Knee Surgery

I swear to God, I am falling apart!  Being over 40 is NOT for Pussies.  I tweaked my knee on the last day of snowboard season this year – a season where I took it REALLY easy because of my hip reconstruction surgery last year.  Well, the knee kept bugging me and I finally went in early this summer to the same orthopedic surgeon who did my hip for a check out.  After a few x-rays and an MRI, it looked like I had a small meniscus tear that he could fix in a few minutes and 2 arthroscopic poke holes.  I waited until after The Ruminator’s summer visit last month and went in for a quick “procedure.”  That is where reality deviated from my plan…  After getting into my knee, the doctor found a second tear: 90+% full thickness and a ligament issue.  Two hours later I am out of surgery with a full meniscus repair, lots of stitches, a knee brace for like 6+ weeks, two weeks of bed rest, and months of physical therapy in my future.

Stamps With Foot is not happy.  I have been banned from snowboarding, skateboarding, parachuting, jumping on or off anything at all, no powered paragliding, or “any other stupid boy shit you decide to do” unless I have express Doctor’s permission and clearance.

I HATE the post-op pain killers.  They make me loopy and make it so I cannot poop.  You don’t know how important that is until you cant do it for like 5 days.  Seriously!  Have decided to take it easy, follow my recovery plan exactly, and I may heed my wife in all of her wishes this time as I am tired of bed rest and hydrocodone and could do with out either for a few more decades!


Video Update:

Proud Father

My son sent me this text message about something he heard during a sermon at his church:

“As illegal aliens, these children are criminals and deserve to be punished!” – my preacher, a white man… the descendent of immigrants… lmao…  OK…

He threw a fit and argued – loudly.  I could not have been more proud of him!

I think we Christians sometimes forget that when Jesus said “love thy neighbor,” He meant:

thy LGBTQ neighbor
thy old neighbor
thy black neighbor
thy asian neighbor
thy addicted neighbor
thy homeless neighbor
thy rich neighbor
thy poor neighbor
thy jewish neighbor
thy weird neighbor
thy muslim neighbor
thy atheist neighbor
thy white neighbor
thy immigrant neighbor
thy sinful neighbor

Jesus taught love, inclusion, and acceptance. We should never forget or ignore that.

Film Friday – BEES!!

My wife bought me a package bee hive box kit for Christmas last year, which reinforces the fact that I have a wife that is kind and considerate and pretty damn adorable.

Anywho, I thought that installing a new hive would be a terrific opportunity to document all the steps to install bees into a new hive box.  I went with a nuc hive instead of packaged bees and a new queen. That is for a later video. The whole process of bringing a new hive into the apiary also allowed me to show all the steps in prepping the pre-built hive boxes/parts and I was able to build and showcase a couple of steel hive stands that I have been thinking about and designing in my head for years.  I will also make a video on the design and build of the hive boxes and parts, but that will have to wait until this winter.

I love bees and I love being a beekeeper. The honey isn’t bad either…

House Painting – Attic Installment

I documented the process to paint the attic conversion that we have spent a couple of months working on. I am using a Graco airless spray rig that I bought a few years ago at a big box store. It has paid for itself MANY times over. This is part 1 of a 2 part video series. In this one, I sprayed the drywall primer and the trim paint. For paint I only use Benjamin Moore. It is my favorite to use and it wears amazing – not cheap though. Wear your mask and keep your lungs healthy!

Tariffs and the Destruction of American Made and Loss of World Markets for American Goods

I swear to God, Every morning, I wake up in a different descending level of Bazaaro World…  Somehow we are on the cusp of a trade war with our allies, our neighbors, and all of Asia.   Harley Davidson looking to produce outside the US?!? Mid-Continent Nail moving to Mexico? 4th & 5th generation Soybean farmers facing bankruptcy? Carrier closing? Tell me more about how awesome the current US Administration is…  Seriously, grab a farmer, a mill worker, or a coal miner and tell me again that you think that we  as a country are in a better place financially or socially than during the previous administration.  I am not an isolationist.  I believe in a global economy and I believe with my whole heart that American made products SHOULD be part of that world economy.

I have said it before and will repeat until I am blue in the face – will the adults in the room please stand up and take the crayons away before things are permanently screwed up?!?

In the interest of full disclosure:  Do I own a Japanese car?  Yes.  I also own a Jeep built in the Toledo, Ohio plant in the closing months of 1986.  My Jeep Trailer was made by union workers in Oregon, and both of my current bicycles were welded/braised in the US from American Steel.  My next vehicle will probably be either a Ford or another Jeep.  Do I own Chinese tools?  Yep, global economy…  I also own a wealth of Snap-On, S&K, Lie-Nelson,  and old American Iron Craftsman.  I also wear much Filson, Carhartt, Danner Boots, and Allen Edmond’s shoes as well.

Tools and products that are still American made

 

Catching up and writing more

I have not been writing as much in the last few months as I should.  I have lots of excuses:

  1. House Remodel
  2. Hectic Work Schedule
  3. Jeep Rebuild
  4. A focus on film making and growing my YouTube presence
  5. Lawn and Garden care – seriously, this takes up a lot of my time.
  6. Too much TV and interwebs…
  7. Blah, Blah, Blah…

When you get to the base of it all though, the answer is that I have made time for all the other things that keep me sane/make me crazy except for writing.  I am renewing my focus and will be posting more words to go along with all of the pictures and video.

Let’s start with an update of current stuff:

The Attic

We are so close to being done with the attic conversion.  I have to put a couple of coats on the closet door and one on the stair railing and paint the 4 walls with a couple coats of the almond eggshell that my wife picked out.  The new hardwood flooring is being delivered today and it will be installed on Friday.  I will spend the weekend installing the stair treads and kickers/risers.  The receptacles, switches and lights are the last serious items that will go in before I touch-up a little paint here & there and I will be done and can focus on the basement.

Basement

We are 75% there.  All tiled laid, grout done and a functioning toilet!!  I need to finish the trim install, hang two doors and then paint EVERYTHING!  I am having a custom shower rod TIG welded together and will be building the double sink vanity.  I have to tack together & paint the medicine cabinet door and mirror frames as well.  After all is in, we will have a plumber come out for the sink install and shower hook up.  I don’t plumb.  I am afraid of flooding my house with water or sewage.  I leave that job to the professionals.

Main Level Bath

The tube tile surround is being replaced in two weeks with 6” subway and small hex tile.  The new bathroom mirror will be going in this week, and I have to have the exhaust fan switch rewired.

Jeep

I had a solid weekend working on the Jeep.  The taillights are installed, the winch is re-wired, mirrors installed, windshield back on with new gasket and PLENTY on extra silicone.  The upper KC spotlights are re-installed, and an issue with the front speakers if fixed.  I still need to paint and install the spare tire rack, as well as the CB, megaphone speaker, 2nd battery, air compressor, lower KC spot lights, passenger headlight, rub rails, whip antenna, headlight trim rings, and polish the rear tube bumper.

The current plan is to leave the top COMPLETELY off until fall when I re-install the soft top.  I need to finish the Hi-Lift Jack rebuild project, have the speedometer serviced, and replace my tube pads as well before the cold winter wind blows.

Garage

The shop of me dreams is packed full of everyone else’s crap right now.  It is all leaving by the last weekend in July if I have to put it all out on the road.  I need to finish wiring in my 40K lumens of LED lighting, a 50AMP plug, a couple of 220/30amp plugs and have an electrician connect all into my service panel.

House Exterior

  1. Downspout in back needs attention
  2. A section of soffit need looking at and possibly repaired
  3. I need to weld together the Juliet Balcony outside the dining room
  4. Weld railing for rear steps
  5. The new front windows need a little trim and paint
  6. Dining room window needs trim and paint
  7. The rear steps need to be painted
  8. The chimney needs to be repointed before fall/winter
  9. Basement railing needs to be installed
  10. Both front railings need to be sanded and repainted.
  11. External security alarm siren need to be installed
  12. A tiny bit of concrete need to be pouted
  13. Two security cameras need to be swapped out for the lower profile ones

The yard

Man, the front yard is good, a little weeding and bush trimming maybe.  The back yard though…  It is still a disaster, or at least ½ a disaster.  I want to fill 3-4 gabion baskets with all the rocks left over from a previous owner’s attempt at pond-scaping and make benches around out fire pit.  We will be adding a steel arbor from the garage to the patio this fall that I am welding up on-site.  The patio table and chairs will get a proper sanding and oiling this weekend and we need/want an umbrella of it this year.  I want to add a tool shed and additional firewood racks to the side yard.   And finally, the small yard next to the garage is my makeshift apiary and I would like to make that both permanent and presentable with some additional hives, gravel and flower plants in narrow garden boxes.

Health

Stamps-With-Foot, my mom, and the kids are good.  I am feeling all of my 40+ years lately though.  My hip is still painful a full year after reconstruction.  I may have torn the meniscus in my left knee, AND I have Fucking Tennis elbow from chopping firewood!!  Not being able to run and bike, coupled with my love of cookies, has left me with a classic “Dad-bod” and even my fat pants are tight right now.  Eating better now.  Trying to get between 7 and 10K steps in a day, having the knee looked at, and working on the elbow.  We are going to Hawaii in February and I need at least a 2-pac as there will be MANY shirtless days in and under the water, for my arm to feel better, and my knee and hip to be like 70%.

Other

Work is work, but I have really traveled at all this year and that is awesome!  Still wish I was building cabinets for a living, covered in man-glitter, smiling but that will have to wait.  I will be traveling to Arkansas this fall to see my daughter and her family.  My son will be here in Seattle for a couple of weeks this summer.  I hope to tour a couple of colleges with him.  My wife and I have a couple of road trips planned and I want to get out on my bike, kayak, and skate board a little (don’t tell my wife or knee Dr. about the board…) I have started recording for a monthly Podcast.  A friend conned me into it after a few years of asking.  I am going to just sit and tell stories without naming names or implicating myself in any illegal activities that are not past the statute of limitations.  As a reward for losing weight I will go ahead and finish out both of my tattooed arm sleeves and my wife and I are planning matching bee tattoos for our anniversary.  I still have not bought a boat or a motorcycle, so she will keep me for a while longer

Film Friday – Double Feature: Attic and Bath Remodel Status

I spent two FULL days, with a little help from my wife, instaling the baseboard, door, skylight, stair, and window trim in the new attic space. This video includes a few tips and tricks along the way. As this will be my wife’s studio space, she put in some sweat equity filling nail holes, doing a little sanding, and she chose the paint scheme. I will be painting next and will document that whole process as well.

This is Part 1 of our basement bathroom build/finish. We decided to add a basement bathroom when we replumbed the house a couple of years ago. 6 months of chaos insued and we took a two year break before diving back into the bathroom build. This time has been SO much better. We went with white subway tile for the walls, black and while hex tiles for the floor, and charcoal grout. The next step is trim, paint and fixture install.

Film Friday – Attic Remodel: Week 7

This is the last of the weekly updates for the Attic Remodel Project. The heavy work and drywall is complete and I will start trimming and painting the space this week (nights and weekends as I have a real J-O-B) so that my wife will have a studio that is full of light and opportunity. The next and final installment of the attic build will show all the paint and trim steps, some tips & tricks, and will be a few weeks away.

Hiring a contractor the right way

I have remodeled 3 homes while living in them and am the son, grandson, brother-in-law, and step-son of contractors.  I once had my own general carpentry company and served as a subcontractor for a few small to medium sized home-builders.  I have had some great experiences working both professionally and personally with contractors and subs and I have had & seen all the possible home renovation horrors.  The advice written below comes from the experience noted above.

Once you have decided on the work to be done and your ability to pay for said work, get written itemized estimates from several firms. Don’t automatically choose the lowest bidder or throw out the highest.  Carefully consider how and why they are the lowest or highest bidders.  Does the lowest have lower overhead cost or are they missing something important to the job?  Does the high bidder know something that the others don’t or does he have a bright shiny new truck to pay for?  Never, never, EVER do business with friends, family, or neighbors.  Seriously.  The “deal” you are getting WILL NOT be worth the hard feelings at the end.  Ignore at you own peril….

Some Questions to ask while you are gathering bids:

  • How many projects like mine have you completed in the last year?
    1. Ask for a list so you can see how familiar the contractor is with your type of project.
  • Will my project require a permit?
    1. If so, will you be taking care of the Permitting process?
    2. If no, why not?
  • Does the contractor have any BBB, State Licensing Board, or labor relations board findings?
    • Call and check.
    • Use the online tools and forums. Even if there is only one negative review. Read it.
  • Will you be arranging both permits and inspections?
    • A good contractor will get all the necessary permits before starting work on your project.
    • Ask for copies of the permits and keep them handy/post on the job site.
  • May I have a list of references?
    • Any contractor should be able to give you names, addresses, and phone numbers of at least three clients with projects like yours.
    • CALL THEM ALL!
    • Ask each reference:
      • How long ago the project was and whether it was completed on time?
      • Were there any unexpected costs?
      • Did workers show up on time and clean up after finishing the job?
      • Is there anything that you would do different?
    • Tell the contractor that you will be visiting the job-site, and will that be an issue?
      • The answer should be: “No, you are welcome any time.”
    • What types of insurance does the contractor carry?
      • Answers should be:
        • Personal liability
        • Worker’s compensation
        • Property damage coverage
      • Ask for copies of insurance certificates, and make sure they’re current, or you could be held liable for any injuries and damages that occur during the project.
        • Make sure there is an indemnity clause in your contract to relieves you of any liability in the case of injury or damage cause by or to a contractor’s employee or sub-contractor.
      • Will you be using subcontractors on this project?
        • If so, make sure to state in the contract that the subcontractors have to have current insurance coverage and licenses, if required.
        • Will you be paying the subcontractor directly or will they be billing separately?
        • Is there a fee added for their service fee by the contractor?

Payment Terms:

  1. Don’t pay cash, don’t pay cash… If a contractor will give you a “better deal” for paying cash, then walk away and go with another contractor.
  2. If they are willing to not declare income on their taxes, then they are willing to take other shortcuts on your job.
  3. Limit your down payment to 10-20% of the job cost. Some contractors will want the cost of materials and the 1st week’s labor upfront and that is fine as well.
  4. Make payments during the project contingent upon completion of defined amounts of work and not on calendar days.
  5. Example: ½ of project due when roof doors, windows installed and inspection passed. Final Payment due 7 days after final inspection pass and “punch list” items agreed to.
  6. This way, if the work isn’t going according to schedule, the payments to your contractor also are delayed.

Get a Written Contract:

It should be clear and concise and include the who, what, where, when, and cost of your project with very limited legal language flourish. Before you sign a contract, make sure it includes:

  • The contractor’s business name, given address, phone, and state license number
  • The payment schedule for the contractor, subcontractors, and suppliers
  • The contractor’s obligation to get all necessary permits
  • An estimated start and completion date
    • Possible monetary penalty for (none weather related) missed dates: $50 off the total amount owed for missed milestone date due to say inspection failure and $50 for each day until Passed Inspection
  • The payment schedule for the contractor, subcontractors, and suppliers
  • A fully defined Scope of Work (SOW), which detail all work to be performed at a Time & Material rate or as a total bid cost.
    • If work to be performed is on a Time & Material basis, then a weekly summation of all costs (labor, material, permits, etc.) and debits (payments or credits) shall be provided to the customer.
  • A “Not to Exceed” amount or percentage for the job, say 5-10% of total unless due to noted and signed change orders previously outlining the expense.
  • How change orders are handled.
    • A change order is a written authorization to the contractor to make a change or an addition to the work described in the original contract. It could affect the project’s cost and schedule and that needs to be outlined in the written change order.
  • A detailed list of all materials including each product’s color, model, size, and brand. If some materials will be chosen later, the contract should say who’s responsible for choosing each item and how much money is budgeted for it (this is also known as the “allowance”).
  • Information about warranties covering materials and workmanship, with names and addresses of who is honoring them — the contractor, distributor, or manufacturer. The length of the warranty period and any limitations also should be spelled out.
  • The inclusion of a lien release or lien waiver. See below.
  • Notification time if Sewer, Water, Gas, Electrical services will be interrupted, normally 24 hours, and how long they will be off.
  • Damage to Property: Negligent damage to property by contractor or subcontractors
    • “Shall be repaired to previous condition at contractor’s expense.”
  • What the contractor will and won’t do. For example, is site clean-up and trash hauling included in the price? Ask for a “broom clause” that makes the contractor responsible for all clean-up work, including spills and stains.
    • You will want a broom clause.  Trust me.
  • Do not sign an Arbitration clause. This is for the sole benefit of limiting the contractor’s cost if things go wrong and if you report the contractor to a state labor board or a BBB in your state, this can be seen as a violation of this clause and the contract as a whole.
  • Make sure there is a General Survival Clause:
    • In the event any clause or provision of this contract shall be held to be invalid, then the remaining clauses and provisions shall never the less be and remain in full force and effect.
  • A written statement of your right to cancel the contract within three business days if you signed it in your home or at a location other than the Contractor’s permanent place of business.

After You Hire a Contractor:

Keep Records!

Keep all paperwork related to your project in one place. If it didn’t happen on paper, then it didn’t happen.  This includes:

  • Speak directly to your contractor or your assign representative. Not the plumber, framer, or roofer.
  • Copies of the signed contract
  • Change orders
  • Copies of all permits
  • Follow up any in person conversations or phone calls with an e-mail detailing any agreed to points.
  • Any correspondence with your contractor.
    • Print out and keep e-mails for ready reference
  • Keep all receipts of any material that you have purchased
    • A record of all your purchases may be need receipts for tax purposes.
  • Keep a log or journal of all phone calls, conversations, and activities. You also might want to take photographs as the job progresses. These records are especially important if you have problems with your project — during or after construction. And serves as a record for future construction or remodeling.

Once the job is “Done”:

Don’t make the final payment or sign an affidavit of final release until you’re satisfied

Besides being satisfied with the work, you also need to know that subcontractors and suppliers have been paid. Laws in your state might allow them to file a mechanic’s lien against your home to satisfy their unpaid bills to the contractor that used them on your job.  Protect yourself by asking the contractor to secure a lien release or lien waiver from every subcontractor and supplier before final payment is made.

Know when you can withhold payment

If you have a problem with merchandise or services charged to a credit card, and you’ve made a good faith effort to work out the problem with the seller, you have the right to contact your credit card company and withhold payment from the card issuer for the merchandise or services. You can withhold payment up to the amount of credit outstanding for the purchase, plus any finance or related charges.

Before you sign off and make the final payment, check that:

  • All work meets the standards spelled out in the contract
  • You have written warranties for materials and workmanship
  • You have proof that all subcontractors and suppliers have been paid
  • The job site has been cleaned up and cleared of excess materials, tools, and equipment
  • You have inspected and approved the completed work
    • Use a Sign-Off Checklist/”Punch List”

Jeep Re-Build Update Video

I got the Jeep back from paint months ago and it has been sitting on the lift in the garage – letting the paint cure as we have had work done at the house (Attic and Basement). I am not 100% happy with the paint, but that is another video. I have been collecting small cardboard boxes full of goodies since last October for the after-paint re-fit. That installation process has begun with the mounting of lights, fender flares, a new bumper, etc… I am giddy with anticipation to get it out in the Seattle summer sun.

This weekend was full. I really need to stop working on my days off.

Welding Cart experienced a failed wheel/axle combo
I said dirty words and decided to replace rather then rebuild
Also decided to upgrade – just a little.
Sourced new cart and used a 20% off Coupon
Assembled new Harbor Freight/General Tools MIG welding cart
Recorded a video of whole experiebce for YouTube channel
Wired in a couple plugs and lights in the attic.
Worked on linocut of our dog Brodie and of a mountain scene print for two letterpress projects.
Wove a 9”+ pine needle coiled basket – because I can.
Made like 6 Instagram posts
Played Ukulele for a bit.
Recorded a couple of riffs and a drum track
Started building a podcast tool for website – slow going
Made a run to the city dump with a trailer load of building material/construction waste.
Mowed and edged yard.
Worked on the washing machine
called it names until it worked
Spent an hour looking for new Jeep parts that disappeared in the garage.
Said more dirty words – there is a theme here…
Found the parts
Installed front blinkers and driver’s side head light.
Completely failed at installing LED tail lights.
Threw a little fit.
Asked questions and then ranted on the Internet forums.
Packet the LEDs back up, returned them, and ordered replacements with regular bulbs.
Sat in yard and drank some Rose’
slept late (8:30) on Sunday morning
Cleaned backyard a little
Took Mom to lunch
Celebrated Mother’s Day
Took mom to nursery for flowers and yarn shop for some skeins of alpaca wool.
Installed new fender flairs on the Jeep.
Installed new Jeep bumper and re-installed winch
HUGE pain and took forever
Two band-Aids with consumed.
Wore good cloths while wrenching.
Wife caught me with grease on shorts
She made wet-cat noise and I got in trouble…
Organized and hauled out all of the recycling from house and garage.
Drank wine in the front yard.
Drank some more wine.
Binged watched season 2 of Westworld to catch up.

Attic Remodel: Week 6

This week, we went from bare studs to insulation to wiring to drywall with a dash of new windows thrown in for good measure. The HVAC split unit head vacuum & power lines were installed and we had a serious accident in the attic that occurred during that process.

Man-Crushes and Day Drinking

Two of my best-est buddies, Doktor_DNR and The Incredible Bulk, were in town for 4 days just to hang out. It.Was.Awesome!! I took the time off work and there was lots of day-drinking, video games played, movies watched, museums visited, about 30 Sapphire Gin&Tonics consumed… We went Go-Kart Racing, toured the track on Vintage Race day. ogled over airplanes, drank some more, ate lots of good food, there was some nudity when one of them leaped from an arctic cold shower, and we made fun of each other at every single opportunity. It was a fine stay-cation for me that I sorely needed with my friends.

 

Film Friday – Attic Week 5

We made huge progress in week five of the attic remodel, even with a couple of setbacks. The windows still are not in, but that is due 100% to the weather. I had an angry cold/flu and my thoughts about getting a little further along that weekend turned into hopeful, but unfulfilled fiction.

Film Friday – Attic Remodel: Week 4

Week 4 brings us views, natural light, and modern wiring! We had a 4’X4′ venting skylight installed that gives us sliver views of Puget Sound, The Seattle Skyline, The Olympic Mountains, and the Cascades. ALL the knob & tube wiring has been replaced, we added some lights and plugs on the main level, are ready for the windows to go in on Monday, and for the last part of the rough carpentry to happen next week as well.

Having two full-time jobs

Came home from regular work and started working in the attic and basement. Ran last bit of new wire, ran 5-65′ Cat5 cable runs for ethernet and our POE cameras. Cleaned up tools, hung electrical boxes in the basement, hauled trash bags down from attic, moved 15 boxes of subway tile, vacuumed basement, shot a little video, sent some email, ordered a new bathroom mirror, and plotted to take over the world with Pinky -like we do every night.

The Spring Flu SUCKS!!

I spent all weekend sipping on a bottle NyQuil – Strait from the bottle because that is how I roll when I have fever. I was at work Monday morning, but I am still not sure where the entire weekend went. It is lost in a dark blue haze with brief interludes of hacking and blowing my nose. It is now Wednesday and I am feeling quasi-normal again, but Stamps-With-Foot started coughing last night and called in sick this morning. I may have infected her.

Film Friday – 3D Printing a Sweet Settlers of Catan Robber

I have been 3D printing a lot lately. I found a SWEET robber piece for The Settlers of Catan on Thingiverse (link listed below) and decided to slice and print it out for our game. It worked really well and I have been printing 1 every few days to give to friends and folks that we play Settlers with. I recorded the whole print and what it looked like before any clean up.

The Thingy for the Settlers of Catan Twister Robber:
https://makerware.thingiverse.com/thi…

I Might need a day off…

This weekend was super full:

  1. Got a haircut
  2. Published “Week 4” attic remodel vid on YouTube
  3. Cleaned out freezer that shut down and spoiled EVERYTHING in it.
  4. Took freezer and bio-waste contents to dump.
  5. Bagged and took 1200 pounds of construction waste to dump
  6. Got Jeep out of garage, charged battery, and fawned over it.
  7. Cleaned yard a little
  8. Wrote a couple of letters.
  9. Had 2017 taxes done.
  10. Getting a refund for first time in 9 years.
  11. Wife and I are going to splurge on hookers and blow – her idea.
  12. Tried to work on the Jeep, but too much shit in my way.
  13. Cleaned garage some.
  14. Organized and hauled out all of the recycling from house and garage – there was a LOT.
  15. Put together new planer stand and mounted wood planer in shop
  16. Drank wine.
  17. Made and finished a YouTube video of the planer assembly.
  18. Installed security camera in the house.
  19. Installed switch and plug boxes and rafter supports in attic.
  20. Input time sheets for my J-O-B.
  21. Played ZERO music.
  22. Worked on a 3D printing design
  23. Got stuff ready for next week
  24. Drank some more wine.
  25. Going to bed now.

Standing on My Soapbox Again – Ford Motor Company

Ahem…

Ascends Soapbox:

I am having a crisis on conscience about vehicles of late: I REALLY want a new Subaru WRX to replace my 2008 blue beauty and I have been salivating over the coming 2019 Jeep Scrambler with a diesel engine FOR YEARS. I have loved all my Scoobys, but there have been some issues with the unavailability of the 5 door WRX and with the CVT transmission & 2.5-liter engine oil consumption recall issues, I am super gun-shy about buying a new Subaru. As for Trucks, I have always been a Nissan/Toyota guy because of a long run of really great vehicles, but that feeling has changed after my experience with my last truck and the dealer I bought it from.

Dad was a Ford man his whole life and mom had a green 1998 4X2 ranger step-side for 14-ish years that was an amazing little truck. That means something to me. I want to buy American owned/made vehicles at this point in my life and I have been looking really hard at Ford. The re-issue of the 2019 Ranger compact/mid-sized truck with a 3.2L, 31+ MPG, diesel looks really good! That coupled with the politics of Ford not taking direct bailout funds (money under AIFP) and Ford (along with Honda), recently urgeing the EPA to maintain the current requirements for the 2025 fuel emission standards, really has my attention.

I still am excited about the Toledo, Ohio-made Scrambler (since my ’86 CJ needs a playmate), but the Jeep brand is currently owned by Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, an Italian/American-ish automobile company that is registered in the Netherlands with its headquarters in London, all for tax purposes. Chrysler also took a crap ton of bail out money, with $1.3 billion that was written off and will never be recovered. This is also a company that looked hard at selling the Jeep brand to a Chinese Automaker in 2017. Seriously, look it up…

With all that said and with months of discussion and deliberation, I am feeling pulled to both the Ford Ranger truck for our next vehicle purchase and the Fiesta ST (when it comes out in AWD) for my wife when her forester runs close to the end of its bumper to bumper warranty period.

…Dismounts Soapbox…

 

Film Friday – Week 2 of the Attic Rebuild

I know… I have been posting a bunch of videos lately and not a lot of travel, Jeep, Puppy, garden, music, building, or other normal posts.  That will change with the coming of Spring and the completion of our attic remodel/rebuild.  In that vain, below is the short video documenting week 2 of the process.  It looks like it will be a 5-part series.

Mid-week Update

So, this week has been crazy at work and at home. On the home-front, there were birthdays, shopping, it is Income Tax time, we have 3-4 guys showing up every morning at 7:00 with tools in hand to work in and on the attic.

My shop is full.  I can’t even get to my table saw and my bench is stacked 5′ high with insulation.   I need a little shop time to keep me sane or at least saner…  So, I took a little me time and signed up for some classes for spring and early summer where I will get use other folks shops and build/make stuff:

  1. Canoe Paddle Making
  2. Claw and Ball Foot Carving
  3. A 10-Week Letter Press Workshop
  4. Woodcarving Figures
  5. Spoon Carving
  6. Block Printing
  7. Industrial Sewing: canvas and leather

The Jeep Rebuild After Paint

As you know, I got the Jeep back from paint about a month ago and it has been sitting on the lift in the garage – letting the paint cure. I am not 100% happy with the paint… It took 4 tries for them to get the hood and fenders right and there are little spots and dings on the tailgate. There is also some mess just above the nerf bars and a run on the rear fender that makes me twitch, but they will be covered by some trim and the fender flairs, so… I included the Jeep’s homecoming in a video here, but skip to 5:09 as I spent way too much time blabbing about other non-Jeep related crap in the 1st part of the Video.

Anyway, I have been collecting small cardboard boxes full of goodies since last October for the after-paint re-fit. That installation process begins this coming weekend. I am giddy with anticipation.

The part additions and changes from Morris, Amazon, ARB, and Northridge4X4 include:

Duel Battery tray
Halogen headlight Lamp Conversion Kit (wanted LEDs, but don’t want to pay $600+ for headlight!!)
Black Rugged Ridge Fender Flare Kit
Stainless Fender Flair Hardware
Front Side Amber Marker Lights
New Wiper Blades
New thick rubber floor mats
BestTop Bikini Top (uses existing soft top channel) for the 2 months of sun in Seattle this summer
Rugged Ridge LED Tail Lights
Front Parking Lamp/Lens
Black Factor 55 FlatLink Winch Cable Shackle
Burnt Orange Jeep Fender Decals
New Frame to Cowl Weather Seal
Black Powder Coated Stainless Steel Side Mirrors
New Winch Cover
Warn Winch bumper with D-Rings
Black Vinyl Spare Tire Cover
New Aviation-Style Light Switches for front spots and reverse lights
Stainless Steel License Plate Holder (I had it powder coated black)
Second set of D-rings (Powder Coated Burnt Orange to match Jeep Logo)
Hi-Lift Jack Rebuild Kit (sandblasting and repainting origional)
Bronze Door Hinge Bushings (sourced at McMaster-Carr)
Warrior Pipe ½ doors (because I can)
ARB Recovery Tools Bag to organize my off-road gear
ARB Compact Onboard Air Compressor (Got a SMOKING Deal at the ARB booth at a recent Jeep Swap Meet!!)

Getting new bar covers made as well

Film Friday – Framing Double Feature

We are remodeling and rebuilding a 90+ year old attic into a master bedroom. This required completely rewiring to electrical in the attic, moving/fixing plumbing, building a complete floating floor, adding roof supports, etc… Below is thew documentation of the 1st week of the build.

Part I of a 2 part video on the replacement of a falling down 90+ year old shack of a carriage shed with a modern 24X24 garage. This was not a flat mono-slab, green field build. Lots of digging was required and a rebar-filled retaining wall and slab had to be poured in the middle of winter before the first wall could go up.

Spring Has Sprung – 2018

With the official start of Spring – as determined by the fact that my wife was reading a book, enjoying the sunshine, and drinking wine in the yard – we had a busy weekend at La Maison Du Talley:

Moved all the power tools in the shop against the wall for temp storage duty
Ordered material for attic finish
Set up new iPhone (old one a brick!)
Checkout at Pratt to be able to independently use their fabrication shop.
Moved everyone else’s crap out of my basement and temporarily into the garage
Said dirty words about all the other people’s crap being stored in our home
Cleaned the basement completely out
Pruned the apple trees in the backyard
Restacked the firewood wood pile
Cleaned and prepped attic for floor installation
Published two YouTube videos
Set up new condenser microphone in home office/studio
Breakfast with my mom and wife
Went to the Moonshiners 36th Annual Jeep Swap Meet
Did not buy a new-to-me 1946 CJ-2A project Jeep
Stayed Married
Did not buy a motorcycle or boat at the swap meet
Stayed married – there is a theme…
DID buy an ARB on-board air compressor and a duel battery mount – and got a sweet deal!
Signed up for three classes at Pratt for this spring: Block printing, wood carving, and letterpress
Padded and protected the wood floor and built-ins in prep for attic finish
Cleaned the hot tub
Edged and mowed the front and back yard
Spread Weed&Feed on the back yard and parking strip
Re-seeded the front yard

Film Friday – 3D Printing Projects

I have been doing some medium-serious designing, borrowing, appropriating, and just plain stealing some 3D designs and printing useful stuff this winter in between shop time, my J-O-B, building projects, and remodel projects. The video below details the printing and use of a couple of safety razor cases, SD card holders, and GoPro Session4 case.