Well today I made a wee bit of progress before my neck said it was time to stop.
I got the front top covers off
Continue reading “There’s your problem”Well today I made a wee bit of progress before my neck said it was time to stop.
I got the front top covers off
Continue reading “There’s your problem”Got my bench cleared off and put the Royal up. Actually took my first real good look at the entire unit today.
Remember, I originally bought it for the key caps only.
I vacuumed the entire unit and closely examined it and things (as usual) got more complicated than expected.



Back in the days when I maintained foreclosed homes, I saw these installed in basements all over Philly. They never had the outer can, just the grinders, so I left them there. I finally broke down and bought one, and couldn’t possibly be happier.
Continue reading “Sometimes it’s the little things”Last year I bought a utility trailer. Mostly because I was tired of putting Yurt bits on the roof of the Excursion. But also because I knew I was going to need to haul things I didn’t want inside my baby.
Today, I needed to hail a cubic yard of gravel, but the open sided utility trailer was just the wrong tool for the job.

This is the first backpacking stove I ever bought (Spring 2001, probably). And my first liquid fuel Coleman appliance. I had a fuel leak below the valve, so it’s time for a rebuild.

Or, don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
I’m an over planner. There’s no arguing it.
My very first boss drilled into my head “We never have time to do it right, but we always have time to do it again.”
Continue reading “The Power of Iterative Engineering”Yesterday I went to the flea market and was able to complete two sets of tools.

From left to right – a center finder, a protractor, and a combination square attached to a 16” metal ruler.
Continue reading “Gotta catch ‘em all!”Alternately, a day of project creep.
I’ve been trying to figure out a tongue box (my wife loves that term, BTW) for the utility trailer. A place to store the lines, straps, wheel chocks, locks, tarps, tools, and other sundries that the trailer requires. But they’re fairly expensive and I’m having problems finding one that seems to be the right size size.

But then I saw it, on a neglected shelf in the garage. A Rubbermaid Action Packer box. Before we met, my wife used it to store her camping kitchen equipment. It sat empty at the old house for years. When we moved here I filled it with the candle lanterns that we use for party lights. Of course we moved just before the pandemic started and haven’t had any parties.
I know that the KLR crowd uses small action packers as tail boxes, so I think it is reasonably water tight. It’s lockable, certainly large enough for my needs, and the price is definitely within my budget. It might not be perfect (foreshadowing), but it will do.
Continue reading “A day with the drill press”While building kitchen Mk.2 I made a cutting error that cost me time and money to fix.
