Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #113,081  
Already 82 with dew points around 70, going to try to mow before it gets worse. Heading to around 95 today.

Drew, I wish a speedy recovery.

Everyone have the best day possible. God bless.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #113,082  
Roy, folding green in pocket sounds like another gun may be in your future. :)

Yep...it's going to be a Ruger American Ranch in .300BLK caliber...and, more then likely I'll get a suppressor too!
Ok course, the suppressor will cost 2-3 times what the rifle costs!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #113,083  
Good morning. 72 going to 86, rain is coming soon.

RNG - starting to become a saga with your solar, hope it all turns out ok.

Be well and stay safe.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #113,084  
66°F and clear mostly skies this morning, going up to 91° today. Weather guy suggested we may flirt with the record of 96°.

When I got home from work last night, I took a walk back to see the progress on the pond. It appears that just with what he pushed in from the piles and what was regraded from the rise in the pasture, he almost has enough dirt to finish. I also noted, as I got back behind the barn, that it was hiding a bevvy of other machines. In addition to the mini-ex I saw in the morning, he'd also brought in a skid steer, as well as an older, well-used-but-in-good-shape MF-175 to disc and drag the ground. It's really looking fantastic already. View is from the pasture looking West towards the house.
20200602 Pond Work 2.JPG 20200602 Pond Work 3.JPG 20200602 Pond Work 1.JPG

Yet another great photo, Ron.

Sounds like some serious progress on your solar project, RNG.

Can't go wrong with a Ruger American, Roy.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #113,085  
Good Morning!!!! 72F @ 4:45AM. Abundant sunshine. High 101F. Winds light and variable.
The coming weekend's chances for rain are rapidly evaporating, but at least this heat spell will end. Can't ask for everything I guess, but the hot weather is keeping firefighters very busy with several call outs a day in this area.

Ceiling paint jobs are a literal pain in the neck, Thomas. And arms, and shoulders, too. Hope yours goes quickly and easily.

Did you put the Seafoam in the fuel, or squirt it into the carb, Don?

You're really reaching out to that frog, Ron. Had to rescue a toad that got trapped in one of the trenches yesterday. It didn't at all like riding in my gloved hands to the tall grass where I let it go.:eek:

Poppies in the middle of the road, Eric?

Glad the nice weather is perking you up, Jay. I want to pull the covers over my head and go back to bed in the morning when I read what passes for news these days. Not just bad, but down right frightening!

How in the world do you back up a truck pulling two trailers, Bill?:shocked:

Some issues have emerged with the electrical work. In the previous week's walk through, we'd discussed a problem with the conduits as they come up to the back of the house not emerging from the ground in an exactly perpendicular fashion. We talked again yesterday morning about a solution, then I went off to do some other work, with the understanding that the electrical lead come get me so we could work together on a fix. When I came by a couple hours later to see when we were to get together, this is what I found:
View attachment 658358
Then he showed me that the connections where the plastic conduit connected to the steel were cracked. I asked how they got that way, and was told that's how he found them. They seemed OK the day before when I cleared the debris out of the trench for the last time. But now the smaller conduit they'd run all the signal and 110V AC lines in was too short to reach where he'd installed the new box. And he couldn't snake the wire up inside the wall because he said it was packed with insulation, so he shoved everything from those three conduits inside one even smaller conduit. But the crowning glory is that "S" bend plumber's nightmare. I'd be embarrassed to do work like that, but he thinks it's OK because he can blame my lousy conduit installation. I need to have a talk with him this morning, and I don't think it's going to be pleasant. But there are several solutions that could have had better results if he had come to talk with me when we'd agreed.

View attachment 658359
Then there's this at the north side of the house where the conduits come in from the pump house. One was supposed to be used to bring the solar power feed back out to the well pumps, the other was what I was going to use for new RG-11 and CAT5 cables. Grid power (the line I'd damaged) was going to be repaired by pulling out the old wire and running a new one. The same contractor said that wouldn't work because there were too many bends in the old conduit and the wire inside couldn't easily be removed. But that's not what he said during the walk through the week before, when all was hunky dory. So now my two signal leads share a conduit with 240V AC from the grid, and I'm worried about AC interference, which he says won't be a problem. And who knows what's inside that upside down U bridging the two boxes?:shocked: In the walk through, I'd also asked about a bypass switch that would reconnect the household loads to the grid should there be a failure in the solar power equipment. I really never got a straight answer to my question, and now that's been troubling me as well. My sense is that the salesman made promises this poor guy is having to deal with, and that four hours of driving a day is causing him to spend more time on the job than he's been allotted. Another difficult conversation awaits...

And it's Hump Day already.

dang, sorry to see what a supposed electrician is trying to pass off as journeyman work.
I would definitely be concerned with noise issues with AC in a control and signal conduit, it has been a few years since I did any of that work but it definitely couldn't be in the same conduit,
conduits had at least a foot of separation, all signal lines had a outer screen which went to ground (one end only) usually at a main marshaling cabinet.
The conduits should have been level and plumb, that's why they make benders and learn how to bend and use offsets, two 30 degree offset bends are much easier to pull wire thru then a pair of 90's.
The old wire in a conduit should pull out with new wire secured to it being pulled in, in one shot, does take 2-3 people with one feeding and a couple pulling.
The old standard was to not exceed 360 degrees of bend in a conduit before using a pull point, a box or open conduit fitting a straight or ell.

Good luck
 
   / Good morning!!!! #113,086  
Putting new belts on JD mower was not that bad. Reason belt went bad was not idler pulleys. Tension springs are worn out. Need to order or make new ones.
 
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   / Good morning!!!! #113,087  
Good morning to all! Low of 50, going up to 88. Finally got the remnants of a passing storm yesterday, just enough to wet everything down, but not enough to do any real good.... areas all around have gotten 1/2 to 1 1/2 inches over the past few days. We have nothing in the gauge!

The shed delivery was actually on time, he told me between 10-12 am, showed up at 10. He maneuvered it perfectly into place between 2 trees and the fence opening. Quality exceeded our expectations. Very well built, even the nails/ screws were evenly spaced. Well worth the expense for them to build it.

The 2x4s / lumber used was exceptional.... I have not seen such high quality for a very long time. I had to ask where he was getting it from. He told me from a supplier in Kentucky, who was getting it from a European distributor. That lumber has traveled a long way... I was hoping it was locally sourced.

Drew, glad to hear you are still moving forward. Keep up the faith, our thoughts and prayers are with you!

Ron, I think that frog has ulterior motive.... you should keep an eye back on him... neat pic! :D

RNG, sorry to hear about the issues arising already. I think you will get them all sorted out in your favor. At least you are making progress. :cool2:

PJ, that looks great! Seems like they made more progress and completed more in one day than the other guy did in months! I bet you are excited!:thumbsup:

Another small project started yesterday... the rehab of an old park bench we have had for 35 years... it finally gave out, so it is getting all new oak slats and a fresh coating of paint. It is kind of a filler project, so just little bits at a time. Yesterday, I was able to take it apart, wire brushed the cast iron parts, and get a coating of rust reformer on them. Maybe today they will get a first coat of paint.

Everyone have a great hump day!
 

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   / Good morning!!!! #113,088  
Coming back from town, I snapped a couple of pics of the storms....
 

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   / Good morning!!!! #113,089  
Oh, forgot the shed pic...
 

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   / Good morning!!!! #113,090  
Yet another somewhat confusing "news" story on the effectiveness of wearing masks to prevent the spread of CoVid-19. Same conclusion, though: Plain cloth masks now recommended by the CDC are better than nothing, but not by much.

I think we have been getting confusing information from all sides on the mask thing. The way I read it N95 and above are useful to keep you from breathing in small particles. Everything below N95 is useful to keep you from breathing out particles. The Dr. who puts out the MedCram videos had a nice video of droplets exhausted into the room with and without a mask then a person talks. Masks below N95 would be more useful if everybody would wear them. I don't see that happening. I found some fiber dust masks in the shop. Pretty useless. I could not get them to seal. How does that keep you from breathing in dust?

Chris
 

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