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IcePrick

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Posts posted by IcePrick

  1. 2 hours ago, superhawk996 said:

    Did he get a laugh, or a hand on the taser?

     

    While they may have a sense of humor, I've never seen evidence.  At least, not one that wasn't at a driver's/rider's expense.

     

    I don't know if it was here that I heard about it, but legend says a Trooper pulled a guy over on the Dragon, and the dude's bike tipped over on the sandy shoulder at some point during the stop.  Naturally, the Trooper didn't miss the opportunity to cite him for losing control of his vehicle or some such thing as well.  That probably qualifies as humor in certain circles.

  2. 2 hours ago, RXX said:

     

    My company does not allow most sharps to be used. They have to be spring-loaded and held open and have a dullish plastic blade, so I keep a benchmade bugout in my pocket to cut shit open and to slice my oranges. I face counseling if I am caught. I like living on the edge. 

     

    Trusts employees with dosing radioactive isotopes: check.  

     

    Prohibits a common pocket knife that every 5th grader carried 30 years ago: fail.

     

    • Upvote 3
  3. 2 hours ago, TOXXIC said:

     

    As Carlos advised it is a tool. Constantly in use, cutting boxes open, strings off things, zip ties off stuff. Convenient clipped to a pocket. I also carry a firearm, but a knife serves a slight purposes as a back up fighting tool if shit got that bad.

     

    I keep a multi tool in the truck and SUVs for the reasons you mentioned.

     

    Plus, a knife saves on ammo if you have to open a lot of boxes.

    • Upvote 1
  4. 1 hour ago, SwampNut said:

    The names are not unrelated.

     

    A whole-house swamp cooler is unheard of around here, except in old/shitty/small houses.  I'm not sure why.  Moving enough air for this space is probably one huge reason.  I suspect there are other issues since I haven't seen one in any neighborhood I'd want to live in.

     

     

     

    Mine works phenomenally well - especially as an afterthought with the house not being designed around it - but the climate is different enough between Phoenix and Prescott to matter. 

     

    There has never been a high-temp/low humidity day that this $400 window unit didn't keep temps under 75 inside, and I've seen 103 outside here.  It's in an otherwise unused room on the lower level (north side) of the house, so it's rarely seen or heard.  Now, when monsoon season comes along and outside humidity gets above 30%, efficiency is essentially nil - it just makes it clammy inside.  Having a respectable AC unit is still a requirement for a brief part of the year here.

     

    I wish I could design a house with evaporative cooling in mind, there are lots of little things that would make it more efficient.  Plumb it into the central air system and install up-ducts that vent into the attic - send the relatively cool, moist house air into the attic and flush some of that heat load as well.  Put several solar panels on the south side of the house or on the roof to shade surfaces while generating the power to run the cooler. 

  5. I make the oats sort of to the label with just water, and add oat milk after microwaving.  The microwave is tricky, but using the same amount every time and learning that three, 38-second doses are what it needs to keep from exploding is key.

     

    Overnight oats sound like the bomb, but as I eschew planning ahead, I've never tried them.  Gave it some serious thought while camping, but evening festivities always occluded turning the thought into action.  Seems like the perfect answer for low-effort prep - some dried fruits, nuts, oatmeal, water, and don't stare at it too hard.

  6. 10 hours ago, TOXXIC said:

     

    Oat Milk? We have almond milk, never seen oat milk?

     

     

    Oat milk is creamier than rice or almond, in my opinion.  I wonder which is more taxing on the environment.

     

    My doctor tells me that probiotic yogurt is good, but not to eat it first thing - he says stomach acid is too strong and will kill the good little buggies, it's best to have it as a second course ~ 15-30 minutes after having something else.

  7. My "usual", as in a couple days a week, is multi-grain toast (or multi-grain tortilla) with either peanut butter and a banana or Marmite on it.  Or a handful of dried apricots, figs, dates, plums, and a handful of mixed nuts.  Sometimes a bowl of granola with dried blueberries and oat milk.

     

    I might get back on my quest for the perfect breakfast oatmeal cookie.  Oats, banana for sweetener, nuts and/or nut butter, maybe dried blueberries. 

     

    I love eggs - but for me, the call of the salt shaker is too strong with them on my plate.  I bet the onion and garlic powders help.

     

  8. 28 minutes ago, SwampNut said:

    I've got a box full of Craftsman, mostly 25-35 years old.  Not sure how that helps you shop today.  I had one wrench replaced under the lifetime guarantee though and absolutely love the new one.  Way nicer than the old one, very fine ratcheting.  I also have the combo open end/ratcheting box from them and love those.

     

     

    I have some 1980's Snap-On ratcheting box-end wrenches, they feel like clunky old cave-man tools carved from rocks compared to the Kobalt combination ratcheting ones I got a couple years ago.  My guess is the Snap-Ons would hold more torque, just from the feel of them.

  9. On 9/25/2021 at 5:57 AM, Nova Scotia Mike said:

     

     

    What wrenches/wrench set have you got or used that you loved or hated? If you were to move forward with only one set, what would it be?

     

     

    My old Snap-On combinations (vintage 1980's) are my favorite for hand fit.  Plus, they're slimmer than most other brands so they fit in low clearance areas where some others won't.

     

    That said, the Husky and Kobalt brands (Lowe's and HD, can't remember which goes with which store) aren't bad and have a lifetime warranty as well.  Some are a little clunky in the hand (Kobalt ratchets come to mind), but they certainly work.

     

    On 9/25/2021 at 6:30 AM, rockmeupto125 said:

    Most of my Snap-On tools were new in the 1960's.  The ratchet teeth are getting a little rounded.

     

    I would buy old name brand in good shape before I'd spend money on new name brand.  I've rarely seen tools become better made.

     

    Only once did I have a Snap-On retailer show any reticence to repairing one of my old tools.  Have you stalked a truck and asked them to honor their warranty?

  10. 4 hours ago, Zero Knievel said:


    Good point.  Sometimes that’s the only way to tell something is wrong with a battery.

     

    Based on the time I've spent chasing issues that weren't, I would simply replace the battery.  I have the luxury burden of having several motorcycles, so I almost always have a battery I can swap out to test with.  Though right now, batteries are missing, bad, or questionable in 4 out of 5 bikes.   

  11. 44 minutes ago, Dotetcher said:

    Battery is fine.

     

    Like I said battery is fine. 

     

    Can you quantify this?  I only ask, respectfully, because I don't personally know your knowledge level, and in my experience, it's almost always the battery.

     

    If you can replace "fine" with "12.8v at rest after not running/charging it for a day", I'd feel better about going down the rabbit hole. 

     

    FWIW, my '97 exhibited exactly the same symptoms on a road trip after I had just gone through and tested the system and upgraded the R/R.  I messed with it for days in the middle of my vacation because I knew the battery was "fine".  Guess what I bought at Autozone that fixed it? 

  12. 4 hours ago, tomek said:

    No aftermarket jugs for me. Allergic to silicone. Sad.

     

     

    Not really "better" than OEM in most cases, but aftermarket can extend the service life beyond where the factory equipment begins to experience normal out-of-spec/tolerance variation - though in many cases, a performance upgrade is selected at the time of replacement.  Some models with factory parts that were oriented more towards economy can be transformed into full-on race machines, though... usually accompanied by increased maintenance and repair costs commensurate with the increased performance level.  

     

    Performance costs money - how fast do you want to go?

    • Upvote 1
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