Where did you learn about the famous "frammistan"?
TDD
Where did you learn about the famous "frammistan"?
TDD
He still posts on some of the sci.electronics newsgroups from time to time. :)
The Daring Dufas fired this volley in news:i7egi4$ljq$ snipped-for-privacy@news.eternal-september.org:
It's in the manual, right next to the page showing the three-pronged veeblefork.
Lloyd
I've yet to see an old refrigeration unit that used R22 since R12 was the first of its type. I use something called R416a in place of R12 and it's more efficient, takes less refrigerant to do the same job and it runs a lower head pressure which makes it good for old systems because it puts less of a load on them. Oh yea, it's a drop in, no oil change necessary.
TDD
Where are the muffler bearings?
Sort of missed the point, didn't you? I envy anyone that has the balls to try to learn something new. If he has no success, so what? He's doing what he wants to do---explore, in the hopes of learning something. If he succeeds, so much the better. Frankly, we need more people like Iggy, not fewer.
Harold
I think the guy is a great treasure for the electronics community, I really admire him. He has the ability to share his knowledge better than most of the teachers I've come across which is a unique talent.
TDD
Believe it or not, there is such a thing as a muffler bearing. A front wheel drive car may have one to accommodate the movement of a transverse mounted engine.
TDD
It used to be a joke among used care salesmen, when telling people what was wrong with their trade-ins in the '60s & '70s. "Our mechanic just informed me that we'll have to take $250 off our offer, since the muffler bearings are bad..." ;-)
That's why I never traded in a used car, or bought one off a lot.
The other was a joke to confuse the new guy at the parts counter, when one of the mechanics would tell him he needed a muffler bearing for a 65 Mustang. Maybe it was a regional thing?
I like his description of the 'Cursor Circuit' in his TV typewriter article: "Have you ever tried to design one?" or something to that effect.
He also wrote some pretty good April Fools stories. :)
I got real tickled when I heard a parts man call another supplier and ask for a harmonica balancer for a Chevy V8.
TDD
They got tossed into that box of flight line..ya..that one.
I am the Sword of my Family and the Shield of my Nation. If sent, I will crush everything you have built, burn everything you love, and kill every one of you. (Hebrew quote)
I remember watching the harmonic balancer from the Chevy 283 in my van rolling up the exit ramp off I-75 at Lima Ohio, after it bounced around under the engine cover a couple times. I was doing 35 MPH, and it was outrunning the van. :(
Oh yeah? Well, my daddy's bigger than your daddy.
H
And tossed into the trash when they were looking for the skyhooks...
Sigh. I was a Broadcast engineer at three TV stations and a bunch of AM radio stations. All of which would fire you on the spot if you were inept, or an asshole.
I ran a repair depot for a large MSO CATV operator, where we did millions of dollars worth of repairs for the various systems we owned.
I also worked in manufacturing and engineering for a company that provided Telemetry systems for NASA, NOAA and the European Space Agency. They never told us how to do our job. They just asked for a price and wrote a check. Some of our equipment was still in use over 30 years after delivery and had never been serviced. It was being used to track some of NASA's deep space probes that were launched in the early '70s.
My work is aboard the International Space Station, while yours is rusting in moldy basements, and your industry has a reputation worse that TV repairmen used to.
"Michael A. Terrell" on Wed, 22 Sep 2010
23:57:24 -0400 typed in rec.crafts.metalworking the following:I've got the drawings for the semi inverted nuts that hold the retaining bracket for the end.
The Chrome Plated ones are next to the remote overhead windshield wiper knobs.
I had one of those in my stepvan. :)
You know, that sounds like a fun job. Sad, that you havn't found honest HVAC companies. I'm not sure about my part of the world. I did see a video years ago. A news team had a HVAC system disabled (remove one wire nut from the contactor wire). And then called different companies to come out and look. One cut a wire on the contactor coil, even. I think one of the companies they called noticed the loose wire, and fixed it inexpensively.
When NYS came out with the red dye in heating kerosene. I bought some "red lantern oil" for a friend.
HomeOwnersHub website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.