Router Table

With all the window repair and trim to be done, as well as such projects as making storm windows and window screens, I knew I would need a router table.

My Dad got me this one for Christmas a while ago, and I got a manufactured Skil 1 horsepower 1/2″ shank router for $35 off Amazon to mount on it. That leaves my not-so-good router free for freehand jobs and gives me access to the 1/2 bits for the table work.

With the current (lack of) budget, some fine detail work (labor instead of material) may be just the ticket instead of tackling some bigger/more expensive infrastructure projects. So, I put it all together and got it ready to go!

The router itself came with a nice canvas bag to put all the bit and other spare parts in to keep together.

This one is a Skil table, milled aluminum and pretty solidly built. Should serve me well.

Router Table

Skil Router Table

Skil Router Table

Skil Router (1hp)

Posted in Tools | Leave a comment

…and work…

Go for it, you gotta set the pace and work.

Okay, a line from a song I like. From a strange movie I like. (shrugs).

Anyway, in keeping with our newly found 2011 Tradition of having absolutely no money whatsoever in the budget for projects (or gas or cars or clothes or…) we are working on things that require elbow grease and not much else…so, “work”.

It’s good for me, good for our projects, and I enjoy the work anyway.

So, this weekend it was a bit of destruction in our commercial building on the square.

One of the front rooms has a beadboard ceiling that had a dip/sag in it that was severe enough to pop the beadboard off. It was in the front corner of the room, and since the attached building next door to me lost part of their facade (the building covered in metal in the pic below) I figured we had something structural going on there.

The damaged ceiling is in the front corner of the room, right above that window.

The fifteen foot ceilings make working on them a bit tough, so, me and my dad hauled the scaffolding upstairs (that’s a job in itself!) and set it up.

Four frames, four cross supports, four wheels, and four platforms…up the stairs, which are at the VERY back of the building, and haul them to the front.

Worth it though. Scaffolding makes high work just challenging, instead of dangerous.

Once set up, we then removed the damaged ceiling.

Good news! Well, sorta…I’ve still got to fix stuff, but it’s pretty easy to fix.

Turns out somebody moved a wall many years ago (50 or more probably). The wall was support for a split in the trusses holding up the roof. Without support, several of them sagged.

The good news is it’s cheap to fix, and not complicated. Lots of work, but that’s just elbow grease.

Here we removed the damaged beadboard...

Note the almost sort-of but not, cribbed together trusses. An easy, and uncomplicated fix.

Once again, my Dad managed to work circles around me…I’m out of shape and need to do something about that…

…and work.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Carpentry/Structure, On the Square | 1 Comment

Controlling the remote control…

It’s one of those “stereo-typical” issues in a household, right?

Just *who* gets control of the remote control?

“Tonight in the news…”
*kshttt*
“Welcome to the Peoples Court where Barbara is suing her mother because she inherited her mother’s small breasts…”
*kshttt*
“Your second-cousin’s uncle’s third-niece’s brother’s second wife’s first-cousin’s daughter’s husband’s brother fathered my baby!”
*kshttt*
“Another Dallas Cowboy arrested for drug charges but was released because the pending arrests of the Dallas city council have used up all the room in the jail…”
*kshttt*
“ONLY 19.95 BUT YOU MUST ACT NOW!”
*kshttt*
“splorch-gurgle-thpppp-swish” (“bullet cam” on CSI)
*kshttt*
“Yet another explosion rocked the…”
*kshttt*

Yeah, I didn’t have the remote.

Finally my patience broke.

“Damn it will you just pick ONE station and stick with it!”

*kshttt*
“Tonight on Animal Planet…”

Guess who's got the remote?

Look at the size of those feet!

Yeah, he *IS* watching the TV

Like all of us, not impressed with what's on.

CUAgain,
Daniel Mey….
*kshttt*

Posted in Pets | Leave a comment

Spring Sprung!

What? So very soon?

Spring went and sprung when we weren’t looking. Flowers, buds, and green showing up all over town! I’m gonna have to mow the lawn this week!

Prunus serrulata - Japanese flowering cherry

Prunus serrulata - Japanese flowering cherry, our house in the background. Pic by Raine Walker over at Wildtype

Pic by Raine Walker over at Wildtype

Posted in Miscellaneous, Pictures | Leave a comment

Fixture Adapting…

I got more than a couple emails about this post, asking what I meant when I talked about adapting fixtures to different bulbs and the recent adaptations in the CFL world making it easier and more affordable.

Sooo…an example:

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--original mount

Original Mounted Fixture

Here is the original fixture, mounted on the wall over the garage door on our suburban “blah” house…it is a dusk-till-dawn 35 watt sodium, and died a few weeks ago. The problem with getting it going again, is the bulb alone costs $20, and the problem may be the ballast, which there is really no easy way to check. The ballasts for these fixtures are not available as a replacement part, and the fixture itself costs around $75.

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--the sodium bulb

The sodium bulb

Very discouraging, as it only lasted about a year. I happened to have an extra sodium bulb (from the last time this fixture quit) and determined the ballast was bad, but buying a $20 bulb just to check is a risk. Nobody takes bulbs on return…

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--the ballast

The ballast (circuit board) and socket.

This is the ballast and socket. There is also photocell to make this a dusk-till dawn fixture. My house has a commercial quality photocell in this circuit so I am not replacing it. There are commercial quality photocells that could easily be stuck in this fixture for about $10 at your local homeowner hell store. If you don’t have one in the circuit (most don’t) I’d recommend replacing the one the fixture was equipped with (it will be trouble) with one of the commercial quality ones (make sure it is one rated for CFL or other ballasted bulbs when purchasing it).

So…I took out all the guts and discarded the ballast.

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--new pigtail

A new pigtail if needed

In my case, the socket was good, AND the right socket for a conventional bulb base (called a “medium base”) so I used the one that was already in the fixture. If you need a new one, this type is available at your local homeowner hell store for about $3 and will do the job just fine. Mount it in a handy hole (or make one) and secure it with a couple blobs of adhesive silicone.

They make CFL’s in an amazing array of sizes and shapes. In this case, this is a 23 watt CFL…about equivalent light output to a 100 watt conventional bulb (at 1/5 the energy usage). You have color choice too…I chose the warmer side. I recommend my friends over at 1000bulbs.com for any of your bulb needs (alas, no compensation for the endorsement…just a satisfied customer).

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--the new bulb...

The new bulb. In this case a 23 watt CFL (about 100 watt conventional equivalent)

This bulb is about an $4 bulb AND the ballast is built in. No expensive fixture replacement needed. No other parts. When it dies, I’ll KNOW it’s the bulb/ballast combination and just replace it easily. I can also check it or replace it with a conventional bulb too. This $4 CFL bulb is rated for 10,000 hours.

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--assembled

Ready to go except the cover.

Ready to go…I just need to hang the fixture and put on the lens.

Adapting a fixture for a new bulb--done.

Done! Dusk till dawness confirmed!

Installed and tested.

Hope that helps! You can pretty much do this to any fixture you can fit the parts and bulb into.

I figure it saved me about $65 to adapt this one rather than replace it even if I had needed the new photocell and socket. It will also save in the future as it will last longer than a new replacement would AND all I have to do next time is a simple bulb replacement. It saves over a conventional bulb by using 1/5 the energy (2 cents a night vs. 10 cents a night), but I don’t need the expensive ballasted fixture.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 1 Comment

Oooo…all tingly…

Oh, boy…a long-winded post. I’m a writer, it happens. One of those “late night and the sleep won’t come” kinds of things…

Heh…and the tingly part is electrical in nature…

Sooo…I don’t feel really good about the progress lately. A combination of weather and work that’s actually pretty typical for this time of year has put a damper on things. A downright chilly damper at times!

A double blow (or perhaps triple) has been the budget and the economy. Taxes, insurance, pay cuts, vehicle crashes, medical stuff, incredibly rising materials cost…yeah, the standard stuff. We got *creamed* last year, and this one looks like it’s going to be worse.

Yeah, we’re not alone. Everybody is dealing with the same environment right now…and we’ll get by it…but the question is how much damage will we take in the process. I do prepare for a rainy day…but I’ve not seen it this bad in my working career…where income vs rising costs have been SO far apart…and a “correction” does not appear to be on the horizon (witness gas prices this week and the charlie-foxtrot that is our current government and industry leaders).

Much of this project I’d rather not do at all, than do incorrectly. I want things done so I don’t have to do them again, and I’m also trying to avoid fixing things “temporarily”, preferring to wait till I have the materials and time do to it right.

That has to balance against our use of our house and business, so the priorities have been randomly and sometimes radically shifting, depending on what our view of the future is at the moment…and of course the state of the checkbook and materials already on hand when those priorities shift.

We’re into reserves now. And they’ll go fast. Things are going to slow significantly now.

Oh, and that minor thing we call the weather changes things too.

I don’t like it…it slows me down.

I just want to put my head down and work. It’s the only way things get done, yet, so much tends to interfere.

And then there’s rest…and sanity. Also important things.

Ah, well…one thing is starting to come about. The weather’s turning. Spring is on the way, and the depressing winter weather is mostly behind us (here in Texas anyway…I don’t know how my friends in the great northern wastes can handle this stuff for so long).

So, time for some stuff. Stuff that doesn’t cost much. Stuff we have materials for, or perhaps stuff we just need to scout out a bit.

So…for this weekend…a little cleanup in the yard, some mower repair, and some lights.

Cleanup? Boring. Sleep late, eat some breakfast, run some errands, take a nap, hack on things with a crowbar, set some stuff on fire, take a nap, read a book…boom! One Saturday gone!

The mower? Mostly just staring at it and wondering if I can get by on those tires one more year. Perhaps with another gallon of slime…

Lights. Now we’re talking! Yeah. Those are sexy. There’s a tower involved you see…

Y’all might recall sometime last spring when we were working on re-siding the tower or “cupola” of our building on the square. It was an important project as the tower was somewhat dilapidated. We wanted to prevent further deterioration, do our part to maintain the historical ambiance of our town, and basically, to keep pieces of the thing from flying all over the square.

Last spring…wow…has it been that long? Tempus fugit. Yeah. Scary how fast too.

Anyway, I’ve been meaning to get back to tinkering on the tower. We’re not ready to open anything yet, but our building has character, and is an important part in setting the overall feeling on the square. One thing I wanted to get back to was the lighting.

As we got it, the building was equipped with some uplighting on the tower. It was, of course, inoperable, but as with most things, I’m completely confident that if I can get my hands on a q-tip and chocolate-chip cookie that I can fix absolutely anything.

So, Sunday morning I broke out the Left-handed Fargle-snorker to go see what I could salvage and adapt from the existing lighting system.

Frankly, I was hoping I could convert the existing 500 watt quartz-halogen fixtures to something a little more affordable to run and be back in business with just a few hours work and little expense.

Affordable? Here’s a perspective. The two existing fixtures if operable, would cost about two bucks a night to run at my existing contract and rates. Sixty bucks a month for lights. Can’t do it.

A CFL, sodium, or like replacement set of fixtures take that number down to about 15 cents a night…call it five bucks a month. That we can do, particularly given the weirdness in the commercial electric market. The actual bill would probably go down.

Recent adaptations in the CFL world are making those previously expensive fixtures/ballasts much more affordable, but what I really wanted to do was insert some CFL floods in the existing fixtures.

Sadly, I failed. The entire system has to be scrapped. It was never installed correctly and has aged…well…badly.

Tingly. That electrician’s sixth sense. Hanging around in an insulated bucket, by an insulated boom, you can still manage to fry yourself. Always treat electrical circuits as live, and if you don’t understand them, call a pro…or at least a friend who does.

They can be dangerous.

Weather tight conduit and boxes…along the lower edge of the awning…fed by a standard, not weather tight 4-square box near the top of the awning.

Know where this is going? Over the years, a little at a time, water enters the bad box and drains down into the weather tight part. Basically, it fills with water. Photo-cell, boxes, conduits…all full of water.

And of course it was live. The shorted photo-cell had energized the lights. The only reason they weren’t on was the bulbs had melted out of them long ago.

I didn’t *know* this Sunday morning…but I always assume anything electrical is out to kill me (despite having turned off several circuits suspected of being associated with the lights) and so approach it as live. A quick visual examination of the parts on the canopy and condition of the overall installation gave me additional pause as that sixth sense kicked in. Out comes the meter.

The subsequent disassembly and draining of the system (remember the three stooges crossing the wiring and plumbing?) told me all I needed.

Oh, and the little matter of having no ground at all meant that I could easily read at least 50 volts on the canopy due to the water-filled junctions and photo-cell. That’s the tingly bit.

Time to start over. The fixtures may be salvageable for another purpose, they don’t have the space to adapt for the bulbs I’m interested in for this application…the rest of it…conduit, boxes, photocell, wire…all junk.

Down it came. I pulled it all and capped it so it’s safe.

I don’t currently have the parts and certainly not the fixtures, and of course, no budget at the moment so…yeah…no lights yet. I know what I need though and have my eyes open for a deal. We’ll see.

I have another day off though…what to do? What to do?

Well, I have a chainsaw and gas, and several trees that have to come down at the suburban blah house…and a fixture to fix there…and a nap to take…and there’s that sleeping in thing…and the brakes on the car…oh, that oil change…

More later.

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical, On the Square | 3 Comments

Hog Hunting…the 4-legged kind…

These things are getting as bad a the forest rats (deer) to us motorcyclists…y’all come on up and whack a few of ’em for me!

There’s $3000 in prize money!

Red River County Texas Hog Hunt, March 3-6 2011

Red River County Texas Hog Hunt, March 3-6 2011

It’s March 3-6, 2011. All the information you need is here (link).

Oh, and…BACON!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Miscellaneous | Leave a comment

Free Electricity–an update to the update!

Heh…once again it’s obvious that once you get through the bureaucratic hurdles and actually get to the working man, things can get done.

An update to the update:

Less than an hour after I called Oncor today, we had a new meter installed at the Old Vic. No muss, no fuss, no threats about costs and billing. Simple…Hey, lookee! Bad meter! Let’s just replace that thing there…

Why that couldn’t have happened with the very first phone call, is a question for the ages.

Brand new meter!

A new meter installed, less than an hour after I made the call...

Done. Less than an hour from the call, and power was only off for seconds. Pretty amazing, and that’s the way things *should* work. Kudos!

So…Oncor…your guy on the truck…you know…the guy that actually *does* stuff? Give him a raise, and toss a few bureaucrats and policy writers out, will ya?

So…my questions from the last post:

1) Will I have power at the end of the week? Check!
2) With the correct provider?
3) Will they fix the problem? Check!
4) Will they try to bill me for fixing their problem?

1 and 3 are taken care of…by the guy that actually works…
2 and 4, well those are up to the bureaucrats. We’ll see…

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 1 Comment

Free Electricity…an update…

Since I didn’t make it clear in my last post on the subject…an update:

Summary:
Oncor’s meter is stuck. Pretty sad that a digital meter can get stuck. They show my usage for the month of January (and now for half of February) as ZERO kilowatt/hours.

Now, we don’t use much when we are NOT air-conditioning, but ZERO is not possible if the power is on. I know we made at least one pot of coffee in the last 45 days…and I usually turn on the lights to pee (even though they are CFL’s) LOL!

WooHoo! Free Electricity!

Yeah, well, we can always dream, right?

I DID call about the problem…

And that’s the sad thing…

I *believe* in paying my way…I may want the rate to be lower /etc…but I will pay for what I legitimately use at the agreed upon price.

So, I watched the meter all this weekend. It’s a digital display, but it never moved.

So I called Oncor (they are the grid service provider, not the retailer…they own the lines and meters and do all physical service). They told me they could only talk to me about outages and to call my retail provider for any complaints.

So I called my retail provider (paraphrased, even though I used quotes for effect)

“I believe my meter is not reading right.”
“If you would like to schedule a meter evaluation there is a charge.”
“You mean I have to *pay* you to come out and see that your meter is broken?”
“Yes. Would you like to schedule a technician?”
“How much does it cost?”
“I can’t tell you for sure. There is a base rate for coming out, and it depends whether they’ve been out before, and possible equipment charges if they have to install a test meter in addition to your normal meter socket. Looks like it will be between $36 and $75 dollars.”

A note here…they don’t want to do their job, and they want to make it difficult and expensive for the consumer to ask them to do their job…thus, charging to diagnose defective equipment…

And just to put that “punishment” for questioning them into perspective, I expect that $75 would cover MY ENTIRE YEAR’S worth of electricity usage if you subtract air-conditioning.

“You’re serious I have to pay for a technician to come out and figure out why you are giving me free electricity?”
“Yes.”
“Will you note on my account that I called in a complaint?”
“Already done sir.”
“Huh. Good. Okay. I think I’ll skip the technician. After y’all figure out the trend on my bills you’ll send somebody out.”
“Okay sir. Have a nice day and be sure to call us for any other problems.”

Deregulation and call centers. Gotta love it. Hell will freeze over before I PAY for a technician to come out to diagnose their busted meter.

I did call Oncor back today and clearly explained to the gal that answered that they were giving me free electricity and my retail provider wanted to charge me money to schedule a technician to check it out.

“You are giving me free electricity.” Can’t get much plainer than that.

“I’m not paying a technician to come out and figure out why you are giving me free electricity. That’s on your dollar.” Pretty plain too.

She said they’d send somebody out within the next 48 hours. I just hope I have power when they are done. They didn’t inspire a lot of confidence…their system showed me being serviced by a different retailer than I am (and I’ve been with my current retail provider well over a year).

Deregulation has not been good for the Texas power industry.

Oh, and I should note just for the chance Oncor or my retailer reads this…their phone folks WERE polite and professional…no gripes with them at all. It’s the bureaucracy and hurdles and complete unwillingness to take ownership (because, somehow, this MUST be the consumer’s problem, yes?) that is the issue. The bureaucracy needs to be pushed out of the way, and let’s get the working men/women involved and get something done.

Four things are in question now:
1) Will I have power at the end of the week?
2) With the correct provider?
3) Will they fix the problem?
4) Will they try to bill me for fixing their problem?

Stay tuned….

Oh, and hey! An update to the update already…here!

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 2 Comments

The problem with declarations.

Y’all here in Texas might recall the “smart meter” controversy that flared up over the last year as Oncor and other grid providers began swapping old electric meters for the new “smart meters”.

An advantage to the new meters is that they read themselves and report back to the provider your usage. No more “meter man” required. There are other, later benefits we will supposedly realize from this massively expensive project, but that one right there is the heart of the controversy that came up.

Hundreds of thousands of them were changed over in a matter of months (it’s still going on).

A meter, out in the field, reporting usage back to headquarters over the (imperfect) electric lines…talking through noisy connections and transformers, along with hundreds of thousands of other meters…implies some interesting software, data transmission, and hardware/management capabilities.

From a tech side, it’s an interesting project and anybody that’s ever done *anything* like it knows there will be problems. Just the logistics of replacing a couple million of the things and getting all the numbers right is a big challenge.

So, there were deployment errors, software errors, hardware problems, handwriting problems, network problems…and every other kind of problem.

People were overbilled, underbilled, cut off, moved across the state (at least, their service address was) etc. Oncor and the meter company were adamant that everything was hunky dory and any problems were the fault of the consumer not understanding simple stuff, like how much electricity they might use or perhaps, where they even lived.

Eventually it all came to a head with a declaration from Oncor that all the problems had been addressed and there were no more issues with the consumer side of it.

They basically declared that their readings and billing were accurate and beyond question. The PUC backed them up.

We all know better, but every now and then ya just gotta let them dig their own hole.

Me? I know it will all work out and really haven’t worried it…so, why this article?

Well, I just got the electric bill for the month of January on the Old Vic.

Now, we don’t use a lot of electricity unless we’re running air-conditioning…but we do use. A big refrigerator, fans in the heaters, computers, the lights…heck, just the coffee maker should be good for 30 kilowatt hours or so for the month.

So…what did we use in the entire month of January according to the infallible system?

We used ZERO kilowatt hours.

ZERO kilowatt hours X 10 cents/each = $0.

That’s one bill that’s no trouble to pay this month. I think I’ll shoot for double the usage next month!

But so much for accurate billing/reporting.

Oh, and that’s the problem with declarations…

What happens when, after declaring “I’m unequivocally, simply, and beyond dispute…ALWAYS right”, it turns out you were wrong?

Maybe I should put in all-electric heat?

CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer

Posted in Electrical | 2 Comments