Thursday, November 22, 2018

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Trump Rally

Yesterday I was afforded the opportunity of attending a Trump rally as a VIP. Originally it was going to be held where I work and at the last minute, Southport High School became available. I don't know all of the logistics but I'm guessing something as simple as not needing to obtain chairs for everyone would be a big deciding factor between hosting it in a hangar versus a gymnasium. Because we had expended some effort they gave us three VIP passes. Because it was last minute these were passed down from above until I got one of them.

Trump was not scheduled to speak until 7pm but we decided to be there by 2pm. Even arriving that early I had to park a half mile from the school. Walking from where we parked there were numerous street vendors much like a NASCAR event all selling various types of Trump paraphernalia. Once we arrived at the school it took a bit to find where we were entering. Even that early there were still at least 20 people in the VIP line. I could see at least three general public lines, this is a picture of just one of them.



This is a shot of of my good friend Jack as we waited in line.


At 4pm they started letting people in, we were given wrist bands and went through a metal detector. On the other side of the metal detector was an agent dressed in full combat gear searching people. After I passed through I walked up to him and raised my arms just like everyone before me had done, he then waved me on past, and people say I am intimidating.

We were then escorted to our seats which were just to the left of the stage. Apparently this is the area that the governor and other dignitaries would be sitting. As we were walking down the stairs I asked our escort what the yellow wrist bands we were given meant (they weren't visible under the sleeves of our jackets). He stopped and said oh you have those, you can sit wherever you want. Jack told him he wanted to sit directly behind the stage. He then passed us off to another escort that seated us in the first row behind the stage.

The next three hours were fairly mind numbing as we waited for the rally to start. With so many people in that area there was no cellular service and about once every 15 minutes our escort would move us either to the left or the right along the row we were sitting in as more people were seated. In the end after moving at least five times we ended up in the same exact location we initially sat at. During this time MAGA hats were handed out along with multiple sign boards that we were instructed to enthusiastically wave during the rally. There was also much discussion about placement of children and removal of various adults from the area immediately behind the podium.


About 15 minutes before the rally was to start our escort came over and informed us if we needed to use the restroom we should now and for the next two hours we would need to stand.

All of the pictures I took were on a loaner Iphone 6 which didn't work well with the stage lights pointed directly at us, but I still managed to get a few good pictures.

Here you can see the teleprompter, this was right before Vice President Pence gave his speech.


In this picture just next to Trumps left elbow is Medal of Honor recipient Sammy Davis. Trump actually pointed at him when he walked out and saluted him. Prior to the rally start he had a continuous line of people wanting to shake his hand and meet him, going all the way up the stairs on to the mezzanine.


This was taken with no zoom, we were that close.


Trump actually stayed on que with his speech for the most part. It was neat to be able to see what he was reading and when he went off on his own. During his speech he brought out Bobby Knight, but before he came out Trump went off on his own for so long that they brought a chair into the entry tent for Bobby to sit on.

One other thing bad about where we were sitting was the acoustics, basically I could only hear about 50% of what the speakers were saying, so I tried to follow along with the teleprompter.

After the rally once I got to my truck, my phone exploded with emails, texts etc. as it started getting service again. I got messages from people who said they saw me on TV and some even took pictures of their TV and sent them to me. Tania recorded the rally on TV and I watched it last night to see how much I had actually missed. Each news feed had a different camera angle which dictated wither Jack, David and I were visible or not.



This morning Trump tweeted this picture.



Sunday, October 28, 2018

Broken Mower

I don't mow very often because Tania enjoys mowing the yard. We have a 42" Gravely zero turn which is a big mower for the size of our yard, taking at most 40 minutes to accomplish. As such it has very low hours for its age.

When I got on it, I could feel the deck where you place your feet, moving and pushing against my feet. I stopped and shut it off so I could look to see what was wrong and noticed the entire front beam had broken loose from the frame.



I slowly drove it back to the garage and started taking it apart. Once I had the cover plate off the foot deck it was apparent the only thing holding the beam on was two 1/2" welds to the foot deck. This was allowing the beam to twist and push the foot deck.

I went online and tried to find any information I could, the biggest source I found was from Gravely's website under the reviews for the mower. There were at least six other people that had posted as having the same problem and all but one were in the same situation as I was, where the mower was past its warranty by age. The one guy that did get his frame warrantied still paid $600 for labor to have everything moved from his old mower to the new frame. Even with that I don't know that the new frame wouldn't break the same exact way.

Initially I had planned to cut the ends of the frame rails to make them straight again, clean the small amount of frame off the beam and weld it back together. This would have made the wheel base of the mower less than a 1/2" shorter and not affected anything. I chose not to do this because, the metal in that area was probably highly stressed and it would more than likely just break again. I decided instead to just weld the breaks back together and add angle iron gussets to the sides and top of each frame rail. This would allow me to get better welds in a more open area to metal that had not been stressed.

As you can see in this picture the welds were very poor and had no penetration in some areas. On the right side of this picture the weld had broken in half. This put all the load on the area that did have penetration and just broke the metal.




Even as open as some of the areas appear I had a difficult time getting my mig torch in some of the areas because the foot deck was in the way. I ended up doing a lot of overhead welding which I haven't done in a long time.

I was frustrated with some of my welds and the amount of time this was taking me. Because of that I forgot to take any pictures of it when I was done, while it was still all apart. I did take a few the following week to show the gussets.


I am extremely disappointed that this happened, the quality of the welds were terrible and shouldn't be something I would deal with for the cost of this mower. I bought the mower based on the reviews of Gravely's in general. I don't know that I will ever purchase another Gravely product. Companies like this cannot control that Brigs or Kawasaki made a lemon engine and they chose to use it in their mower. They cant necessarily control that Bosch made a bad run of relays, but they can control that they made a crap frame. The lack of penetration and the poor welds would have been visible prior to the frame being painted if anyone had actually looked.

Monday, September 24, 2018

Vacation - Chicago

Last year I had the opportunity to take one of the "Architectural Tours" on a river boat while I was in Chicago on business. It was late fall and literally a week or so before they stopped running for the year. I thought Tania would enjoy it as much as I did so we decided to go to Chicago for the weekend.

I used some Marriott points and we stayed in a new Marriott on the south side of Chicago. Rooms facing the lake or the city were $40.00 a night more than the rooms facing south or west.



We spent the first evening there signing up and buying tickets for what we wanted to do on Sunday.

The Museum of Science and Industry was just a few miles south of our hotel. We signed up for the "Giant Dome Theater" and the U-505 exhibit in the morning with just under two hours to get to the dock for the "Architectural Tour".

The Giant Dome Theater was good but the U-505 was awesome. As you made your way to the exhibit there were long hallways that had everything from signboards to holograms that told the story of how the U-505 was captured. Just as you get to the point of capture, you turn a corner and this is your first view.


You could literally reach out and touch the sub from the mezzanine.

The lighting under the sub flickered to give the illusion of it being in water. Around the base of the sub there were multiple displays set up which contained artifacts from the sub. It was amazing the amount of items they still had that were in the sub as well as what they found years later when it was moved into the building.


The conning tower shows the damage from both small arms fire as well as a deck gun.


If you have ever been in a sub before, I would not recommend paying extra to tour the inside. Its a pain to schedule and not that much to see.

After you leave the display there are more signboards that explain how the sub was brought to Chicago, the time it spent on the lake and how it came about to be where it is currently housed.

We were able to leave the museum and make it to the dock with 30 minutes to spare. The Architectural Tour I would also highly recommend, even with doing it a year before, because I went on a different companies tour most of the information the guide narrated was new to me. The tour takes about 90 minutes to accomplish and it was a perfect day for it.

Because we went in the afternoon I didn't get any good pictures, they were all washed out by the sun. This is a picture from the last time I went.


The following day we had planned to drive though Rockford and follow the river down to St Louis. Unfortunately the weather didn't cooperate and driving a scenic route 500+ miles in the rain didn't sound like a ton of fun so we headed home.

Monday, August 13, 2018

M&P 2.0

Ive been researching pistols for over a year now and I finally made up my mind to buy one. I initially wanted a 1911 .45, the limited capacity and the cost of the brands I was looking at made a big part of my decision to go a different direction. I started looking at full sized 9mm's and narrowed it down to the Glock 19, H&K VP9 and S&W 2.0. The 2.0 felt the best in my hand and its cost made it the clear winner for me. I was able to shoot both it and the Glock before I made my decision. I would have liked to shoot the H&K but in the end it didn't feel as good and was substantially more expensive.


Tonight after work I stopped at my buddies house and was able to shoot 300 rounds through it, I am really happy with my choice. I noticed that I was shooting high and left, basically twisting the gun while I fired. I changed the back strap to a narrower one and it helped bring it back to center. The fatter back strap felt better but made how I squeezed the trigger different.

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Football

I walk a lot at work, even if I spend most of the day in my office my walk is a minimum of a mile. I was also going though dress shoes like I owned stock in their companies until I started buying Red Wings. Yesterday I was walking across the hangar and realized the ball of my right foot hurt. it felt like my sock was bunched up in my shoe, I took it off and found nothing out of the ordinary. Later in the day I found myself taking it off again to check the sock. I then stuck my hand inside the shoe to feel the insole and it felt weird, when I flipped the shoe over I found this.


Immediately I start thinking to when I bought these, because they are expensive shoes and have a year warranty on them. Convinced they weren't a year old yet I jumped in my truck and drove over to the Red Wing store all puffy chested and mad.

The nice young lady working the counter convinced me that it was almost two years since I had bought them. Now that I documented it here I can just check the date when the next pair wears out.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Range Fun - Update

I spoke to my boss today about the AR-15 I sighted in for him yesterday, and through that conversation the mystery was solved as to why the windage was full right. The scope is a UTG Bugbuster and it has a lighted reticle for which he believed there was a spare battery. Instead of screwing off the cover on the left side of the scope he turned the windage knob full CCW on the right side of the scope.


At least I know now why it was so far off.

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Range Fun

The last two weekends were taken up by working on the range, this weekend we get to use it.

My boss just finished building an AR-15 for his son and asked me to sight it in for him. I started off and 50 yards and after 3 shots I couldn't even see where it was hitting. I moved up to 25 with the same result and then about 15 yards and still couldn't tell. We grabbed some clean cardboard and at 10 yards I could see the shots were three feet off center to the right.When I went to put windage to the left into the scope I checked and it was maxed to the right, I'm not sure why. With it fairly close at 50 yards we moved out to 100 and I was able to make three shots that overlapped each other on the 4" plate.


Here is my buddy's range from 100 yards, the white tent is where we shoot from 50.


This is standing in front of the trap looking back the opposite direction.


This is the same shot zoomed in, the shooting bench is just to the left of his pickup.


I was also testing a shell bag I bought last week for $10.00. It attaches to the gun with a velcro strap and has a zipper at the bottom of the bag to empty it. It works great and takes the pain out of collecting shells, with it on the gun you hardly even notice its there. I wish I had known about these a long time ago.


Next my buddy got out his Barrett .338 Lapua Magnum. He had never shot his AR500 with it and even though the guy he bought it from guaranteed it would handle the gun at 100 yards there was still some doubt. Here is a short video of him hitting dead center on the 10" plate.



The next victim for the Barrett was a 5lb fire extinguisher I have had in my garage for 7 years. It had dropped below minimum charge and because it has a plastic head no one would recharge it.




After that I shot the Barrett at some mild steel pistol targets we had hung next to the AR500. The targets were the type that flipped up and you would shoot one to reset them. The problem with them is it took a 45 to reliably flip them so we never shot them much .

As you can see the Barrett went through the one I shot rather easily, that was a hollow point round not even armor piercing or anything fancy.




We shot about 400 rounds of .22 the rest of the afternoon, all in all a very vun day.

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Range Repair

The weekend after the 4th my buddy called asking if I could help him do some repairs to his shooting range. I shoot there quite often with him so I don't mind at all helping him with any maintenance on it.

He had family over for the 4th and noticed sand coming out from around the main wall. The wall we shoot into is one wall of a 8' x 8' sand trap. Its really overkill for anything we would be shooting and typical of my buddy.

This shows about two years of use and after looking things over has been falling apart for at least six months. Normally this would be a solid wall of rail road ties with some old interior doors screwed over them. The doors make it easy to staple targets in place but they also tend to hide the damage to the ties.


After we started removing the ties we noticed that the sand was also moving out around one of the sides. There have been a lot of recent heavy rains and the lag screws holding the ties to the 4x4 pulled through the ties. We had to bring in my buddies toy to dig the sand out and then dig out the corner by hand so we could push the ties back into place.



Here you can see the area we had to dig out to get the lower ties on the right side back into place.


This weekend we finished up by putting the lower ties back in place. We cut one in half and placed each half on end on each side to hold the lower ties in place. I talked my buddy into leaving out the upper ties. The sand sloping across is still over a food deep at its thinnest spot at the top. Behind that there is a railroad tie, 75 yards of heavily wooded forest and a 30ft berm, I think it is more than safe.

I bought a rail road tie from Lowes to place over the top since the upper tie is now gone we had nothing to hang the AR500 plates from. Unfortunately Lowes 8' ties are apparently only 7.5' so we had to add some 4x4s to hold it in place.



I think this setup will work much better and last a lot longer, the only consumable with this is the doors and I think he has about 12 more of them. To this point we have gone through three of them in two years. The 22's and .223/5.56 don't do much damage to them, not like the rail road ties that splinter and break up.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Parts Storage

Over the years I have collected literally boxes and boxes of aviation hardware. Its not useful to me because I don't know the majority of what I have. Last month I noticed a hanging bin cabinet for sale on Craigslist for $100.00 minus the bins. I didn't know that I wanted to take the plunge on a large bin cabinet so I blew it off until last weekend. Id looked up some options for just hanging bins but I didn't find anything that I liked or that was really even cost effective. So I texted the guy with the cabinet and Matty went with me to Greenwood to look at it.

Other than being really dirty the cabinet was in really good shape. Since the guy had the ad up for it for over three months and he had no bins for it I offered him $60.00 which he took and we loaded up.

When we had loaded it I notices something was up with the feet on the bottom of the cabinet. After we got it home and I could lay it down and look closer I realized they were extended nearly all the way out and had bent over from people sliding the cabinet around. I took them out of the cabinet and dollied the floor back to flat. The feet themselves were relatively undamaged so I added large area washers to the openings and put the feet back in.


I gave the cabinet a good bath and after drying it I hit it with the power buffer and a good coat of wax. Generally cabinets like this spend their lives in an industrial environment and look pretty rough. This one is in really good shape with really only a couple paint scratches.


 All the boxes on the floor around the cabinet have the hardware I want to load in it.


The cabinet is 36"W x 24"D x 72"H, 16 Gauge welded steel. I am not sure who makes it, it looks exactly like the cabinets sold by Global Industries. Their cabinets have a logo on the upper left corner of the left door which I believe is just a decal, this cabinet has no decals or stampings.

Last week I ordered 96ea 4-1/8 x 5-3/8 x 3 bins to fill the doors and 24ea 5-1/2 x 10-7/8 x 5 bins for the back wall. The bins set me back $150.00 and there is room for 40ea more of the large ones.

Today I cleared a spot on the wall next to the compressor and started loading it up, I basically have the bins 90% full and still have half the hardware to go through. I may look at purchasing bin dividers before I buy the last 40 bins.



I have $210.00 invested at this point and I have no fear that I cant get that back for it easily. A Global cabinet with the same bin loading sells for just over $1,000.00.

It may take a while but every time I'm able to use something from the cabinet versus buying hardware it starts paying for itself.

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Qsonix

I have a friend at work that is a true audiophile, his home audio system is of the same value as a nice car. For years at the heart of that system was a Qsonix media server. Its basically a Windows XP based computer with 1.5tb of storage and a high end sound card that has a 24bit DAC.The internals are all bleeding edge for when it was built around 2007 and it came with a price tag to match of over $7500.00. The big selling point for it wasn't the fancy hardware, it was the software. It came with a 15" touchscreen that allows you to control all your music with a couple touches. Not really earth shattering until you think about 2007, the first iPhone came out midway through the year and the biggest iPods were around 8gb.

What does this have to do with iPhones and iPods?

It was the Apple interface that eventually put Qsonix out of business. Why spend $7500.00 when you can buy an iPad and interface it though a DAC or even use it to control a home built media server for a fraction of the price.

A few weeks ago my friend asked me if I was interested in the Qsonix, it had developed a problem where it would not reliably boot if it lost power. He didn't want to sell it like that, he knew I enjoyed tinkering with things so he offered to give it to me. After researching it I found that there is no real fix for the reboot problem.The units are still being built and still exist, they are used in very high end digital juke boxes. The software even still looks the same. Unfortunately to protect the software they were never shipped with disks to reinstall like a normal computer. If something went wrong you shipped the unit or hard-drive back to Qsonix. The company that owns the rights to them now does not provide support for the older Qsonix units.

The unit still works fine, once you have it booted. So I decided to put it in the garage, because that is where I generally listen to music. It actually has 4 zone capabilities and can be controlled through a web interface, so I ran a 100' Ethernet cable from my router to the Qsonix.

 
 While I was in the attic running the Ethernet cable I decided to mount some extra speakers I had bought at a garage sale a few years ago for $10.00. I bought the Ethernet cable $14.99, 100' speaker cable $6.00 and two speaker brackets $9.50 from Monoprice. I really don't know how they sell some of the things they do for the price. The speaker brackets are steel, support up to 33lb, can be tilted to most any angle and have a safety cable. I woudn't even try to make wooden shelves to set them on when I can get brackets for that price.


 I mounted the AIWA speakers in the corners over the edge of the garage doors.



Along with the Klipsch KG 4.2' I have less than $200.00 in the system and it sounds great. The Qsonix is awesome because I can create playlists on it that will play non-repeating for days. I have about 800 uncompressed albums loaded on it now.

Saturday, June 2, 2018

ATS Allignment

Three weeks ago I took Tania's ATS in to a shop near work for an alignment. The place is very reputable and they have done at least three alignments for me in the past.

That afternoon they called me for what I was expecting to be a notification of the car being ready. Instead it was to let me know they had damaged it. Apparently the alignment tech left the alignment fixture still attached to the passenger side front wheel as he drove it off the rack. It hit the fender just behind the wheel and then pulled the fixture off the wheel, scratching it.

 
The Manager was very apologetic, had already contacted his body shop and had someone over to look at it. I was concerned not knowing who his "body shop" was, so I set my expectations of only OEM parts and let him know how particular I was. We mad arrangements for me to bring it back in just over a week and how they would pay for a rental.

I picked it up yesterday and looked it over closely. Even with the knowledge that it had happened I could not find any indication of it being repaired, I was very impressed with the quality of the work. When speaking to the Manager I thanked him for replacing the wheel, I found out they had it "repaired" and had used a wheel repair shop I have used twice in the past. It looked perfect, actually better than it had before because they removed the road rash from it as well.