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Showing content with the highest reputation on 03/03/2022 in Posts

  1. Thanks everyone - had a spectacular day! My daughter, Lizzie, home for three weeks from Australia not only brought me a spectacular bottle of single malt (Balvenie triple cask, 16 year), she'd also organized a cat for me! From a rehoming center that we've had several cats from before. Picked him up yesterday - a super affectionate four year old, initially called Wolfie, but now renamed Oberon. 5.2kg (11.5lb) of muscle. Our previous cat, also rehomed, we had to say farewell to a few months ago aged 19. My son bought the food, climbing tower etc for Oberon. And Carole bought us tickets to see Wagner's Lohengrin at the Royal Opera House in May. The usual 4 hour Wagner epic, And finally my son Rob, Lizzie, Carole and I went out for a meal together last night https://www.brunningandprice.co.uk/greyhound/ So one hell of a good day!!
    7 points
  2. Thanks all. Crap day at work fighting dry dock struggles but making up for it in Boston tonight - heading to Celtic's game shortly. First, an Old Fashioned with dinner.
    6 points
  3. Happy Birthday Mr. DIY Drydock!
    2 points
  4. A little thing, but if you need a 58mm tamper, this is a very good one for the money made by a Ukrainian company. I have one in red. It’s dead on 58, so basket fit is pretty universal (though of course there can be a little ring depending on basket and/or dose).
    2 points
  5. 2 points
  6. I got a sample of a rwandan coffee from olam yesterday and roasted it. i made a cortado this morning and then immediately ordered a 30kg bag of beans.
    2 points
  7. Happy Birthday Craig! Brittania waives the rules!
    2 points
  8. I like the vaguely Flintstones feel to it. 🥴 I'm amazed by the difficult projects you decide to take on as your first attempt to use a tool or learn a skill. I haven't even attempted a curve on my bandsaw let alone a complicated curved box. Give yourself some time to practice before deciding you aren't good at it, and maybe pick something easier to start off.
    2 points
  9. Some people have been asking for specs on the Aeras, so here they are... Input: XLR – Accepts balanced or single-ended (with grounded RCA to XLR cable) Input Impedance: 50K x2 Gain: 1000x Frequency Response: 1Hz – 60KHz Max P-P Voltage: 1500VAC Max RMS Voltage: 1000VAC Output: Stax Pro-Bias x1 Vacuum Tubes: 6S4A x4 Power Consumption: 100W External Dimensions: 19 cm x 34.3 cm x 14.2 cm (7.5” x 13.5” x 5.6”) – W x D x H Weight: 5.5 Kg (12 lbs) Mains AC: 115/230VAC Switchable
    2 points
  10. Cheers Nate - Happy Birthday's
    1 point
  11. Happy Birthday, Vince! 😜
    1 point
  12. Happy Nathan Day, Birthman! (party favour noise)
    1 point
  13. 1 point
  14. Just wanted to offer a quick update on this...... I couldn't get the "all in one" code from @Kerry to work perfectly with my setup; it always opened up the relays to full volume on power-up, and I couldn't work out why. User fastfwd from SBAF took pity on me and wanted a distraction project, and produced some code for me that did the trick. He took an interesting approach to 'dejitter' that works beautifully, and we also added averaging of multiple pots readings and easy custom mapping of volume knob to attenuation to customise things to my setup. Here's the final code: Everything is now all installed in my Exstata. I didn't originally plan to have these boards in there, so the layout is pretty wasteful, but it keeps clean signal lines away from AC. The digital power is four lines from two Twisted Pear LCDPS fed from two toroids - WAY over the top, but I had them all just sitting in the cupboard, so why not? All in all a great end to a project first posted almost 11 years ago! [EDIT] I should add, I have no idea why this code works great, and Kerry's code was causing my boards to open up full volume on start-up. Such are the mysteries of the universe.
    1 point
  15. A Night in London (Deluxe Edition) Ophélie Gaillard, Pulcinella Orchestra 2022 Example:
    1 point
  16. Happy Birthday, Nate!!! Have an awesome day.
    1 point
  17. 1 point
  18. Happy Birthday Nate!!!! Hoping you have a fantastic day! Go and cut some round circle holes!
    1 point
  19. 1 point
  20. Happy Birthday, Nate! As a cyclist in the NE ...
    1 point
  21. Hope it's a joyful, carefree day
    1 point
  22. Happy birthday, Nate! Hope it isn't too cold out there in the northeast.
    1 point
  23. 1 point
  24. Happy Birthday, Nate! Hope it's a great one.
    1 point
  25. Congrats Kerry! The small form factor will appeal to many, for sure.
    1 point
  26. Hah! I haven’t thought about Martinelli cider in a long time, but I sure tasted it as soon as I read that line! That’s certainly a strong endorsement!
    1 point
  27. Happy Birthday, Craig!!! I'm a bit late, but hopefully it was a very good one.
    1 point
  28. Hope you had a great day, Craig Cheers!
    1 point
  29. Cheerio, guvna, glad you're still hanging on in quiet desperation, as it were. (party favour noise)
    1 point
  30. 1 point
  31. Mini-review of Colombia Decaf Rainbow by Metric Coffee. On the bag they put notes of apple cider, caramel, and citrus. At first blush it seems like "just another Colombian EA decaf" but I think it's in the leading 30% or so. As a pour-over you can expect a fairly interesting decaf, with all of those aforementioned flavors. It's not particularly complex but is a very approachable coffee, great for sipping. As an espresso, the most accurate form of apple cider I can think of is those Martinelli's apple ciders -- very apple juice-like, with some spices but definitely mostly the former. If you want shots redolent of apple juice and don't want extra caffeine, this coffee is hard to beat.
    1 point
  32. Figured out I am just as bad at bandsawing as I am at the other sawings. Tried to build this but found even with the 1/4” blade I could not cut smooth curves like the YouTube guys. Also managed to combine CA glue and wood glue when mounting the handle, then walked away without cleaning up squeeze out and left myself with a glue line I cannot manage to sand or chisel.
    1 point
  33. Photos from Inside the Russian Invasion of Ukraine https://petapixel.com/2022/03/01/photos-from-inside-the-russian-invasion-of-ukraine/
    1 point
  34. Yup, I can imagine a few people proud to wear that sheet of art as a tattoo in the back.
    1 point
  35. Had the first parent visit on school campus since things got bad with the pandemic today. Saw the classrooms, met some teachers in-person, etc. Good to see Esmé is paying attention in music class.* * BTW, Adopt Me is a favorite game, though I guess it could be a cry for help.
    1 point
  36. Well with the $700 loyalty discount and the $400 trade in for my old Note 9, this phone was $100. That made it a no brainer for me.
    1 point
  37. Good choice! I cheaped out and got a Samsung S21 FE 5G. It's more than enough of a phone that what I really need.
    1 point
  38. Got my new Samsung S22 Ultra and I'm learning the new features. So far I'm really liking it.
    1 point
  39. Leave it to Naaman to have Walnut cabinets in his shop. When do the Wenge floors get installed?
    1 point
  40. Fancy. One wall is done in the garage. I now have 23 outlets on that one wall, where I had 2 to begin with.
    1 point
  41. Thanks. The Aeras will sell for 5,995 Euro and $6,695 USD. The euro fluctuates against the dollar, but we'll keep the pricing as is, unless there are some larger swings. We're going to offer a show special of 10% off which I can extend here as well through mid-March
    1 point
  42. Tossed together a Valentine’s Day box.
    1 point
  43. I meant to post this last week when I actually built it, but forgot to. I also forgot to take finished pictures with the newel caps in place, but use your imagination. A couple of weeks ago one of the bosses told me that he forgot to call the stair guy to build railings at the new addition of a smallish job. By the time he remembered, the stair guys schedule was too far out to meet our deadline. The railings needed to mimick the existing railings of the San Francisco Victorian home. He asked me if it was something I thought that I could do. Stairs and railings are usually a specialty, and as such are usually subbed out. A sub genre of finish carpentry, if you will. I haven't actually built indoor railings before, but I knew it was something that I could accomplish. There were no solid newel posts available in the size that I needed, so I built my own. As these will be painted, I used Poplar. It's a good, stable wood that doesn't have the most beautiful color or grain pattern, but is easy to mill and takes paint very well. The exception are the pickets, which are Alaskan Yellow Cedar. Kind of felt right using a wood from my home state. It's not soft like the usual Cedars, and has a very unique smell when cut. I got to use a lot of tradesman tricks and practices, and a lot of the math that I told my teachers I'd never need. Yes, they we're right. I did a lot of good preparation, so it wasn't just dumb luck, but it did fall together beautifully. The absence of a lower rail that the pickets sit on is a bit unique, but the existing rails pickets also connect directly to the stair treads. It actually works quite well at tying the newer, somewhat modern addition to the classic Victorian style. The caps not pictured are a pretty simple double cap design, with the bottom cap being 5/4 material, with a smaller top cap of 3/4.
    1 point
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