Garage

Workspaces sized between 265 and 485 squarefeet.

Bob Heine

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a slightly heavier peda
Nick, I was always easy on clutches because of the time it took to replace one. I was used to driving relatively wimpy manual transmission cars (Triumph Herald and Vega GT) so when I bought my first Corvette (used), I wasn't prepared for the transmission and clutch setup. The previous owner had the clutch replaced and apparently told them to install the strongest available for a 390hp 427 big block. For the first month, my left leg would shake at a stoplight trying to hold the pedal down. I eventually put the car in neutral and released the clutch at stoplights. Liane couldn't even drive the car.
 
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fourmotioneer

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Ann Arbor, MI
@fourmotioneer yeah I've definitely considered that, and I totally hear what you're saying. I am sensitive to NVH and I don't want to ruin my car, I'm already on the borderline after doing the BFI mounts. I don't know what clutch your brother's Stage 3 GTI has but I would assume it's pretty aggressive, usually a Stage 3 car is all-out race car. On the contrary I'd be looking at something as OEM as possible that can hold the extra torque. A common option is the Sachs Performance Clutch that can be used with the OEM dual-mass flywheel. It holds 407 ft/lbs, and while I haven't experienced one myself, most reviews say it is very similar to the stock clutch, albeit with a slightly heavier pedal. Which I don't mind.

Another common OEM-feeling Stage 1 solution (I think FCP Euro actually sold a hodgepodge kit for awhile) is to use the OEM pressure plate from the Audi TTRS, and maybe the disc too I can't remember. Which if you source the parts on your own can come out pretty reasonable, just need a good parts list and a shop willing to install it. For peace of mind and ease of use I'd lean towards the Sachs kit, though.

But in any case, I'd be keeping the dual-mass flywheel.

Another reason for wanting to tune, besides being able to go faster, is drivability. This requires more research on my end, but I know tunes release some of the nannies, or try to improve things like emissions-related rev hang. One thing that's always annoyed me is the ECU gives a little fuel as you lift the clutch pedal from a stop. I think it's supposed to help drivers that don't know how to use a clutch or something. But I like to control the takeoff myself — I don't like that the car tries to "help". I would assume this would be removed in a tune. Also things like not being as heavy-handed on the boost limitations in 1st and 2nd gear, etc, etc.

I hadn’t considered that there might be less aggressive clutches out there. A South Bend with a single mass flywheel is rough haha. Something from a different VW sounds wise. A clutch on a GTI is pretty easy in the garage without special tools, if you do go that route.

The GTI rev hangs are odd and I’m not a fan either. Our Alltrack 6MT takes off from a start and shifts so much more smoothly than the GTI.

I sort of doubt you could get useable power in the low revs on a GTI due to traction issues? Generally need to be rolling to use the boost in the stage 3 GTI.

Curious to see where you end up going with your GTI!
 
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nicholam77

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Nick, I was always easy on clutches because of the time it took to replace one. I was used to driving relatively wimpy manual transmission cars (Triumph Herald and Vega GT) so when I bought my first Corvette (used), I wasn't prepared for the transmission and clutch setup. The previous owner had the clutch replaced and apparently told them to install the strongest available for a 390hp 427 big block. For the first month, my left leg would shake at a stoplight trying to hold the pedal down. I eventually put the car in neutral and released the clutch at stoplights. Liane couldn't even drive the car.

I am the same, Bob. With my driving style I would expect my stock clutch to last a long time.

I used to always keep the pedal down at stoplights with my previous car, but starting with this car I put it in neutral even though it's a light clutch. It's one of those debated topics (being in gear to react to something faster vs. potential undue wear on the throwout bearing). I decided I can afford the extra 3-5sec it takes me to get in gear if I need to. I have driven cars with a heavy clutch before, and yeah it's no fun to hold it down.

P.S. those are some sweet rides! My dad had a Triumph TR6 he imported to Minnesota during his college years. Apparently the door locks would freeze during winter so he'd have to hold the doors shut and try to steer at the same time. But it was such a little car you could easily reach the passenger door handle from the driver's seat. It was long gone by the time I was born, but I have the original front Euro plate in my garage.

I hadn’t considered that there might be less aggressive clutches out there. A South Bend with a single mass flywheel is rough haha. Something from a different VW sounds wise. A clutch on a GTI is pretty easy in the garage without special tools, if you do go that route.

The GTI rev hangs are odd and I’m not a fan either. Our Alltrack 6MT takes off from a start and shifts so much more smoothly than the GTI.

I sort of doubt you could get useable power in the low revs on a GTI due to traction issues? Generally need to be rolling to use the boost in the stage 3 GTI.

Curious to see where you end up going with your GTI!

Yeah, the Sachs Performance kit with OE flywheel should be much friendlier than a South Bend. I've never driven either one, so that's just me regurgitating what the Internet says.

Pretty sure all modern VWs have built in rev hang for emissions reasons. I am not at all surprised the Alltrack 6MT has a better take off. For the GTI I think it's a combination of things, but the gearing isn't helping. 1st gear crawl speed is 5 mph, which is too high in my opinion. But both 1st and 2nd are geared very tall in this car. I find it much smoother to get going in reverse, but that's a much shorter gear. And then to top it off the spread between 1st and 2nd in the GTI is huge, it's like 45% or something. Lot's of complaints from new drivers on the forums about the "1-2 shift" not being smooth, probably not realizing how far the revs need to come down.

I hardly ever use 6th. Like hardly ever. I would have been much happier if VW gave the GTI an extra gear down low instead of two overdrive gears (5th and 6th). It would be sportier (closer ratio), torquier, and maybe I wouldn't even be wanting to tune it.

And even though I haven't driven them, something that's always annoyed me is the DSG version has shorter 1st and 2nd gears, and so does the Golf R. Like, why?!?

Anyways sorry to write a book but it's sort of a trigger point! Really the only thing (besides a little more power) that I'd like to change about this car.

Btw I like the Alltrack. I really don't see many of them and now it's even more elusive that VW killed it off.

🍻
 

Snapped-off

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Indiana
Which saw do you use with your Makita track?

Seeing your Golf has really made me want to get back into a Golf/Jetta for commuting. My Mk4 tdi is kaput so I've been driving the Q5.

I'm going to try and hunt down a 2 door Golf TDI 6MT. Hard to find the 2 doors with a stick. There's a 2012 on its way to Carvana...
 
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nicholam77

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Which saw do you use with your Makita track?

Seeing your Golf has really made me want to get back into a Golf/Jetta for commuting. My Mk4 tdi is kaput so I've been driving the Q5.

I'm going to try and hunt down a 2 door Golf TDI 6MT. Hard to find the 2 doors with a stick. There's a 2012 on its way to Carvana...

I use the Makita corded track saw (SP6000J). If you scroll back in the thread you'll see if featured quite often 😁

Before the Mk7 GTI I had a 5-speed Mk4 Jetta, the 2.slow. And it was slow. Still loved it though!

The only time I've driven a TDI motor was on a rental vehicle in Europe (a VW Touran which is basically a compact van). It had a manual transmission and was surprisingly fun! A 2 door Golf would be sweet!
 
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nicholam77

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Minneapolis, MN
Whoops!

It's been snowing and freezing here. I've had the snow blower going every other day. The temps have been in the negatives, in the morning for daycare drop off around -11° F today.

One upside of the extreme cold is I witnessed some amazing Sun Dogs the other morning:

IMG-9487.jpg
IMG-9490.jpg

Usually they aren't rainbow like that. Pics never do justice to these types of things, but in person it looked like a 300 ft rainbow pylon coming out of the ground. Pretty neat.

Ok, the reason this post is called "whoops!" is because I was naughty and bought the Ender 3 S1 from Microcenter. 😲

Sorry to the Prusa cult, but at $120 off this was less than 1/3 of the price of the fully assembled i3.

I've actually had it for a week or so, but I wanted to get a few prints across the finish line before jumping to any conclusions.

The thing that tipped me over the edge is after printing that guide rail protector cap, the next print I went to do with the old printer was massively under extruding.

IMG-9449.jpg

I just couldn't take it anymore.

They say the definition of crazy is doing the same thing over and over expecting different results. So why did I jump into another Ender 3?

I think this machine is genuinely better, at essentially the same price point (on sale) as the 3v2. Pretty much everything about it is nicer. It's like they actually thought about the design.

In addition to better aesthetics and cabling, it has these upgrades over the 3v2:
  • direct drive extruder
  • dual Z-axis motors
  • CR Touch bed probe
  • filament runout sensor
  • magnetic build plate
  • different motherboard
  • full size SD card
  • USB C port instead of Micro USB
The bed heater wiring is much sturdier, they placed the power switch on the side instead of the back, the aluminum extrusions are flat so they won't collect dust, and the belt tensioners etc have dust covers. The bottom is easier to access and the mainboard and power supply layout is much easier to work on.

It came almost fully assembled, just had to attach the gantry to the base, and attach the extruder assembly.

Unlike the 3v2, this had machined indents for the gantry placement:

IMG-9461.jpg
IMG-9462.jpg

The fit was surprisingly precise.

Everything seemed pretty dang square.

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One thing that bothered my OCD was the heater block was askew on the extruder, but I don't think this has any practical downside.

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The hot end looks harder to take apart than the 3v2, but the heater block and thermistor cables would be much easier to swap out since they are so short. With the 3v2 they would have to be run back to the main board.

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The whole extruder / hot end assembly hooks onto the X carriage with a few screws.

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I like this because it's super easy to take off to work on, versus having to bend over the printer with little Allen keys. It's also "modular" and they sell a laser engraver that can be swapped in.

After getting it assembled I checked all the V-wheels and lead screws and belts for tightness. Some minimal adjustment was needed.

Then I manually leveled the bed to get close, and then ran the CR Touch probe to create a mesh.

IMG-9473.jpg
IMG-9472.jpg

Then I added
Code:
M420 S1
in the starting Gcode in Cura, which I guess is supposed to call the last saved bed mesh before the print starts.

And we're off to the races!

IMG-9474.jpg

My first print was this unicorn cookie cutter for my daughter:

IMG-9478.jpg

Came out pretty nice!

Since then I've printed:

A butterfly cookie cutter.

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This track saw rail hose guard.

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This helical looking wire support that goes on top of the extruder to help support the cabling from bending:

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A Mexican Train (dominos game) train starter. My in-laws like to play at XMAS and lost theirs.

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This is all with my old filament. I think all the prints turned out really nice with no major issues. These are all with the default Cura profile. I haven't touched the bed leveling, either, despite taking the magnetic build plate off a bunch of times.

I suspect I'll occasionally have to re-run the bed probe, but that's pretty easy.

Long term, the downsides I can see with this machine are repairs. If any of the wiring goes bad from use, since it is so buttoned up especially the extruder ribbon cable and bed heater cable, I suspect a full replacement part would be in order. This isn't the end of the world to me as long as parts are available.

Now my big question is what to do with the 3v2. I'm probably going to sell it to recoup money. But... part of me still feels like I know the machine well and am probably close to fixing the extrusion issue. I could also fit one of this Sprite direct drive extruders. One thing I really enjoyed was the 0.6mm nozzle, and I don't really want to be switching nozzles much so the thought crossed my mind to keep the 0.4mm on the S1 and keep the 3v2 around for 0.6mm prints that are larger and less critical. But I'm still thinking about it.

If this S1 does me dirty in the long term, a Prusa will definitely be on the menu. But for now this scratches the itch and I like what I see so far!



Happy Holidays to everyone reading along, and especially to the the usual crew who respond and give me advice and feedback here, I hope you all have a wonderful and relaxing holiday with your families! And get lots of new tools. 😜

🍻
 

patlun

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Apr 12, 2015
Messages
241
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Värmland, Sweden
God jul! :LOL:

Nice tool you have bought there. I would try to get the old one running well and then use it for experimenting with other filaments like "wood", TPU, ABS, PET and of course using the 0.6 mm nozzle for some prototyping and faster prints. That is my plan for the old Ender 3 V1 I have, I have already a direct drive extruder for it at home.

I need to look over all my printers now, two of them works, one need to be calibrated and the newest one a TRONXY X5SA-400-2E with 400 mm printbed and 2 extruders is still not fully assembled. I have not needed a print for months, but I see some storage bins in the near future. So it is time to blow of the dust from them and verify that they all is usable.
 

MadeByMiller

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Dec 29, 2018
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Location
Rapid City, SD
Merry Christmas!

Cult? Cult?! Just because we all have the same unwavering, unquestioning loyalty to Josef Prusa and worship the alter of pain-free prints doesn't make us a cult! The matching tattoos and secret handshakes don't prove anything!

I have to hand it to you though, you may be crazy, but at least you're self aware!
 
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nicholam77

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@patlun Thanks Patrik! Wow you have a whole print farm going! That TRONXY looks nice.

@MadeByMiller LOL! I should have made it more clear that that was completely in jest. I do find it funny that no one has anything bad to say about Prusa, but I guess that shows how good their product is. Like I said at the bottom of the post, if this Ender S1 doesn't work out... I might have to join the cult. Merry Christmas!
 

mikev12345

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Jul 30, 2021
Messages
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I kind of agree with @patlun. I would keep the 3v2 and mod the heck out of it and mess with other filaments. I currently have one printer and I avoid doing certain things cause I don't want to be switching back and fourth in my settings and then find myself without a working printer.
 

loganb

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Congrats on the new printer! Maybe Santa left some filament under the tree?

My thought for the printer is move it to its next home, it hasn't been terribly reliable for you and seems to cause more headaches then help so my thought would be put it for sale and move it along. If it worked well and you were upgrading capability, size, speed I might think about tuning it to run a specific filament really well but unless it starts behaving far better then I think it has I would move it along
 

MadeByMiller

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I'd consider some sort of slow, satisfaction inducing destruction for all of the heartache it's caused you. Record it and send it to me so I can share it with my fellow Prusa cultists... err um I mean enthusiasts.

On a serious note, is it worth selling? I know they aren't an expensive machine to purchase new, and with it having the current issues drives down the selling price even more. Perhaps there's a deserving group/cause/individual that you could donate it to? It is the season of giving after all!
 
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nicholam77

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Minneapolis, MN
I kind of agree with @patlun. I would keep the 3v2 and mod the heck out of it and mess with other filaments. I currently have one printer and I avoid doing certain things cause I don't want to be switching back and fourth in my settings and then find myself without a working printer.

That's still an option. I don't know that I'd mod the heck out of it but I do see the appeal of having two machines on hand.

Congrats on the new printer! Maybe Santa left some filament under the tree?

My thought for the printer is move it to its next home, it hasn't been terribly reliable for you and seems to cause more headaches then help so my thought would be put it for sale and move it along. If it worked well and you were upgrading capability, size, speed I might think about tuning it to run a specific filament really well but unless it starts behaving far better then I think it has I would move it along

Thanks! No new filament from Santa but I have some green PLA on the way I'm hoping will approximate Festool green. The new printer came with a coupon for the Microcenter "Inland" brand filament so I'll grab some of that, too, which I've read is rebranded eSun.

I'm still deciding what to do but I kind of agree with you. I don't have a good spot for the two of them at the moment, either.

I'd consider some sort of slow, satisfaction inducing destruction for all of the heartache it's caused you. Record it and send it to me so I can share it with my fellow Prusa cultists... err um I mean enthusiasts.

On a serious note, is it worth selling? I know they aren't an expensive machine to purchase new, and with it having the current issues drives down the selling price even more. Perhaps there's a deserving group/cause/individual that you could donate it to? It is the season of giving after all!

It certainly deserves a slow, satisfying destruction :ROFLMAO:

I paid about $270 for it with tax. I wouldn't sell it in a non-working condition. A new stock 3v2 hot end is pretty cheap, and so is a new extruder or extruder gear. I bet for ~$30 I could get it going reliably again. As for selling, I would think someone might buy it in working condition for $100-$200, since that's still a decent deal. Maybe I'm not with the times with inflation and everything going on, but that's still a decent amount of money to me and would offset the cost of the new printer. Or get funneled into something else. I like to recycle funds like that.

There's a chance I might give it away, though, I have some in-laws who are curious about the whole 3D printing thing, so we'll see. Its fate is still undecided.



Christmas for us went off without a hitch, for the most part. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday were full of fun and family times.

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In the middle of the night on the 25th, my youngest (1.5 yrs) barfed all over his crib with fever and chills. Stayed up with him for a lot of the night. The next morning took him to the pediatrician and he tested positive for Influenza A. Now we've exposed our whole immediate family (unknowingly). My daughter developed a mild fever the next day, but tested negative with no other symptoms. Either way they are both home from daycare, we are trying to keep them separated as much as possible and three of us are wearing the 'ol covid masks around the house. Two of my brother-in-laws reported feeling sick this morning. I'm probably a cooked goose already.

Pretty frustrating since my brother and his wife are visiting from North Carolina and I don't get to see them often. We were also supposed to go to Ames, IA this weekend for an extended family Christmas get together on the wife's side, but that may not happen anymore.

So unfortunately no QST for me... hope everyone else had a good holiday is staying healthy!

On a positive note I saw a movie in theaters for the first time in forever, Avatar 2, and it was awesome!

🍻
 

Bob Heine

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There's a chance I might give it away, though, I have some in-laws who are curious about the whole 3D printing thing, so we'll see. Its fate is still undecided.
Nick, sometimes giving it away comes with strings. If you give it away to a charity, school or a stranger, it's out of your hair. A friend or relative will likely expect your undivided attention when something goes wrong. Not that that has ever happened to me.
 
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nicholam77

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Dec 18, 2016
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Minneapolis, MN
Glad your Christmas went off well Nick, sorry to hear about your little one being sick, that's no fun at all. Hopefully it's short-lived and you guys can get back to your regularly scheduled chaos.

Thanks, Tom. He's doing surprisingly well.

Nick, sometimes giving it away comes with strings. If you give it away to a charity, school or a stranger, it's out of your hair. A friend or relative will likely expect your undivided attention when something goes wrong. Not that that has ever happened to me.

:ROFLMAO: that is so true, Bob! Either that or they will give up on it and it will pain me to see it be unused.



The printer has been going strong, except for this unpleasant catastrophe:

IMG-9665.jpg

I'm not sure what happened. The bottom parts of the models were all adhered to the build plate plenty well. I feel like this white filament has been causing the most problems — maybe I can blame it on that.

I switched to my black PLA (also old and same brand), and did another print and that one turned out awesome. So...

¯\_(ツ)_/¯



Surprisingly, I didn't ask for or receive any tools for Christmas. The main thing I got is a new smart home automation hub, the Hubitat Elevation.

IMG-9652.jpg

I've been a longtime Samsung SmartThings user, and while I liked many things about it, Samsung has made a number of bad business decisions in the past few years and like many others, I decided it was time to jump ship.

I weighed heavily which platform to get into next for quite some time, and I felt Hubitat was a good balance of being able to preserve my existing devices, advanced features, and hopefully reliability. That and @Denwood 's review helped tip me over the edge. 😁

I'm sure it's probably not of interest to everyone, but I know there are a few tech-y Garage Journalers, so I'll likely do some sort of a write up on this lil' guy after I get it configured, as it is a bit of a "project". And go over some of the home automations I use and what it can do.

🍻

P.S. Almost time to start a new image hosting album for Garage Journal 2023! I posted 660 photos in 2022!
 

isonic

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Joined
Aug 1, 2018
Messages
213
Location
Ham Lake, MN
Happy new year Nick. I feel ya on the kids barfing. It went through our house too last week. 4 yo, 1.5 yo, wife, and me. Fortunately it seems like a 24-48 hour deal and then it was gone.

Post some reviews when you want to about the smarthub. I am interested.
 

Trapps

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Feb 10, 2017
Messages
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The Detroit Zoo
Congrats on the new machine!

I hope all make a speedy recovery.

I had the Flu (A) earlier this month, it can be rough; I lost a week and 11Lbs. No one else got it despite me unknowingly exposing them.

Sick kids are a thing. So are injuries. They happen and you hate it as a parent, but you get through it.

All the best in 2023!
 
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nicholam77

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Happy new year Nick. I feel ya on the kids barfing. It went through our house too last week. 4 yo, 1.5 yo, wife, and me. Fortunately it seems like a 24-48 hour deal and then it was gone.

Post some reviews when you want to about the smarthub. I am interested.

Happy new year and sorry to hear that. It's been much longer than 24-48 hrs for us unfortunately (not the barfing, but the flu). My daughter still had a 105° fever and no appetite today and she tested positive 7 days ago. I've had one or both of them home from daycare every day and it's driving me nuts!

I will do a write up on Hubitat and my "smart home". Still getting some things in place with the new system, but it will likely be a multi-post share for those who are interested.

Congrats on the new machine!

I hope all make a speedy recovery.

I had the Flu (A) earlier this month, it can be rough; I lost a week and 11Lbs. No one else got it despite me unknowingly exposing them.

Sick kids are a thing. So are injuries. They happen and you hate it as a parent, but you get through it.

All the best in 2023!

Thanks Mark! I'm fine, my kids got hit hard. But you're right, such is life! Hopefully out of the woods soon!



On top of the flu, we got kid by a winter storm yesterday and today. And by that I mean 11 inches so far, with another 1-3 inches overnight tonight.

My son was at daycare yesterday but fortunately this beast powered through about 5-6" of unplowed backstreets:

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The snowblower I got a few years ago has been the best investment. So much less work. And I have a chronic back injury so it's been a real lifesaver.

Day 1 of storm:

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I made an unfortunate discovery re: the garage — some cracks in the vinyl siding.

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The damage is near the trash cans and the only thing I can thing of is accidentally slamming the lids into the cold vinyl trying to clear the snow off.

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Day 2 of storm:

After clearing everything night 1, I woke up to this.

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My son was just as peeved as I was. :ROFLMAO:

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Our daycare was closed due to the weather so after a long day of juggling both kids, one with a 105° fever, and also trying to do my job, I got out there for round two.

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The average path the snowblower cut through is 16" tall now. For just being a single stage I'm super happy with how it's performed.

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Look at that snow cover on the garage roof!

It's still snowing... so maybe round 3 tomorrow?!

🍻
 
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isonic

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Aug 1, 2018
Messages
213
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Ham Lake, MN
I am guessing round 3 tomorrow for sure. I did same as you, I cleared yesterday and today. For some reason I thought you had gotten an electric blower. Glad this one is working for ya.

Sorry to hear about your kids. No fevers here but I can empathize with how hard that is. Keep at it. Hopefully it will break soon.
 

jar944

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Joined
Jul 26, 2010
Messages
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Location
Northern VA
On top of the flu, we got kid by a winter storm yesterday and today. And by that I mean 11 inches so far, with another 1-3 inches overnight tonight.

My son was at daycare yesterday but fortunately this beast powered through about 5-6" of unplowed backstreets:

IMG-9723.jpg

The snowblower I got a few years ago has been the best investment. So much less work. And I have a chronic back injury so it's been a real lifesaver.

Day 1 of storm:

IMG-9727.jpg
IMG-9729.jpg

I made an unfortunate discovery re: the garage — some cracks in the vinyl siding.

IMG-9724.jpg
IMG-9725.jpg

The damage is near the trash cans and the only thing I can thing of is accidentally slamming the lids into the cold vinyl trying to clear the snow off.

IMG-9726.jpg

Day 2 of storm:

After clearing everything night 1, I woke up to this.

IMG-9730.jpg
IMG-9731.jpg

My son was just as peeved as I was. :ROFLMAO:

IMG-9739.jpg

Our daycare was closed due to the weather so after a long day of juggling both kids, one with a 105° fever, and also trying to do my job, I got out there for round two.

IMG-9745.jpg
IMG-9751.jpg
IMG-9752.jpg

The average path the snowblower cut through is 16" tall now. For just being a single stage I'm super happy with how it's performed.

IMG-9753.jpg

Look at that snow cover on the garage roof!

It's still snowing... so maybe round 3 tomorrow?!

🍻

That doesn't sound fun..

I wouldn't mind some* snow here. It's been in the high 60s this week.
 

racer-john

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Joined
Apr 1, 2008
Messages
1,461
Location
Newmarket, ON Canada
Happy new year and sorry to hear that. It's been much longer than 24-48 hrs for us unfortunately (not the barfing, but the flu). My daughter still had a 105° fever and no appetite today and she tested positive 7 days ago. I've had one or both of them home from daycare every day and it's driving me nuts!

I will do a write up on Hubitat and my "smart home". Still getting some things in place with the new system, but it will likely be a multi-post share for those who are interested.



Thanks Mark! I'm fine, my kids got hit hard. But you're right, such is life! Hopefully out of the woods soon!



On top of the flu, we got kid by a winter storm yesterday and today. And by that I mean 11 inches so far, with another 1-3 inches overnight tonight.

My son was at daycare yesterday but fortunately this beast powered through about 5-6" of unplowed backstreets:

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The snowblower I got a few years ago has been the best investment. So much less work. And I have a chronic back injury so it's been a real lifesaver.

Day 1 of storm:

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I made an unfortunate discovery re: the garage — some cracks in the vinyl siding.

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The damage is near the trash cans and the only thing I can thing of is accidentally slamming the lids into the cold vinyl trying to clear the snow off.

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Day 2 of storm:

After clearing everything night 1, I woke up to this.

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My son was just as peeved as I was. :ROFLMAO:

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Our daycare was closed due to the weather so after a long day of juggling both kids, one with a 105° fever, and also trying to do my job, I got out there for round two.

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The average path the snowblower cut through is 16" tall now. For just being a single stage I'm super happy with how it's performed.

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Look at that snow cover on the garage roof!
That's why they call it "Minnisnowta. Lo.
Good on the VW and the blower. You can keep the sno, ours is all gone and +3*
l
It's still snowing... so maybe round 3 tomorrow?!

🍻
 
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nicholam77

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I am guessing round 3 tomorrow for sure. I did same as you, I cleared yesterday and today. For some reason I thought you had gotten an electric blower. Glad this one is working for ya.

Sorry to hear about your kids. No fevers here but I can empathize with how hard that is. Keep at it. Hopefully it will break soon.

Thanks! Looks like another 1-2" overnight for us, I'm sure you got the same. Plow left another nice wall in my alley driveway so about to head out there again!

I did have a corded electric blower for 1 season. It was terrible, so it went on Craigslist. Managing the cord was super annoying, and it was weak sauce. It never would have held up to this wet stuff, or more than a few inches of powder. The Toro has been able to handle pretty much every storm the past few years and throws the snow way farther.

Secretly I'm jealous of those with the big two-stage blowers with joystick chute control and lights and all the bells and whistles. :ROFLMAO: But it doesn't make sense to have one of those for the small size of my property.

That doesn't sound fun..

I wouldn't mind some* snow here. It's been in the high 60s this week.

Sick kids is not fun. But on the contrary, clearing snow actually was the best part of my day lol. Got some exercise and it can feel kind of satisfying. Like I accomplished something haha.

Hope all that snow stays away when I head up there for the US Pond Hockey Championships in a couple weeks! Never been to MN so I am looking forward to it!

That's awesome!! I see it's on Lake Nokomis. Not sure how long you'll be here, but Minneapolis and the surrounding area has a lot to offer so if you need any recommendations for food, breweries, hiking trails, etc, let me know!

There will be plenty of snow on the ground, this much doesn't melt that fast even if it goes above freezing. But hopefully no storms while you're here as it does make driving a mess. But... it's kind of a spectacle, too!

Good on the VW and the blower. You can keep the sno, ours is all gone and +3*

I'd almost rather the snow than the 3°!
 

ricketycricket

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57
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Saint Louis
It is indeed! Snow also makes pond hockey extremely slow so as long as it is not actively coming down, I am fine with it! I would love some recs! We have an Air BNB for for 5 days and plan to explore the area a bit. Only rec I have so far is getting a Juicy Lucy burger haha. I am sure we will find the breweries one way or another but recs are always welcome!
 
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nicholam77

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Minneapolis, MN
It is indeed! Snow also makes pond hockey extremely slow so as long as it is not actively coming down, I am fine with it! I would love some recs! We have an Air BNB for for 5 days and plan to explore the area a bit. Only rec I have so far is getting a Juicy Lucy burger haha. I am sure we will find the breweries one way or another but recs are always welcome!

Cool! Juicy Lucy is the classic recommend for out-of-towner's / tourists, but imo is a bit like suggesting the Mall of America. I guess it's neat if you've never been, but not really something locals get excited about. The OG Juicy Lucy joints are Matt's Bar and the 5-8 Club.

Honestly 5 days is not enough to fully realize the brewery scene here, there are soooo many, and they are mostly great so you can rarely go wrong. But I'll PM you a list of some favorites, as well as some food and restaurant ideas, and other things to do.
 

isonic

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Ham Lake, MN
Cool! Juicy Lucy is the classic recommend for out-of-towner's / tourists, but imo is a bit like suggesting the Mall of America. I guess it's neat if you've never been, but not really something locals get excited about. The OG Juicy Lucy joints are Matt's Bar and the 5-8 Club.
Don't forget the Blue Door!
 
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nicholam77

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There's the Minnesota I remember.

:ROFLMAO:

Don't forget the Blue Door!

Ah yes — I didn't include that since it's not one of the originals and I've never been, but my co-worker always says good things! I'll have to try it sometime.



After a 2-week USPS delay (so much for Amazon Prime 2-day shipping :rolleyes:) I got this roll of green NovaMaker PLA delivered and printed a little Festool quick clamp hanger.

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Came out pretty nice.

This build plate has great adhesion... almost too good. I routinely struggle getting the thin prime stripe and brim off afterwards. I might need to look into a PEI bed at some point.

I was hoping this would match Festool Green pretty closely, and it does!

IMG-9761.jpg
 

racer-john

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Newmarket, ON Canada
:ROFLMAO:



Ah yes — I didn't include that since it's not one of the originals and I've never been, but my co-worker always says good things! I'll have to try it sometime.



After a 2-week USPS delay (so much for Amazon Prime 2-day shipping :rolleyes:) I got this roll of green NovaMaker PLA delivered and printed a little Festool quick clamp hanger.

IMG-9756.jpg
IMG-9757.jpg

Came out pretty nice.

This build plate has great adhesion... almost too good. I routinely struggle getting the thin prime stripe and brim off afterwards. I might need to look into a PEI bed at some point.

I was hoping this would match Festool Green pretty closely, and it does!

IMG-9761.jpg
...in use please.
 

jake28

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Aug 28, 2018
Messages
484
Location
SF, CA
A happy new year to you Nick. I’m playing catch up after a GJ hiatus. Re Gold clutches: FWIW, I have 43,000 miles on My Golf R with an APR stage 1 and no clutch issues. If I really hammer on it I’ll smell the clutch a bit, so I just don’t hammer on it. I avoid digs from a standstill. I have zero regrets having done the tune.
 
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nicholam77

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...in use please.

I haven't attached it to anything yet — not sure where I'm going to put it. Was more of a test. But this is the model if you want to see someone else's pic.

happy new year to you Nick. I’m playing catch up after a GJ hiatus. Re Gold clutches: FWIW, I have 43,000 miles on My Golf R with an APR stage 1 and no clutch issues. If I really hammer on it I’ll smell the clutch a bit, so I just don’t hammer on it. I avoid digs from a standstill. I have zero regrets having done the tune.

Thanks Jake, good to see you stop in and happy new year! Now it's time to give us some updates on your awesome thread!

Where were you 2 days ago before the Unitronic Holiday sale expired?! :ROFLMAO: I could have used that extra encouragement! But alas, I chickened out again.

I've thought about just doing the tune and seeing what happens with the clutch. Interesting that yours has lasted so far, since I believe APR kicks in high boost right from down low, and I assume the Golf R has even larger gains. I'm keeping my car long term, so I definitely want something with longevity. I'm a bit overwhelmed with all the tuning options these days, but I was thinking Unitronic because I've read they leverage timing more than boost, and it's more of a gradual build than full-on boost at 2,000 RPM. Thought it would maybe be better for the engine and turbo long term. But then again I don't want to spend $2,500 - $3,000 (including clutch) and not feel like it made a big difference. I wish I could drive different tunes and see what they are like. I wish I could know if my clutch would last another few years or be instantly toast. I've heard it go both ways.

I keep saying this but maybe they next time there's a sale, haha. With the kids I don't see myself getting into a true sports car anytime soon, and with car prices and inflation on the rise, and the trend towards EV's and away from manual transmissions, I feel like I want to make this car count.

Can I ask what made you go APR?
 

Denwood

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Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
Glad to see all is ok with your little one! That's an awesome new 3D printer toy you have there. It looks like it's printing very well.

So going back to your first 3D printer purchase, what is your advise to a newby looking maybe to jump in?

I'd say you got your money's worth 100% from that snow blower. If it makes you feel any better, I've put a few tanks of gas through the pimp'd beast:

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bdbecker

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Iowa
...I am sure we will find the breweries one way or another but recs are always welcome!

I always make a point to stop by Psycho Suzi's when I'm in the area. Great food, wacky atmosphere, always a good time. More of a place for the grownups, but I've seen a few families there in the afternoons.


Its normally a tiki bar, but it looks like they've got a holiday theme going on right now.
 
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nicholam77

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Glad to see all is ok with your little one! That's an awesome new 3D printer toy you have there. It looks like it's printing very well.

So going back to your first 3D printer purchase, what is your advise to a newby looking maybe to jump in?

I'd say you got your money's worth 100% from that snow blower. If it makes you feel any better, I've put a few tanks of gas through the pimp'd beast:

Thanks Dennis! Of course this weekend I went to the pediatrician again and the boy's got a double ear infection. It never ends!

Re: the 3d printer, I'm in agreement with others on this forum that if you can afford a higher end one like the Prusa mk3, that would be a good investment. It also might depend on what materials you want to print with. If it's just basic PLA like me, I think an Ender can produce just as good of results as something like a Prusa, albeit with less reliability overall. ABS and TPU would be a no-go without upgrades, and PETG I haven't tried myself but is probably more challenging than PLA.

However, at the same time, if you can stomach a little bit of fiddling I don't see anything wrong with getting an entry level option like the Ender if it fits your needs. I know you'd have the ability to manage it, it's just a question if that's how you want to spend your time. Anecdotally I've heard from people I know (co-workers) as well as others on GJ with the Ender 3v2, that they've had very little issues and "it just works". In my opinion, though, I think you'll run into some issues eventually and no low-cost FDM printer is going to be a perfect experience. Part of that is just the nature of how it works.

The main issues I had with my 3v2 were failed parts (broken parts cooling fan, melted terminals on the motherboard), electrical issues like improper stepper motor voltage and static electricity/grounding issues. As well as nozzle clogs. The nozzle clogs were what ultimately made me scrap it, it was just too frustrating. With the original hot end I think it was due to the Bowden system and not a good seal on the nozzle from the teflon tubing. With the aftermarket all-metal hot end I think it was issues with the hot and cold zones of the hot end, possibly slicer settings I never got figured out, and possibly something with the extruder. Whatever it was, it's no fun to start a print and immediately have a clog issue where you have to take the whole hot end apart.

Because of that, if you're looking at the Ender series, I do think the Ender 3 S1 or S1 Pro is a good value and worth the extra money over the 3v2. With key upgrades being the direct drive extruder, dual-Z lead screws, and just overall better design and cable management.

The snow blower is looking good! Love the lights!
 

Denwood

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Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
Ear infections are no fun for the littles. My youngest had ear drainage tubes put in 3-4 times over her younger ears...all good now but it was no fun at all then. Hope it clears up soon.

Nick, I purchased, used and had to pay the annual maintenance fee (like $1600/year) for a $50K Alaris printer in my last business. When it worked, awesome...but there were a lot of issues, regularly. It consumed liquid UV cured monomer for support/model at around 400/litre. I messed with it regularly to address print quality issues, failed power supplies, failed hard drives, etc. I'm not sure it gets much better as you go up in price!
 
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nicholam77

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My youngest had ear drainage tubes put in 3-4 times over her younger ears...all good now but it was no fun at all then. Hope it clears up soon.

Yeah I've been wondering if that will be needed eventually, he's had a few this year.

Nick, I purchased, used and had to pay the annual maintenance fee (like $1600/year) for a $50K Alaris printer in my last business. When it worked, awesome...but there were a lot of issues, regularly. It consumed liquid UV cured monomer for support/model at around 400/litre. I messed with it regularly to address print quality issues, failed power supplies, failed hard drives, etc. I'm not sure it gets much better as you go up in price!

Ha! Well the Prusa Cult would beg to differ (some light ribbing for @MadeByMiller @loganb ) 😜
 
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nicholam77

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Moving to Hubitat Elevation

Let's chat smart homes!

The Why

I've been long-intrigued by the prospect of a "smart home". For me it ties into an overall desire to simplify my life. As I've gotten older, moved apartments, bought the house, had kids — it seems life just keeps getting more chaotic and busy, and I keep accumulating more and more stuff. I've been (only somewhat successfully) on a mission to de-clutter and simplify over the past few years, and that mission plays into my architecture and interior design affinities of modernism and minimalism, amongst other things. But it's not just physical stuff that can weigh you down and add anxiety and stress to life, it's also aspects of the daily routine. The more things I have to worry or think about or address every day, even if small, all add up to make my day more complicated.

This is a long way of saying the reason I am interested in smart homes is automation. Your house doing things for you, so you don't have to worry about them or take the time to do them. Keeping things smooth sailing. Set the lights, set the blinds, manage the HVAC, control music, etc, etc. Called it OCD or whatever but if the lights aren't set a certain way, it bothers me. I like things just so in my house, and having some of that controlled by a smart home system eliminates me having to manually configure everything to my liking all the time.

Switching To A New Hub

To do all this, you need a hub or "controller ". It's the thing that connects to all the devices, and where you set up the logic for the automations. I've been a Samsung SmartThings user for 5-6 yrs, and it mostly worked well. The biggest attraction to that system for me was the open platform, that anyone could develop for. That means there were literally hundreds of third party apps and device drivers, meaning device support was almost second-to-none. Multiple complex 3rd-party rules engines were available, allowing you to pretty much automate anything you could think of. But it's been dying a slow death by Samsung over the past few years. They re-wrote their iPhone app and it totally *****. It's become more unreliable. And the last straw for me was ending support for Groovy, the coding language all of these community projects are based on. That effectively neutered the system. It's all in the name of a much-needed overall... but it's going to take a long time for things to stabilize and it was time to jump ship.

Enter Hubitat Elevation. I got one of these hubs for XMAS and it's going to replace my SmartThings setup. It fits almost all my criteria, which were:

— local execution of events (doesn't rely on any server or cloud integration)
— privacy
— Zwave + Zigbee radios
— advanced rules engine
— remote control (control of devices outside the home when off my local network)
— voice assistant capable
— Matter certified for future-proofing

It ticks most of those boxes. It can't do remote control natively without a subscription (although I have a workaround), and they haven't pledged support for Matter, but other than that it's great. By contrast SmartThings relies too heavily on cloud operations and is not private, Google Home and Alexa are not private and rely on cloud integrations, Google Home has no Zigbee/Zwave support, HomeKit is local and private but lacks an advanced rules engine and very little Zwave/Zigbee support, and Home Assistant checks most of the boxes but is a very involved tech-y endeavor which I don't have time for. There are other systems out there, but they are problematic for the same reasons.

And I will add that @Denwood also switched to Hubitat, and if it's good enough for him it's good enough for me :ROFLMAO:

Smart home products are constantly marketed towards us these days, but I find that without an advanced setup they don't actually add that much benefit. In fact sometimes they make things harder and more frustrating. It's extremely important to me that my smart home stuff:

— works reliably
— can be used without an internet connection
— is friendly to everyone in the house and guests (intuitive physical controls, no need to bark at Alexa or whip out 20 different phone apps)
— actually solves a problem or makes something better

So that's my general philosophy and approach going forward. I've been working on getting everything set up with the new system, and in subsequent posts I'll go over some specific examples of how I use it in my house and my solutions for automation challenges I've faced.

Hopefully someone will find it interesting!

🍻
 

slodat

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I've had Homeseer for many years, because it too checks your boxes. The reason I went with it is there were plugins for everything I wanted to connect/automate. I've been very happy with it. Literally zero issues. It just runs.
 
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