This blog posts about aviation, automobiles, electronics, programming, politics and such other subjects as catch my interest. The blog is based in northern New Hampshire, USA
Monday, September 12, 2016
Summer home shop project
As always, you need more storage space in a shop. So last month's project was a combined wall shelving and plane till project. I5t's made from ordinary lumberyard white pine. The finish is one coat of Minwax "puritan pine" to give it the light tan color, the natural pine is bright white which seems a little much for a shop. Plus one coat of poly urethane varnish over the Minwax. Hanging it on the wall was tricky. This bit of wall has NO studs in it. I know, I put the wall board up myself some years ago. So it is now bolted and lag screwed to the joists. I started out with three lag screws going straight up, but the last one broke off deep in the hole, so two lag screws will have to do. Part of the project was to have a place to put my handplanes where they would be handy, and where they could show themselves off. The shelves are still fairly empty but I don't expect that to last long. The dadoes in the side are to accept a pair of chisel holders, which I haven't made yet.
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Price Inversions
Seen at my local grocery market, hot dogs $6 a pound, Chicken $1.29 a pound. Looks like good old beans and franks ain't cheap anymore.
Friday, September 9, 2016
Norks finally get the bomb
Took 'em five test shots before it worked right. The first four Nork tests had yields in the one kiloton area. That's a fizzle in most people's books. Where as the United States was able to produce TWO functional nuclear weapons in 1945 with only one test shot. The Little Boy gun type uranium bomb was so well understood that it was sent into action without a test, and produced a 20 kiloton yield that devastated Hiroshima. Fat Man, the far more tricky implosion type plutonium bomb, was tested once in Nevada before being dropped on Nagasaki. In action, it worked properly, with a 20 kiloton yield, and vaporized Nagasaki.
Getting a fission bomb to explode is tricky. You have to assemble a critical mass of fissionables, either by gun style assembly or implosion, and hold it together long enough (nanoseconds) for the neutrons to fission the fissionables. If the energy released in the first few nanoseconds blows the bomb to bits, you don't get a 20 kiloton yield, you get a fizzle.
We let the Norks run off five nuclear tests, and finally they got it together, achieved city smashing yield, and we did nothing to stop them.
Getting a fission bomb to explode is tricky. You have to assemble a critical mass of fissionables, either by gun style assembly or implosion, and hold it together long enough (nanoseconds) for the neutrons to fission the fissionables. If the energy released in the first few nanoseconds blows the bomb to bits, you don't get a 20 kiloton yield, you get a fizzle.
We let the Norks run off five nuclear tests, and finally they got it together, achieved city smashing yield, and we did nothing to stop them.
Bring back paper ballots
They cannot be hacked by the Russians. And they can be recounted should there be some irregularities, or challenges. And they don't suffer from hanging chads. We could do it. There is plenty of time to print ballots for the entire country before the election. Up here there is never a lack of public spirited citizens to count ballots on election night.
And the various ways of cheating on paper ballots have been around for centuries and are well known. Precautions against ballot box stuffing and other chicanery can be taken.
Them voting machines, which are small computers run by software, and we all know how trustworthy software is, can be hacked to change the election result, and there is no way to tell. No paper record, and nobody can decipher the software, so you can't prove a thing. All it takes is one party fanatic with access to the machines, and he can do anything, and leave no traces. And if the election committee is stupid enough to connect their election machines to the public internet, all bets are off. Anything can happen.
And the various ways of cheating on paper ballots have been around for centuries and are well known. Precautions against ballot box stuffing and other chicanery can be taken.
Them voting machines, which are small computers run by software, and we all know how trustworthy software is, can be hacked to change the election result, and there is no way to tell. No paper record, and nobody can decipher the software, so you can't prove a thing. All it takes is one party fanatic with access to the machines, and he can do anything, and leave no traces. And if the election committee is stupid enough to connect their election machines to the public internet, all bets are off. Anything can happen.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Epipens are only $20 in Europe
And we could have them over here for that price if we passed a federal law allowing duty free import of medicines from any reasonable first world country. Like Canada, the EU, Japan, a few other places. First world countries all have regulations on the sale of medicine. If they rule a medicine OK for sale to their citizens then it's OK for Americans too. FDA doesn't get to block imports. If it's legal in the country of origin, the law shall make it legal here.
The reason Epipens are selling for $600 here is that FDA shut down all the competitors. Nothing fancy in Epipen, its just adrenalin in an easy to use hypodermic needle. No patents, no nothing, but FDA kindly drove all the competitors off the market. Nice work for Mylan.
The reason Epipens are selling for $600 here is that FDA shut down all the competitors. Nothing fancy in Epipen, its just adrenalin in an easy to use hypodermic needle. No patents, no nothing, but FDA kindly drove all the competitors off the market. Nice work for Mylan.
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Battles that Changed History
An oldie but a goodie. First published in 1956 when I was in middle school. I saw it in a Harvard Square bookstore, and thought it was so cool. I begged and pleaded with the parents and somehow I received a copy for birthday and read it cover to cover. Pratt starts off with Alexander the Great, moves up thru Pyrrus of Epirus (from whom we get Pyrric victory), the siege of Vienna, the revolt of the Netherlands, and ending with the carrier battles of Midway. Although it concentrates on the military history of Western Civilization, the book is a good introduction to Western European history.
The writer, Fletcher Pratt is a helova good writer. He made his living dong decent science fiction, good stuff that sold, and he knows the periods of which he writes well, gives all sorts of interesting details. Pratt is a good fun read, and in this book the reader gets at good abet sketchy history of the Western world going back 2500 years. If you have a middle school child or grandchild, this book would be a class A gift.
The writer, Fletcher Pratt is a helova good writer. He made his living dong decent science fiction, good stuff that sold, and he knows the periods of which he writes well, gives all sorts of interesting details. Pratt is a good fun read, and in this book the reader gets at good abet sketchy history of the Western world going back 2500 years. If you have a middle school child or grandchild, this book would be a class A gift.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
What small children ought to know
And it's your responsibility to tell 'em about it.
1. Beware of going into the street. The cars will run right over you. Stay on the sidewalk. If a toy or a ball rolls into the street, don't go after it. Find a grownup to retrieve it.
2. Beware of going out on the ice. If the ice breaks, you are dumped into freezing water over your head. Your chances of pulling yourself out are poor, especially after the water soaks into your winter coat and snowpants making them very heavy. My mother required us kids to wack a hole in the ice with a pickax to see if it was four inches thick. Any less than four inches and we couldn't go skating on it.
3. Stay away from the stove. I still remember my mother touching a paper towel to a dark electric stove burner and watching it burst into flame.
4. Beware of electric sockets, light sockets and lamp cords. If the insulation is old or bad, they can kill.
5. Beware of power mowers. They can fling rocks and stuff with the speed and force of bullets. Stay away.
6. Beware of wild animals and strange dogs. Don't try to pet them, they may take it the wrong way, and bite you.
7. Beware of cars with engines running. They may be parked at curbside, standing in driveways, or parking lots. If the engine is running (smoke from tailpipe, and/or lights on) the car is getting ready to move. Stay well clear, since you are short and the driver may not be able to see you.
8. Dress for winter when going out in winter. Coat, boots, mittens and hat. Maybe snow pants too. Even if going by car. One dark Friday night the car engine lost power going up Franconia Notch with all three kids in the back seat. We might have had to walk out, four miles or more. Fortunately I was able to fix the problem by flashlight and we drove on. But we also had the needed winter gear to walk it should it have been necessary.
1. Beware of going into the street. The cars will run right over you. Stay on the sidewalk. If a toy or a ball rolls into the street, don't go after it. Find a grownup to retrieve it.
2. Beware of going out on the ice. If the ice breaks, you are dumped into freezing water over your head. Your chances of pulling yourself out are poor, especially after the water soaks into your winter coat and snowpants making them very heavy. My mother required us kids to wack a hole in the ice with a pickax to see if it was four inches thick. Any less than four inches and we couldn't go skating on it.
3. Stay away from the stove. I still remember my mother touching a paper towel to a dark electric stove burner and watching it burst into flame.
4. Beware of electric sockets, light sockets and lamp cords. If the insulation is old or bad, they can kill.
5. Beware of power mowers. They can fling rocks and stuff with the speed and force of bullets. Stay away.
6. Beware of wild animals and strange dogs. Don't try to pet them, they may take it the wrong way, and bite you.
7. Beware of cars with engines running. They may be parked at curbside, standing in driveways, or parking lots. If the engine is running (smoke from tailpipe, and/or lights on) the car is getting ready to move. Stay well clear, since you are short and the driver may not be able to see you.
8. Dress for winter when going out in winter. Coat, boots, mittens and hat. Maybe snow pants too. Even if going by car. One dark Friday night the car engine lost power going up Franconia Notch with all three kids in the back seat. We might have had to walk out, four miles or more. Fortunately I was able to fix the problem by flashlight and we drove on. But we also had the needed winter gear to walk it should it have been necessary.
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