Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Weekend Wrapup

As far as weekends go, they don't get more pleasurely productive as this past one. There's a fine line to walk- you can bust ass all weekend and not bring anything to completion. Result: unfulfillment. You can peter out halfway through the day or sleep in a little too long. Result: Shame and guilt. If you're feeling it, you can work at 100% for 100% of the time and when the alarm goes off Monday morning you can't lift yourself out of bed. Result: Sweet satisfaction, but you've set yourself up for Monday fail. Ideally, I like to run at #3, and then force myself out there for Monday action (and bed….early). Trouble is, if I don't get myself to bed at a reasonable hour the rest of the week, the fatigue rolls on down to Friday like falling dominos. This is not good.
 
They say variety is the spice of life. True that. Got off work a little early on Friday and checked on the cars in storage. Things looked ok and the batt in the '59 appeared to hold a charge. Maybe I'll get it out next month. Wrote a check and headed into town to change. The skies were looking unfriendly so instead of pounding nails, I decided to turn wrenches; added Friday's list to Saturday's. Spent a few hours working on the ETC. Put in the new gas lift cylinders for the hood. Worked on getting the batt to take a charge. Started pulling lights and dash parts. Swapped brackets and connectors to put the Biarritz radio in. Discovered all 6 tailight bulbs were either blown entirely or only had half good sections; plus sockets full of crud. Flushed everything with lots of brake cleaner and started making a list. One taillight extension had been installed after repaint pinching a wire between metal and metal. Fixed that. Yanked the aftermarket fog light wiring and got down into the fuse panel. I would have guessed replacing two open fuses would have brought back the Climate and Fuel readouts. They did not, but I was getting closer. Swapping the climate head made no difference either. Followed the trouble-tree and schematics in the shop manual and made it all the way to the very last step in the guide with my meter: Replace A/C programmer. Hmmm. I did have a spare board downstairs, missing the solenoids. Worth a shot. Swapped it in and still no luck. Then I had a thought. I replaced both it AND the climate head and we were back in business! Plus a functioning warning chime. Tore apart the head and found a severely burnt resistor in the power supply section. The programmer must have shorted and taken it out. OK, now I had a list.
 
Sat morning, the real work began. Moved the picker to the east and let the sun soften the shingles. Finished the last panel of aromatic cedar in the closet, installed the freshly painted exterior recept cover, installed the last piece of red cedar on the gangway wall and drug the stain outside to warm in the sun. Managed to drill and install the aluminum drip eding on the east side, followed by (very messy) tar to seal nails and shingles back down. Measured for cedar corners while I was up there. Fixed a kink in some z-flashing and folded the picker up to move to the west side. Once there it was 'beat the clock' with the sun moving overhead. With brush and handi-pail, stained the west siding to remove all traces of the white paint faux-paus (finally!). Riveted the dip out of the west flashing and then proceeded to carefully and tediously cut the shingles flush to the flashing in 4 ft sections with the shingle knife. Did a little electrical wiring, then decided I better put a drop of white paint on the rivet head up there. Done and done. Gorgeous day to hang out in the bucket.
 
Now late in the afternoon, it was time for errands. Picked up automotive supplies, bulbs and a new battery. Home in time for Guy Lombardo (yeah, yeah) and a viewing of Taken. I'd probably feel cheated if I were paying at a theater, but being action-driven, it loses something on the small screen. Tough call.
 
Sunday. Crappy, crappy weather. Toiled on the second garage door, section #2, for a couple hours to the point where it was ready for a 24 hour adhesive setup. Headed to the parents with bags of laundry and got things going. Spent the afternoon running laundry and working on the car. Swapped taillight lenses and bezels (ETC's have painted bezels and (non-OEM) cracked lenses, apparently). Loaded fresh bulbs. R&R'd a socket that was too far gone. Shimmied underneath the rear to find both backup lamps were toast. Replaced. Still no workee. Tore apart dash for a deep cleaning. Found a broken mount on the wiper control pod. Replaced from my stash. Paint monkeys had snaked the RH remote mirror cable out and botched that control pod. Removed, scrubbed clean and re-heat-staked the faceplate (and re-routed the cable). Polished all the dash chrome, scrubbed the nicotine off the soft parts. Pulled driver's visor. Swapped batteries. Soldered in a 15 ohm resistor into the control head and that fixed that. The car now runs without any error codes but still surges under load. Clean as a pin underhood.
 
That is one of the nice things about these cars- yes, lots of plastic, which is the way of the world since around the '70 models, but everything can be removed with screws, repaired if you're careful, and put right back in. No mega-assemblies, proprietary components or 'break-clips' to remove type parts. So far only money spent has been on maintenance stuff- battery, coolant, light bulbs. Well worth it for the therapy of making something better than when you found it.

Monday, March 16, 2009

What Time is it Mr. Fox?

3:30 Leaving work- Getting into car.
3:40 Entering Menards
4:00 Deftly executed- walking through Menards' exit with bags- stain, paint, nails, quotes.
4:20 Arrive at apartment. Change, grab a bite.
4:40 Leaving alley.
5 to 5 Roll up to Lodge
8:30 Dark, beat, ready for a shower. Turning onto 1st from Union.
8:33 Waiting for burgers at McD's. Notice I better switch the truck to heavier oil this spring.
8:35 Shake fist and curse city for Dam Neglect.
8:42 Alley. Home. Shower and Schlitz.
10:21 Posting this blog.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Pinkertons

Once again, my plans thwarted! Old man winter (Old man river?) and young, woman, spring? (this doesn’t make any sense) teamed up to bring us continuous rain on Saturday in amounts sufficient to trigger a flash flood watch by the afternoon, and a bout of snow on Sunday with flakes the size of Chinese Stars (Jet Li?) that are still sticking around today. Since temps were above freezing pretty much the entire weekend, it’ll be some time before I can navigate the Blazer out to the lodge to move around the 5000lb bucket lift without a) getting stuck on the way in, and b) carving deep, muddy ruts around the building with that sucker hitched up.
 
So what did we do instead? Made excellent use of Saturday by getting up early and taking to the road. Headed down to Des Moines to the ReStore  to see what they had to offer (scored a nice stack of 9x9 VAT) and some DalTile. From there to Calypso in one of the malls down there (http://www.calypso968.com/new/home.html) which was a very surreal experience in that you weren’t surprised by the Mohair Pair-esque items, but were caught off guard by vintage typewriters, chrome tables, radios and dinnerware actually for sale….inside a store…in the mall. Cara, being a pen lover, picked up another in the Retro 51 series and I couldn’t resist a chrome Colibri. The spacing and typeface on the clip reminded me very much of that used in the late 50’s, early 60’s on high-brow adding machines and computer equipment. Very Remington-Randish.
 
The rain continued off and on and we kept our eyes on the field waterways, driving north taking in the show. Stopped off at Bob and Barb’s after passing through Eldora and got the full tour of the place. A few hours later….still soggy and getting dark. Headed back and phoned in a pizza. Changed the clocks and collapsed in a pile of utter-tiredness.
 
More Sunday. Vowed to sleep in (huzzah!) and yet we were still tired. Shopped for groceries, spent a couple hours on laundry, and trekked over to the CF Lib with Cara. Here’s the deal: They have no books. Cara got her stuff, I found 3:10 to Yuma (2007) on DVD and upon looking over the Technology/Video/Computer non-fiction choices, I was awestruck by the fact that pretty much all the books were the exact some ones I checked out as a kid over 20 years ago. Nothing new. I cracked a couple open and sure enough, it all came back to me. Left with a very tattered copy of one I recognized, copywrite ’81. Flipped through it last night. Why should I pick VHS? Why should I pick Beta? The last half are all the machines on the market- features, prices, reviews. Interesting to actually own many of the machines and learn of their context in that time, 30 years later.
 
3:10 to Yuma (2007). Good movie, even with the english subtitles stuck on. 

Monday, March 2, 2009

Sour Sequence

There really wasn’t a good reason to be so sour yesterday, and yet by the time evening rolled around, I was simply Not Pleased with Anything.
 
Got up, hefted out the laundry, filled the tank with fuel for the gen and headed for the lodge. Put in a 4 hour shift before coming in for lunch and starting on the copious amounts of laundry we’ve got. This may have been the start of my discontentment, watching usable daylight slip away. Didn’t change the fact that it was only 20F, though. While the machines were humming, Cara brought over the supplies for me to make a batch of my tempting egg-salad.
 
Got through most of the laundry, went back out until dark, realizing along the way how tired I really was. But there’s no good reason for that either. Then, back to the parents to finish up. Grandma stopped by which was nice as we hadn’t seen her in some time. Endured ridicule by the group on my anti-closet policy while I thumbed through the Menards ad waiting on the dryer. Also learned that my other grandma had purchased a 17” PC laptop a couple months ago and I will obviously be expected to help with the matter as sometimes things work, and other times not. This is probably what put me over the edge.
 
Undoubtedly, I am the most vocal Apple enthusiast in the family. Apparently I have no right to be offended when people ignore me (that’s their right), but dear reader, you know how this is going to work out. If I decline to help, stones will be cast upon me like a sequel to The Lottery. Worst. Grandson. Ever. If I do help, it goes against every fiber of my being and my words (all these years) are simply hollow. Why did she buy this computer? There were rebates.
 
I find it a shame for a couple reasons- One, this is her first foray into computing and this experience is only going to reinforce what post-boomers tend to think about computers. Two, she doesn’t have a tech service next door to her. This isn’t going to bode well when she picks up some spyware or a virus, or the registry gets corrupted or she has to figure out the Task Manager on_her_own. In the end, I’m betting this computer gets put aside somewhere because of all the niggling little problems. (BTW, I’m on a PC at the moment, drafting in Word because my Outlook keeps crashing.)
 
Friday night was a blast however. Blew off some steam from the week down at the PL. A couple girls at the bar wanted to know if Ben and I were any good at pool. Any good, ha! So we racked ‘em up and started shooting. This was, however, moments after getting off the phone with Cara and inviting her down (she was getting off work). As you can imagine, the scenario was quite odd but I’m thinking this may have worked to Ben’s advantage. After a couple games we turned the table over to Levi and chummed it up at the bar, discussing marriage, kids, and being ostracized by coworkers for holding atypical views on such. Cara asked Mel her take on things and her response was A1. Ben was agog.
 
Saturday: Re-assembled the medicine cabinet I had re-hab’d, then toiled at the lodge in good spirits. At nightfall, home to cleanup and we set our sights on Applebees. Packed. Fine then, Taco Bell it is! Home again. Shawshank Redemption on LD. Then, a good night’s rest.