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Elliot's Trackside Diner September 2010 Locked

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Posted by Robby P. on Thursday, September 16, 2010 1:30 PM

 Ray....Nice shot (with a old flash)  Big Smile.

 Chris......I'm not sure what classes I will need, until the test is done.   I know I'm going to "bomb" it.   I will keep your wife in mind thou.  I did ask this morning, if this is a job for the future.   He said it should be.  What job isn't safe anymore!!!

 "Rust, whats not to love?"      

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Posted by Cederstrand on Thursday, September 16, 2010 2:57 PM

Italian Roast coffee in a UNION PACIFIC mug, please.

***Ray, your old pic is now our latest desktop background image. Thanks!Smile, Wink & Grin

Seems we've lost over half our geese duing the last weekends storm. Either they were washed downstream or met an untimely fate with coyotes or a neighbor. We'll never know. Made our last real search for them downstream today.

Hope everyone is doing well.

Cheers! Cowboy Rob

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Posted by teen steam fan on Thursday, September 16, 2010 3:36 PM

Hey guys, just thought I would stop in 

Not much new for me, and as for the comments about the planning board, yes the power of veto and no chance of overruling. 

Its a bit more complicated than that, you see, my sisters have a dance floor that they never use in the area that my layout would expand into. So far, all I have is a small yard and a very short 2 way main line. When I got some used cabinets for workbenches, well, I got a chewing out and am still getting it. 

If you can read this... thank a teacher. If you are reading this in english... thank a veteran

When in doubt. grab a hammer. 

If it moves and isn't supposed to, get a hammer

If it doesn't move and is supposed to, get a hammer

If it's broken, get a hammer

If it can't be fixed with a hammer... DUCK TAPE!

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Posted by Packer on Thursday, September 16, 2010 4:50 PM

Hey guys

Haven't done a whole lot train wise lately.

Had yet another car issue the yesterday. Yesterday night on my way to ollege I ran over what looked to be a piece of someone's headlight (there was an upside down crashed truck a few cars ahead of me) but I didn't see it under the van in front of me until it was too late. I figured it had hit the one of crossmembers and maybe hit another one so I didn't make much of it. When I came back from college there was a bunch of smoke coming out from under the hood. I get out and pop the hood figuring it may have been the power steering fluid that missed the funnel when I was topping it off. I found out it was actually antifreeze when I smelt it. A little bit of snooping and I find a 3-way connector near the headers is leaking. Go to tighten the claps and part of connector breaks off. Luckily a new one is only $4. Wish I could get a metal one though

I'll be catching up at the rivet ounter

Vincent

Wants: 1. high-quality, sound equipped, SD40-2s, C636s, C30-7s, and F-units in BN. As for ones that don't cost an arm and a leg, that's out of the question....

2. An end to the limited-production and other crap that makes models harder to get and more expensive.

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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Thursday, September 16, 2010 5:59 PM

TMarsh

Jeff- Feet? You didn’t mean inches? My gosh if you get dandy lions that big, does your Bull Thistle get that big too? Holy moley the size of the stickers would be frightening.

That's right. FEET. It not a true dandelion. It's more closely related to a Helios plant though I can't find specific info on this particular type plant. The leaves are very similar to those of a dandelion but are longer and thicker and lay flat. The flowers are way up at the top and look almost exactly like dandelion flowers even down to the turning into balls windborne seeds like those of a dandelion. However it has a slightly foul odor and is NOT good in salads. Unlike the dandelion it is poisonous. Even cows won't eat it. Here's a photo I found of a small one.

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, September 16, 2010 6:24 PM

Thought I´d stop in for a nightcap with friends.

Chloe, a whatyamaycallit, on the rocks, please.

Struck by insomnia again, too many worries on my mind, which keep me getting the sleep I need. Will talk to my doc about it, next time I see him.

Jeff - that stuff does not look like something I would want to have in my yard.

Well, I shall give Zzz one more try...

SleepSleepSleep

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Posted by der5997 on Thursday, September 16, 2010 6:38 PM

Hello Diners: thought I'd better say something before my membership card is canceled!ClownEmbarrassed  I've been looking in the window quite often, but usually too late in the day to try a reply, what with all the steps it seems to take these daysWhistling

I see from my photo file that I took this on August 31st - so I've been working on the replacement of the card mock-up scene-divider  from before that. This morning I got the thing wrestled down and more or less crying "Uncle"   The brick and stone, seen here at a stage where I ran out of printer ink so couldn't print another page of the hotel from which the edge masonry was takenBang Head are pretty much how they are going to stay. The factory covers a switch machine - here's how that works The industry name has to be put up on the brick-work (I'd like to try a painted sign on the bricks - any links to articles on "how to" for that?)  The first arch on the right has to have storage racks for metal sheet and rod. A chain link fence is a must -

I wish I could work at the layout as fast as some of you guys - Jeff and Keith spring to mind - there are so many unfinished projects....and I keep inventing more.  That article in the July(?) MR about making extra industries using existing spurs caught my eye - and there is a spot on my "TimeSaver" switching yard which could, if I re-align the spur a bit, become a drop-off/pick-up for one container car. Also, this new industry under the arches could be rail-served if the additional spur I need for the mill/bakery comes the other side of the mill spur than that I had planned. The shipments of metal sheet and rod would be off-loaded sort of team track style, and fork lifted to the storage arch. Too many projects, too little time - and here's Ed planning a whole new layout maybe!!!

I've also been running trains every day, even if it's "just a short burst".  I thought that if I did that, the track might stay a bit cleaner longer. I've also discovered that cleaning the loco wheels more often than I was doing is a great help.   I've had my interchange fiddle yard up for some days now, and cleared a bunch of traffic from the main layout. Remembering it's there when I get up from the computer desk is the biggest challenge. Only one serious incident so far....and no breakages (some disassembly, but no breakagesHmm) in that one. Lucky the train room floor is carpeted!Big Smile

Our local TV is running 4 episodes of Big Bang Theory (3 back to back) tonight - so I'll say goodnight all, and God Bless.  Prayers for all in need of healing, comfort, prosperity and peace. Angel

 

"There are always alternatives, Captain" - Spock.

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Posted by Packers#1 on Thursday, September 16, 2010 6:57 PM

Derjohn, that image you posted is the one that began the saga of change that has led to the new layout plan etc.

I'm starting to go crazy without this hobby. I'm thinking a mini-layout may be in the mix. EDIT: actually probably a diorama based on one of these two different shots. or maybe a hybrid of the two, not completely sure, this is just an idea. I might just add a spur (hello use for some code 80 track) so I can stage cars etc.

Sawyer Berry

Clemson University c/o 2018

Building a protolanced industrial park layout

 

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Posted by der5997 on Thursday, September 16, 2010 9:16 PM

Sawyer:

Derjohn, that image you posted is the one that began the saga of change that has led to the new layout plan etc.
...do you mean the 2028? I don't know who put that up originally, but it's a cool train; right out of "A prototype you can model" when MR ran that column Thumbs Up

(Big Bang just over, and all set up for the start of Season 4 next Thursday!

TTFN.

"There are always alternatives, Captain" - Spock.

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Posted by Heartland Division CB&Q on Thursday, September 16, 2010 9:58 PM

Good evening ... An RBF at the RC, please.

Lee ... I recall your work relates to bridges. The old highway bridges here look like they will eventually fall in the water.

Der John ... your city ssene is progressing nicely.

Chris ... Continued prayes for Ross's family and friends. ... Also, Chris, don't let Robby see the rusty bridge. Next, he'll be weathering bridges as well as freight cars.

I continue working on my city scene when not interrupted with other stuff. This week I built a 4 foot long retaining wall 4 inches high.

 

GARRY

HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR

EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU

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Posted by howmus on Thursday, September 16, 2010 10:09 PM

Evenin' folks!

Flo, just a decaf for me.

Just got home from the RR Hysterical Historical Society Meeting (aka: The Rochester and Genesee Valley RR Museum).  Had a great program about the Finger Lakes Railway, Past, Present, & Future given by the lady who is the Director of Communication and Public Affairs for the RR.  Similar program to the one she did a couple years ago in Geneva for the NMRA but updated.  She still has a way of holding all the guys attention....  Ahhhh, never mind!

FYI, the photo I put in here this morning is of the layout I was at last night, not of my layout.  Way too modern for my layout.  His is transition era, but still mostly steam.

Jeffrey, the plant looks more like a member of the thistle family....  Interesting!  Probably better to have THAT around than either the Wild Parsnip (which we have out at boy scout camp and find along many roadsides), or the Giant Hogweed a similar plant on steroids!  Both are nasty and can cause sever burns if you get any of the sap on your skin.

Got a conveyor painted flat black today.....  THAT is the only progress on the layout........

Catch you all later!

73

Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO

We'll get there sooner or later! 

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Posted by TMarsh on Thursday, September 16, 2010 11:25 PM

Good evening.

Jeff- Looks like a weed to me. Albeit a bigun. Sounds like you identify weeds kinda like I do. If it looks like a dandylion, it’s a dandy lion. I carry it a bit farther. If it has stickers, it’s a thistle. (Big stickers get called bull thistle even if it’s not. ) If it’s a big weed, it gets called a Horseweed. If I know the name I usually call it by the name, and I do know many types,  but in reality, Brenda and Roundup don’t care what it’s called. Just it needs to be dead.

DerJohn- I believe in the Big Bang Theory myself. God clapping his hands probably made a big bang. CLAP “There! Done.”

Ray- Gee whiz you folks grow some big weeds out there. I thought we had some big ones in the fields. It almost looks like this type of weed that grows all over. I’ve been mowing and chopping it down for ever. Juicy thing. No burns or irritation so it isn’t Giant Hogweed. Don’t know what it really is. Just a weed to me. Horseweed. EDIT: After a bit of research I've discovered it is Poison Hemlock. Not sure yet just how I feel about that.

YAWN. Best get to sleep before it’s tomorrow. Another action packed day ahead..

Todd  

Central Illinoyz

In order to keep my position as Master and Supreme Ruler of the House, I don't argue with my wife.

I'm a small town boy. A product of two people from even smaller towns. I don’t talk on topic….. I just talk. Laugh

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Posted by Cederstrand on Friday, September 17, 2010 12:02 AM

A bowl of the House Stew, please.

Got the manure spreader back together with some replacement parts and it's ready for action. Next up is to finish work on the Polaris Ranger so I can pull the spreader with it. Next week I'll start on the pickup truck...ugh!

Will squeeze in some train time over the weekend. My goal is to finish the wife's (HO) town in the next couple weeks and then take a break from it all to work on some easel projects.

Have a good night y'all.

Cheers! Cowboy Rob

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Posted by AmanaMedic on Friday, September 17, 2010 12:34 AM

Gooooooooooooooooooooooooooooood Morning, sedation please...

Well, another round of content has been created for THAT Editor, she'll be pleased as usual.

Later this morning, I'll be at the POW/MIA Day ceremony at the Solon High School. I'll be meeting WW2 vets who suffered and perservered in captivity. I'll be meeting history. Last year, the guys who were "guests" of the Germans told of stuff straight out of "Hogan's Heroes." The "guests" of the Japanese told of giving the guards chocolate X-Lax bars (while they ate Hershey's bars) THAT they had received at the end of hostilities via air-drop.

Needless to say, this is one assignment I am honored to be covering!

After being in the company of heroes, I'll return to the office for "facetime" with THAT. I'm sure she'll have another batch of assignments for me on top of football later tonight, and a car show on Saturday to cover. THAT will be "take your wife to w**k day" as she'll go along. Odds are, the BIL will take his...Kalimar GT to it, so I'll be mixing business with pleasure.

ULRICH: I hope you were able to get some sleep last night, a very good, good morning to you, and here's hoping things start looking at least a little better for you.

ROBBY P: Don't sweat THAT "pre-test," I think most people "bomb" it, to be honest with you. What chaffs my schmeckle is when kids straight out of high school "bomb" it, or need extensive remediation in the very subjects their brand new, ink still drying diploma attests THAT they have met proficiency standards in...  For what its worth, more and more of Kit's duties are web graphics, or otherwise designing for the web. The college is doing more and more stuff online. She's also getting farther and farther into "social media." Personally, I still say "social media" is what one gets when they stick their "bits" someplace they shouldn't have... "I'm sorry Mr. Schlebotnik, but you seem to have 'social media' about your bits! Here's some penicillin, should wipe it out." I've noticed you keep saying people have suggested you go into something artistic, based on your weathering and MRR stuff. The bottom line is, what do YOU want to do?? Heck, I'm 41 years old (going on 14 most days), and I STILL don't know what I want to be "when I grow up." I'm just saying, if you're going to rack up student loan debt...it might be a good idea to have a pretty firm path to follow. Also, be careful. I ended up taking the maximum amount offered...as I was more or less living off of it AND trying to take care of a woman and her three kids. I'm still paying for THAT mistake... Actually, I'm in foreberance for the second consecutive time... Eventually, I'll be resuming payments on THAT loan...  But, by doing so, it took something THAT could've been easily paid off in a few years, and turned it into a 10-year plus anvil hanging over my head.

As the cops say: use extreme caution...

 

Not sure if this will qualify for the soapbox or not... but yesterday a brand new jacket I ordered arrived. It is the exact same style as was worn in the 1970s on the TV show "EMERGENCY!" I first got one in '04 or '05 factory direct from Transcon Mfg., who happened to be the uniform provider for LACoFD then as well as LA City, and others. Now THAT I've...expanded...since then, it (the first one) fits fine unless I go to zip it. So, went to order a new one, a bit larger. Now, the company has been bought out by another firm. While they still have the jacket (Transcon was threatening to discontinue it then, and made it "special order"), they only sell through dealers. So, I found a shop in New Jersey THAT carries it. Turns out, when I ordered it, they then had to order it from the new company. Fine...took about the same amount of time to arrive, no biggee. What got me, was THAT instead of being made in downtown Los Angeles like it used to be, it is now a "product of Mexico."

Geesh, can't even get a fireman's jacket Made in the USA anymore...

 

A happy Yom Kippur to those of the Jewish faith.

Please honor our POW/MIA today, "you are not forgotten."

Chris

"We salute our armed forces, police officers, firefighters, and emergency personnel" - Mark Levin

The Cedar cRapids Industrial Branch: Proudly Shipping Yesterday's CrunchBerries Tomorrow!

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, September 17, 2010 1:06 AM

Good Morning Everyone,

Petra is off to her day at the GULAG, so I am all alone with a mile-long HD list. Laundry, cleaning house - all those fun and entertaining things. Thought I´d better drop by and get a good breakfast before I start on all of this.

Zoe, darling, coffee (lots of it) and two fried eggs, sunny-side up, bacon, a stack of pancakes/maple syrup and a tall glass of apple juice - thank you.

Chris - from what my grandfather told me, your statement of "Hogan´s Heroes" is quite right. POW camp guards were usually elderly men, who had absolutely no interest to play hero. Commanding officers were usually worn-out battle horses from WW I, who also had no interest to play it rough. Of course, there was the odd young and eager whipper-snapper, but that used to be the exception. Allied, non-Russian POW´s were treated fairly well, especially when the US Army started to pull into Germany at the end of 1944. Close to my father´s home town, there was a POW camp. One day, all "men" aged 15+, were commanded to search for a GI who had escaped from there. All of my father´s class had to join the hunt, only he was rejected as being "politically unreliable". That was good for him and the refugee, because he found him, took him home and gave shelter until they had to flee from the Red Army. Quite a risky thing, it meant instant death when giving shelter to a POW. Unfortunately, they have lost contact since, and my father never got to know, whether the bloke made it home safely.

On my "home front", there is no improvement in sight. Things are getting worse, as our government will be introducing cuts in welfare spendings, meaning that, with the beginning of next year, we will have a week´s worth of food less to spend. At the same time, they are discussing tax breaks... No, I won´t continue on this, as it would blow the rules of this forum.

Petra and I need a miracle to happen, if we want to stay alive. $ 600 a month (make that $ 450 on the basis of US prices) for food, clothing, communication and electricity does not carry you far. "Too little to live, too much to die"

You all have a good day!

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Posted by blownout cylinder on Friday, September 17, 2010 5:32 AM

Good Morning everyone-

Welb, I got the colonoscopy done yesterday so today is hurry up and get those other dang things done before I go to the nuclear medicine people next week for the heart wall exam--that is to assess whether or not my heart will be able to take the defib or not.

First off my hd list thing includes more laundry as well as some minor housecleaning--such as gets done in hereWhistling Then it is off to get the shopping done for the weekend seminar stuff as well as my on-call stuffHuh? This may take awhile though as we have to go to three separate stores to get the dang stuffTongue Tied

Chloe, I'll have the giant bucket o' caffeine and a couple of eggs--sunny side up--as well as a platter of pancakes with good ol' maple syrup as well please---I'll be at the window booth to watch the sun rise--Wink

Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry

I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...

http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/

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Posted by Wisconsin Railfan on Friday, September 17, 2010 6:17 AM

Good Day Folks!

Big ol' cup of coffee please.

Had some some storms roll through last night, tornado sirens were going off.  It missed my location, but the power was out for about 3 hours.  I hope to finish up the C&NW diorama this weekend, I have not worked on it for a few weeks.  Hope everyone has a great day!

Steven

The train came by and I got on, that’s when it all began
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Posted by GMTRacing on Friday, September 17, 2010 6:33 AM

Good Morning All,

    64F and drizzly here this morning. We were spared the extreme winds that hit NYC last evening and got just the rain instead. I for one am not complaining, last time we had big winds we had a large branch clobber the roof of a customers enclosed trailer. Instant sunroof!

  No MRR progress yet, but I did get more of the Focus interior assembled last night. I have a plastic gauge panel to add and it was the wrong color so I used Krylon Fusion as a base coat and then matched it as best I could. The paint seems to have adheered well so we'll see if it holds up without peeling or flaking. That's always been an issue for plastic interior stuff. Might be a good thing on plastic buildings as well. The carrier still attacks extruded foam so a prime coat is still needed there. I didn't like the latex spray I got - too lumpy and it gets bubbles on the surface as well. Does go right over the styrofoam without attacking it though.

    Time to get back in the shop and get to it.

Jeff - are you sure those aren't sunflowers you're describbing?      CUL, J.R.

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Posted by LSWrr on Friday, September 17, 2010 6:48 AM

Good Morning,

We had some strong storms last night; the town of Wooster was hit by a tornado.  All is well on my side of town.

GMT
, the steel mill in East Chicago transports the molten steel across the river and the mill in Cleveland did it once upon a time.  Cleveland still has a finishing/rolling mill on the opposite riverbank and a power plant but the only remaining BOF is near the blast furnace. The power plant runs off the gases given off when making iron in the blast furnace.

Chris, sorry you had to go to a funeral, but it sounds like he had a good full life with several friends.  Good weather is always a plus.  Again sorry for the departments and your Loss.

Garry, I would worry about the new bridges more than the old ones.  In my area there are 2 spiral stone RR bridges being hammered by 70 trains/day.  These were built form local stones and laid in a spiral pattern by mason’s pre civil war.  They still pass all the safety/load/stress tests.  None of the stones have required replacement.  The approach stones are 3’ thick marble pavers and workers hand dug the foundations all the way down to bedrock.  Now everybody is more concerned about workers hours and materials costs.

BM1 Lee Soule USCG (ret)
 L.S.&W Railroad Serving the Lower Great Lakes

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Posted by Robby P. on Friday, September 17, 2010 6:56 AM

 Good morning.  It rained pretty much of the day yesterday, but I did see NY got slammed.   We got lucky with the storms.

 Yesterday  went and bought another air-brush gun.  One will be used for enamel paint, and the other for acrylic  paint.   I'm getting things lined up for the show.  Monday I will mail out my form for the show, and start to get some cars lined up to weather.  

 Today,  not much planned.  Maybe clean the house and just take it easy. 

 Chris.......The student loan part will be used for the one semester (I hope).  I was to late on filing for a grant.   The wife has student loans, and they are up to $48,000 +.    I don't want anything like that!!   Something as simple as a student loan really effects your credit !!!!  That's one reason our house re-fi fell through.

 "Rust, whats not to love?"      

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Posted by cudaken on Friday, September 17, 2010 7:04 AM

 Mourning Flo, may I have a English Muffing with butter and a Dew Please?

 der 5997 Thanks for posting pictures of your layout, I enjoyed looking at them.

 Todd What does poison hemlock look like? If you touch it, will it cause you to break out? Reason I ask, there is something in my yard that cause's me to break out when I am cutting down brush and trees. I know what poison ivy looks like, have some growing on the house behind rose bushes where I can't get to it. Last week I cut down some trees so I could get the lawnmower in the shed with out fighting the trees. Now I have a rash on my arms.

 Ulrich Don't feel alone (I know that is of no help) but I am in the same boat except I still have the house. I had been doing OK financially till this month. Bank took me out of forbearance and raised the house payment from $481.00 to the original $925.00.

 Floor Wars Just a few more tiles and the kitchen will be done. Got more tiles yesterday so I can do the hallway. It should go pretty easy with there being no sub floor problems. Funny thing about it, sort of sad it is all most done. Gave me something to look forward to.

Train Front Had a nice secession last night and got another Swap Meet car in services. 

 Today is a different story! Bang Head This mourning when I fired up the Empire Builder it is acting all sorts of Goofy! When the SEP is at rest the DT 400 should say Idle on the read out. Not today, it says Kdng? When the system is fully power up I cannot control the trains. I hope I just pushed the wrong button while the DT 400 was laying on the desk and I was working on the coal car. 

  I will be on the phone with Digitrax as soon as they open this mourning.

        Wish me luck folks.

                                     Ken

I hate Rust

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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Friday, September 17, 2010 7:45 AM

GMTRacing

Jeff - are you sure those aren't sunflowers you're describbing?

If they are sunflowers it's a wild variety with very small flowers. At the largest the blooms are one and a half inches across while the rest of the plant is enormous. I have a photo somewhere of a friend of mine who is 7' 3" tall standing next to one and he's dwarfed by it. Wish I could find it.

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
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Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running Bear
Space Mouse for president!
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beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam


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09/17/2010
Posted by wetidlerjr on Friday, September 17, 2010 7:52 AM

 

 

Good Morning ! from Tipton IN.

 

 

Geeked Dinner

Bill Tidler Jr.

Near a cornfield in Indiana...

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Posted by TMarsh on Friday, September 17, 2010 8:02 AM

Good Morning! Coffee. Lot's of coffee please. Tossed and turned until 2 am last night. Up at 6. Plenty to do today and I've just been tasked with one trip to town by my perfect wife.Must figure how to sew it into my shhhhedu-all. Big Fall Festival is tomorrow. I hope the rain stays away, Brenda has worked so hard to get this thing going again. No rain was forecast until yesterday morn with a 30% chance of scattered T-storms and showers. Or Showers and T-storms. Today, it's just a 10% chance of showers. I'm keeping my fingers and toes crossed for good weather.

KenTHIS is the weed I tear down in the waterways and along the ditches and along the fence rows. I don't think it's irritating to skin, but people are different. I myself am not allergic to Poison Ivy. Neither was my Grandfather on my Mom's side. My son can't even see the stuff without breaking out. That may be why I don't break out too. Then again, my buddy doesn't break out, I don't think, and he's allergic to Poison Ivy. Here's a better picture . Stuff gets pretty tall.

(I wonder why the font changed? Weird))

Well it's 8 already and I sould be outta here. Still have a few minutes on the dryer to get my britches out.

Ya'll have a Great Day now ya hear?!

 

Todd  

Central Illinoyz

In order to keep my position as Master and Supreme Ruler of the House, I don't argue with my wife.

I'm a small town boy. A product of two people from even smaller towns. I don’t talk on topic….. I just talk. Laugh

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  • From: Orig: Tyler Texas. Lived in seven countries, now live in Sundown, Louisiana
  • 25,640 posts
Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Friday, September 17, 2010 8:23 AM

Good morning. Not much going on here today. I'm just trying to get over yesterday. I was using my father's little Yardman rider mower to pull the trailer the weeds were loaded into. What a piece of crap! I've never seen this behavior from a Kohler engine before. It runs OK for work like mowing where it's running all the time but on jobs where it will be shut down between runs it sucks. It seems to have a penchant for flooding out. When that happens, the spark plug has to be removed and dried. The crank then has to be turned several times to expel the excess gas then the spark plug can be reinstalled. Only then will it crank again. It didn't take but a couple of times of that for me to break out the old tractor.

 

TMarsh
THIS is the weed I tear down in the waterways and along the ditches and along the fence rows. I don't think it's irritating to skin, but people are different. I myself am not allergic to Poison Ivy. Neither was my Grandfather on my Mom's side. My son can't even see the stuff without breaking out. That may be why I don't break out too. Then again, my buddy doesn't break out, I don't think, and he's allergic to Poison Ivy. Here's a better picture . Stuff gets pretty tall.

Good old Poison Hemlock. We have that here though not in mass proliferation. It doesn't bother me or anyone else in my family but one of my neighbors bloats up like a blimp if it so much as touches any exposed part of his body. RoundUp does a good job of 'controlling' it.

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
          Joined June, 2004

Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running Bear
Space Mouse for president!
15 year veteran fire fighter
Collector of Apple //e's
Running Bear Enterprises
History Channel Club life member.
beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam


  • Member since
    November 2008
  • From: Williamsville, ILL
  • 3,698 posts
Posted by TMarsh on Friday, September 17, 2010 8:40 AM

Jeff- I would assume Roundup works on it. Problem is, most of it grows in the waterways and along the roads and such. When the fields are spryed with Roundup, the truck turns the spray off as it goes through the waterways because, as we all know, Roundup is not selective as to what it kills and grass is desirable in the waterways and along the roads to aaid in lessening erosion. ( that sounded almost as if I know what I'm talking about. )The waterways are usually mowed with a drag mower behingd the tractor so no problems there. But along the places thetractor won't fi, it's weedeater time. Now that is a splattery mess. The thing has hollow stems and a somewhat fiberous, I guess is a good way to describe it, and juicy. It splatters everywhere and a large amount splats all over the operator. I usually look like I sat in the front row of a Gallagher show without the plastic for the Sledge-O-Matic routine.

Welp, britches are dry so off I go........

Todd  

Central Illinoyz

In order to keep my position as Master and Supreme Ruler of the House, I don't argue with my wife.

I'm a small town boy. A product of two people from even smaller towns. I don’t talk on topic….. I just talk. Laugh

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: upstate NY
  • 9,236 posts
Posted by galaxy on Friday, September 17, 2010 9:02 AM

Good morning.

I cancelled dentist as the partial seems adjusted for now. I wear it half the day and let the tissues rest the other half.

My other half got called in for 8 hours of w**k today extra. It won't be overtime but will mean extra needed money as we had a furnace diagnostic bill to pay yesterday that resulted in a declaration taht the induced draft exhaust blower was short circuiting and staying on all the time. A simple reconnect of the ground seemed to solve that problem. Last night was not as chilly so the furnace wasn't needed this AM SO tonight {45*} may tell us if furnace is fixed.

Robby P. Yeah the "placement test" is primarily to determine if you need to take any "oh-ninety" courses to update you to the college entrance standards. the "090" courses are precursors to the "100" starter college courses. Not a big sweat test. It will tell you what you need to do to get caught up. You will do well to know where you stand.

WEll, I have some chores such a s laundry, dishwasher and cleaning to see how much I can get done.

Leaves are turning and falling here, but not as bad as the "north country" of NYS.

TTY'ALLL8R

-G .

Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.

 HO and N Scale.

After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.

  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: Maryville IL
  • 9,577 posts
Posted by cudaken on Friday, September 17, 2010 9:07 AM

Crying

 Just got off the phone with Dave at Digitrax.Crying Looks like my one and only throttle is fried. Told him what it was doing, and it was doing some really odd stuff and he never heard of the problem's before.

 What the heck am I going to do not being able to run trains for 2 weeks? Bang Head

 Hum, well I still have the E-Z command. Luckily I use decoder pro so I can change the address.

  One of the things I was hopping to find at the swap meets was a spare throttle.

                       Ken

I hate Rust

  • Member since
    January 2005
  • From: New Milford, Ct
  • 3,232 posts
Posted by GMTRacing on Friday, September 17, 2010 9:56 AM

Time to load up the excursion and head off to the blasters. A set of wheels to blast to bare and our neighbors truck light bar plus some bits and pieces. I'll pick up a finished engine out that way as well but first a stop at the not so LHS.

  Jeff - sounds like the float is sticking a bit on the old tractor. If you get a chance get the carb top off and see if there is "stuff" on the needle and seat and in the float chamber. Happens a lot when the things just sit. A little ATF or some Marvel mystery Oil in the fuel will keep it from gumming up especially with the new fuels that lack everything in additives (except the alcohol). We even add fuel stabilizer to the race car fuel when they are going to sit for more than a month.

Todd I feel your pain. Tomorrow is laundry  day with the remainder carrying over to Sunday. Oh well, off to bring more joy throughout the world.Big Smile  J.R.

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Finger Lakes
  • 10,198 posts
Posted by howmus on Friday, September 17, 2010 10:17 AM

Mornin' everyone!

Zoe, I'll have a short stack of Buckwheat Pancakes and a side order of bacon, a glass of OJ, and a constant supply of dark roast coffee in a R&GV RR Mug.

Ken, sorry to hear the DT-400 is fried.  Hopefully Digitrax will fix it and get it back to you soon.  I have an old DT-400 THAT has started doing some weird things also.  It seems to w*rk fine after the system if up and running, but if it is plugged in when I fire up the system, nothing will work.  I think it had to do with the times I knocked it on the floor while reaching for something else.......  Since i have 3 other throttles, I don't use THAT one unless I have to (when guests come over to run trains....)

Currently 55°F outside the door here in the Finger Lakes.  The high will get up to 61°F......  Maybe.  I need to get a potato salad made for a picnic tomorrow, drive my son to the repair shop THAT is w*rking on his wife's car (should be done), and then load my truck with items to be taken to the hazardous waste recycling day at the county landfill.  THAT should eat up most of today.

Went to BJ's Wholesale yesterday to pick up a few items I needed.  BJ's is the only "Big Box" store THAT I will even walk into.  Walked into the main part of the store and the first display...........  Complete with flashing lights, plastic tress, and a Santa.......  Yep Christmas sales!!!  I stopped, looked around, saw a couple guys with their carts not far away in the main isle, and shout at the top of my lungs, "Holy $*%%, is it Halloween already!!!! Sixteenth of SEPTEMBER???????  The two guys laughed, shook their heads and said they agreed 100% with me.  Well, I now have crossed THAT store off my list of places I will shop.  If I can't get it somewhere else, I don't need it!  Oh, oh here comes the   OK, I'll be quiet...

Oh thanks, Zoe, I do need a refill on the coffee....  Wait a minute, this is tea!   Hmmmmm.  Did someone order me a "Cup of Hemlock?"     Hmmmmmmmmmm!!!

Catch you all later!

73

 

Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO

We'll get there sooner or later! 

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