Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #86,221  
wngsprd
We have 5 dogs and a cat here along with our sons and their wife/girlfriends. Of all the Christmas presents on the floor, Coco went straight to the wrapped box that had a frisbee in it for her, picked it up, unwrapped it (actually tore it open) and took the frisbee to the door to go outside. What a nose dogs have.
.....................................
Priceless. :thumbsup: :)
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,222  
28 high of 51 today not sure what I will do

Earth quakes strange weather seems to be the new norm except when one considers the sun which is going into a period of inactivity ie no solar sun spots. This is called a solar minimum and is documented in history with Earthquakes colder temperatures rain snow. Just food for thought

Prayers for all
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,223  
RNG.
...
If you don稚 bury a tank can you increase survival by surrounding with a concrete block wall?

The gravel pad the tank sits on provided enough distance from the flames to keep the tank temperatures low enough that it did not vent/explode. That said, and I have no way of proving it other than looking at what burned and how, if the winds had been high and carrying a lot of sparks or flaming material, perhaps enough could have accumulated around the tank to cause it to vent/explode. No way of telling for sure without running some tests, and doing that would involve too much risk. Besides, if there is that much flaming material in the air, I'm not sure my home, even though it has a concrete tile roof, boxed in eves, stucco walls, and screened vent openings, would survive. The videos I've seen of the firestorm in Paradise reminded me of a snow blizzard at night, with the snow replaced with glowing orange and red embers. People were walking around in it, so the air temperature wasn't enough to catch things on fire, so it was the embers themselves, landing on flammable material, that spread the fire so quickly. My strategy here has been to remove the flammable material where I don't want fire. I assume the embers will go everywhere, but if there's nothing to burn, they'll go out by themselves. I don't think the embers carry a lot of heat, not enough to heat a propane tank to the point of venting/exploding, unless there's a steady supply of them over a fair amount of time, and I think there's enough distance between my tank and the fuels heavy enough to provide such a heat supply. At least I hope so, because I can't mitigate the brush hazard on the other side of the state park boundary.

If you're headed down the propane trail, are you aware that there are aftermarket kits to convert your Honda generator to use propane? I looked into it for my 6500 Honda, and it seemed like once converted, the generator could be run on either fuel without much fuss.

As far as transporting Diesel/gasoline, my bulldozer neighbor has two 100 gallon tanks that fit in the bed of his pickup truck, and uses them to fuel his various tractors and heavy equipment. That avoids needing a large storage tank and meeting the stringent building code requirements and the vagaries of fuel delivery service. I think he's pretty much dedicated an old pickup truck to carry the tanks; I wouldn't want to do that to my F250 as I prefer to keep the cap on the bed and be able to use it to haul other things. Perhaps some arrangement of the tanks on pallets would make removal/replacement easier, and that thought is worth exploring.

When I asked him about Diesel fuel "spoiling", he says he's never had a problem, likely due to him using enough of it to keep his supply moisture free. He also uses a fuel additive that very likely incorporates an algaecide. From what I understand, it's water in the fuel that promotes algae growth, and using tanks small enough that they get resupplied frequently keeps the moisture at bay.

I'm pretty sure a single 100 gallon tank of Diesel wouldn't be enough to last through the three and a half week evacuation period I just endured, and that would be the goal of any system, generator or solar based, I come up with. Both propane and Diesel have the same issue with maintaining a large enough supply of fuel to last that long. Solar, on the other hand, seems to meet the duration criteria by being self refilling, and capacity is just a matter of building a big enough array of panels to meet a typical 24 hour power cycle in the summer (my peak energy use time due to A/C) and installing a large enough battery bank to get through the night and periods of low solar influx. And perhaps maintaining a small generator for times of high demand. You know that game very well, so I'm curious as to why you seem to be maintaining such a large generator capability. Is it just too expensive to maintain sufficient capacity in a solar/battery system to supply your needs?
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,224  
wngsprd
We have 5 dogs and a cat here along with our sons and their wife/girlfriends. Of all the Christmas presents on the floor, Coco went straight to the wrapped box that had a frisbee in it for her, picked it up, unwrapped it (actually tore it open) and took the frisbee to the door to go outside. What a nose dogs have.
.....................................
Priceless. :thumbsup: :)

I agree. Would have been great fun to watch.
Dogs are smart.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,225  
lot of family emailing this morning. Time for a late breakfast.
Though I think there is an apple pie down there, and if one has that,
why would one want anything else?
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,226  
FWIW, during the 30+ years I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, I got to experience quite a few earthquakes. The worst was Loma Prieta, a 7+ magnitude event that collapsed freeway bridges and caused wide spread fires in SF. I remember it being very hard to remain standing during that quake. I also remember it taking a 4.0 or greater to even be able to feel the shaking, unless it was very close to my location. If that was the case, things might rattle off a shelf if they weren't properly secured, but little to no structural damage occurred. Events of 2.0 and less were almost a daily happening, and went entirely unnoticed. Also keep in mind that the number reflects not only the magnitude of the earthquake wave, but also its duration. A short, sharp shock doesn't get a very big number even though it certainly gets your attention. A slow rolling motion of long duration is easier on the nerves, but that prolonged shaking does a lot of damage, and it gets a big number as a result.:2cents:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,227  
Good Morning!!!! 46F @ 6:00AM. Rain early...then remaining cloudy with showers in the afternoon. High 49F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 70%.

Coco sounds like a pretty smart doggie, WNG. You're very lucky to have each other!

Hope that slice of pie was as delicious as you made it sound, Eric!

Thanks for the heads up on the Surge Guard, Ron. I'm aiming for a system that can operate autonomously, and it'll need to cope with brown outs if I'm not around to throw a switch. Just another reason to go with a complete solar panel system with battery backup, as they've been coping with such situations for quite a while now.

Spent most of the day working on the touring bike yesterday, most of it dinking with the ignition system. The aftermarket ignition system on that bike never has worked properly due to an ignition control unit with the wrong advance curve. The other two instances of that same ignition system in similar bikes run fine because they have the correct curve, but when this one was purchased there were manufacturing issues. And it turns out that just changing the ICU, which presumably calculates the amount of advance needed based on RPM, isn't sufficient to fix the problem, as the unit that detects cam shaft position also seems to have an effect. My usual supplier has been unable to resolve the issue, which reared its ugly head again yesterday when I attempted to wake up the touring bike from its long summer slumber. I had two ICUs to try, and the first one provided significantly less advance than was needed. So the bike could be made to start and idle nicely, but not make any power at higher RPMs, or start and run reluctantly at idle, and really pull nicely at full advance. The other ICU I had on hand is much the same, but not quite as bad, so today it looks like I'll be taking the complete ignition system off the "new" dirt bike and putting it on the touring bike. Then I'll see if my supplier will just swap the mismatched system for a current one, which at least in the dirt bike, runs perfect.

It's not clear when I'll get to try out the results of my handiwork, though, as rain is forecast for the next two days and I don't fancy trying to negotiate what passes for a driveway without some knobs on my tires, and the touring bike is prominently lacking in that department. I'd like to start my trip on Christmas Day, so perhaps the best present I'll receive this year will be a smooth idle and a strong pull as the tach needle swings past 4000 RPM. Otherwise it'll mean a quick luggage swap to the old zebra bike, and a chilly start to the ride owing to the much abbreviated fairing providing very little protection from the weather.

Hope everyone enjoys the rest of their weekend...
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,228  
FWIW, during the 30+ years I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, I got to experience quite a few earthquakes. The worst was Loma Prieta, a 7+ magnitude event that collapsed freeway bridges and caused wide spread fires in SF. I remember it being very hard to remain standing during that quake. I also remember it taking a 4.0 or greater to even be able to feel the shaking, unless it was very close to my location. If that was the case, things might rattle off a shelf if they weren't properly secured, but little to no structural damage occurred. Events of 2.0 and less were almost a daily happening, and went entirely unnoticed. Also keep in mind that the number reflects not only the magnitude of the earthquake wave, but also its duration. A short, sharp shock doesn't get a very big number even though it certainly gets your attention. A slow rolling motion of long duration is easier on the nerves, but that prolonged shaking does a lot of damage, and it gets a big number as a result.:2cents:

Yes, and one of the things I learned from the big Louisa 2011 earthquake that hit about 20 miles away was that the shock waves maintain their energy as they travel depending on the type of rock they are traveling through. Very solid granites like in our intraplate part of the country transmit energy better than the broken up rock in fault zones. That's why they said the Louisa quake was felt by more people than any other in US history, and even the 2.0 quakes can be felt nearby.

Fingers crossed that Cali doesn't have another big one, like the one you experienced, on top of all these fires and droughts.

I'm always amazed looking at the earthquake map at how many occur each day along the plate zone in California and through the Rockies and Cascades, and hoping that folks are not feeling them all.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,229  
Thanks, I'll pass the compliment on to Coconino.

RNG, a bike trip on Christmas day sounds like fun.

Well, my phone says my mug is empty again (never would have know by the fact that I just turned its bottom up to the sky). Better go do a refill.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #86,230  
When I lived in Vallejo we had what we called (window ) blind rattlers everyday, some you could feel, most just sounded like a train in the distance. Down in Stockton we hardly ever felt one.
 

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