greatbear: (picard wtf)
2010-08-02 07:37 pm

Mayhem Outdoor Power, Inc.

I might not be able to do much in the way of heavy-duty yard work or any such similar sundries, but at least I can sit hunkered down on the garage floor and rebuild, fix, tune-up, modify and/or totally re-imagine some of my equipment. Lately I had used my extra time to tend to all the various "outdoor power equipment" here at Chez Mayhem. some stuff just gets a little cleaning and an oil change, other items that had sat around unused for a while or had recurring problems (the latter causes the former) got torn into with a vengeance as a challenge to get fully operation again. This slow but rather fun (for me) process netted lots of shiny, almost new looking equipment despite some being well over 20 years old, plus a lot of new usability for little or no cost. However, by the time I had done all of this and put everything together outside the garage I wondered when I had become my own landscaping, cleaning and grounds maintenance outfit. I mean, seriously, look at all this stuff:

IMG_0345


I guess I could get into a new line of work if I had to. Now all I need to do is get well enough to start using most of this again on a regular basis.

With all of this stuff mostly done, I've turned my attention on the garage machinery. I beadblasted and began to paint one of my grinder stands today. I can lean against the blast cabinet to clean the stuff off, and sit in the driveway to paint the pieces. No back needed. I just realized that I have no gray paint. More stuff to get at the hardware store I guess.
greatbear: (forearms)
2008-07-07 09:49 pm

Monday randomness

Long day at work that was actually pleasant and productive. I hope the next three days are like that. After coming home and having a bite, I started getting things fixed up and ready for the trip. Our 10x10 easy-up canopy we take camping suffered a broken strut when it was used for a function where Jeff works. Tonight I brazed up the broken metal piece, cleaned and painted it and reassembled the frame. Good as new. I packed the truck with some sundry items and gave it a mechanical once-over. It's good to go, though I'd really like to wash the thing before the trip. It's a mess inside and out. I have a pair of folding reclining chairs that need repair after a rather large individual from LJ that shall remain nameless bent part of the mechanism. That will happen tomorrow. Most everything else is ready to go.

Put a 500GB drive in an external enclosure and am currently backing up this laptop. The new server has settled down and is behaving nicely (click on wood), though I still have to find out why the DNS service wont load properly at startup, yet runs without issues after starting manually. The server itself has it's own automatic backup schedule, so it takes care of itself. I realized that in the past several months I have accumulated nearly 11TB worth of hard drives. Newegg loves me. I await the inevitable day that I can look back and call that ridiculous amount of storage 'quaint'.

N.B. All those drives are not part of one computer, instead some are library drives for the HTPC, a couple small ones and one big one for the new server, a couple external drives, and about half that will make up the uber file/media server. The same data in a bunch of locations. And I promised myself no more god boxes. Sheesh.

I am reading where the NHRA, the sanctioning body behind professional drag racing (with cars, not with heels and dresses) is considering shortening the track from it's historical 1/4 mile (1320 feet) to 1000 feet in wake of the death of one of it's more famous drivers, Scott Kalitta. I'm sorry, but that is total BS. Yes, the cars are hitting record speeds again and again, and it's getting tough to haul them down from 340+ mph in the remaining track length, even more so when the cars or their systems are damaged. Racing of all kinds has always evolved the safety aspects as speeds increased. Much of this safety tech works it's way into our everyday cars. Time has come to advance the safety technologies once again to keep pace. Making the track shorter reduces trap speeds and leaves more room for stopping. But changing the track length invalidates comparisons of past record achievement with what will happen in the future. And some things should remain sacred anyway.