RedNeckGeek
Super Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2011
- Messages
- 8,754
- Location
- Butte County & Orcutt, California
- Tractor
- Kubota M62, Kubota L3240D HST (SOLD!), Kubota RTV900
Good Morning!!!! 53F @ 6:15AM. Rain showers this morning with overcast skies during the afternoon hours. High 56F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 60%.
Hmff. Yesterday's forecast was for sun and warmth today, now we're back to rain and clouds. Good thing I knocked off early yesterday and enjoyed a campfire, the first since the fire season ended, and watched the sun set with a few fingers of moonshine.:drink: But I was gonna tarp over the bead blaster today, and now it looks like I'll have to wait until it dries out again.

I read yesterday that the fuel injection system Subaru uses in the van's engine needs at least 10.4 volts to work when the engine is being cranked. At best, the van only runs once a week, and sits the rest of the time, so it's easy for the battery to get low. Add to that all the time it spent neglected at the ex-mechanic's shop, and I had good reason to run a little test yesterday that shed some interesting light on the cold start problem. Fired up the diagnostic app on the iPhone after turning the key on, but before cranking, and got exactly 12 volts. But as soon as I turned the key to start, the voltage fell to 9.4, and all it did was crank and refused to start. Again. So I put it on a trickle charger, coming back to check it in a few hours and the Battery Saver's "Full" LED was lit. I repeated the test, finding the resting voltage at 13.5, with 12.0 volts when starting, and start it did, after only a couple seconds of cranking. And it started right up after I shut it off, too. If I get a repeat performance this morning, after having sat with the charger attached all night, I'm going to put a charging lead on the battery and probably buy another Battery Saver to keep more or less permanently attached to it when it sits. Fingers crossed...
Also spent some time on the phone yesterday with AudioVox tech support, quizzing them about the new car alarm system. No long waits on hold, knowledgeable people, and the only issue I learned about is that glass break, shock, and tilt sensors all attach to the same input on the controller, so there's no way to tell which one triggered the alarm. But trigger it will, and the remote will get a signal up to 2500 feet away. And if it's in cellular range, so will the iPhone, and the charge for that service is only forty dollars a year. That's about a third of what I'm paying for a SPOT tracker now, and the alarm also reports vehicle position via GPS, same as the SPOT. So the new alarm should be here Friday.
Sorry to hear about all the scratches and dents on new vehicles. But when you stop to consider that even a small scratch, unless the shop already has that particular shade of paint on the shelf, will cost in the neighborhood of five hundred dollars just for the materials, and three or four hours of someone's time that's probably making twenty-five or thirty dollars an hour, then add in the overhead of running a large shop full of specialized equipment and a heavily regulated spray booth, and you begin to appreciate why repairs cost so much. And that's pretty much the cost for plain old white, with only a small fractional increase in the price for the extra time needed for additional coats in some of the fancier, formerly custom, finishes. It's no wonder some folks put stickers over their scratches and dents! And why I have yet to add up all the automotive paint shop receipts that accumulated while I was painting the Vanagon.:shocked:
Hmff. Yesterday's forecast was for sun and warmth today, now we're back to rain and clouds. Good thing I knocked off early yesterday and enjoyed a campfire, the first since the fire season ended, and watched the sun set with a few fingers of moonshine.:drink: But I was gonna tarp over the bead blaster today, and now it looks like I'll have to wait until it dries out again.

I read yesterday that the fuel injection system Subaru uses in the van's engine needs at least 10.4 volts to work when the engine is being cranked. At best, the van only runs once a week, and sits the rest of the time, so it's easy for the battery to get low. Add to that all the time it spent neglected at the ex-mechanic's shop, and I had good reason to run a little test yesterday that shed some interesting light on the cold start problem. Fired up the diagnostic app on the iPhone after turning the key on, but before cranking, and got exactly 12 volts. But as soon as I turned the key to start, the voltage fell to 9.4, and all it did was crank and refused to start. Again. So I put it on a trickle charger, coming back to check it in a few hours and the Battery Saver's "Full" LED was lit. I repeated the test, finding the resting voltage at 13.5, with 12.0 volts when starting, and start it did, after only a couple seconds of cranking. And it started right up after I shut it off, too. If I get a repeat performance this morning, after having sat with the charger attached all night, I'm going to put a charging lead on the battery and probably buy another Battery Saver to keep more or less permanently attached to it when it sits. Fingers crossed...
Also spent some time on the phone yesterday with AudioVox tech support, quizzing them about the new car alarm system. No long waits on hold, knowledgeable people, and the only issue I learned about is that glass break, shock, and tilt sensors all attach to the same input on the controller, so there's no way to tell which one triggered the alarm. But trigger it will, and the remote will get a signal up to 2500 feet away. And if it's in cellular range, so will the iPhone, and the charge for that service is only forty dollars a year. That's about a third of what I'm paying for a SPOT tracker now, and the alarm also reports vehicle position via GPS, same as the SPOT. So the new alarm should be here Friday.
Sorry to hear about all the scratches and dents on new vehicles. But when you stop to consider that even a small scratch, unless the shop already has that particular shade of paint on the shelf, will cost in the neighborhood of five hundred dollars just for the materials, and three or four hours of someone's time that's probably making twenty-five or thirty dollars an hour, then add in the overhead of running a large shop full of specialized equipment and a heavily regulated spray booth, and you begin to appreciate why repairs cost so much. And that's pretty much the cost for plain old white, with only a small fractional increase in the price for the extra time needed for additional coats in some of the fancier, formerly custom, finishes. It's no wonder some folks put stickers over their scratches and dents! And why I have yet to add up all the automotive paint shop receipts that accumulated while I was painting the Vanagon.:shocked:
