Sunday, October 11, 2015
Packing it up for the year
Tonight it's 65, with a downhill slide to next Saturday of 30, so I'll take care of this while I don't have to wear gloves!
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Well, the new heater arrived
This is a good post:
- My tub label indicated our Jacuzzi "CARESSA" hot tub was assembled in 1987. It also said it has a 1.5KW 5.1K BTU heater at 115v, which should be 13 amps.
- At first, the best price I could find for the heater was $450, with absolutely no help at the manufacture's site! They say they have good customer support, but just try to find help for a 28 year old tub!
- Then I found something that looked similar at INYO POOLS for $225.55. I had to ask questions to figure out if this part might fit
- I was given a sketch via their chat, being told it was the same 17-1/4" long and the connections were 2" diameter (3/16" smaller than mine) with a 5.5KW rating at 240v.
- Doing the math on that, the heater should be 10.47 Ohms and draw 23 amps. But if I put 115 volts though the 10.47 Ohm element, it should draw 11 amps, consuming 1.3KW, some 15% less. So, it'll take a little longer to heat the tub -- so what?
- I ordered it on Saturday and it arrived the next Thursday
- Now that I have it, I find it was only 1/16" diameter smaller, so a good fit
- I needed to come up with two different sized romex connectors for the power and over-temp switch connections
- I bought new rubber connectors to go between the 2" ID (2-3/8" OD) PVC pipe of the tub and the 2-1/4" OD stainless steel of the new heater at Tractor Supply.
- To get the wires to exit out the bottom, I removed the 4 bolts holding the box on the heater and rotated it 180. This made the wires fit better and I felt better about having the holes in the box at the bottom instead of the top.
- Went together great, and we are in hot water now!



Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Sunday, July 12, 2015
New light socket for 2002 Montana turn signal
Instead of buying the ~$48 light socket, Fochtman Car Quest hooked me up with a "similar" socket (BWD PT154) that for all appearances is identical. Had the same footprint, 3 wire connector and right-angle faced the same way. And I walked out the door for $39!
Friday, July 3, 2015
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Networking multiple XBMCs (pi hosted MySQL)
Here I am setting up a newer copy of XBMC (Kodi 14.0 Git:2014-12-24-e044d5a-dirty) and at the same time I'm moving my library to a 2TB NAS (used to have a 400 GB USB HDD connected directly to the pi).
I figured this would be a good time to re-do things so I can have multiple XBMC clients pull from that same source (a pi that is on all the time) and keep track of the "watched" information.
I like my pi at a static IP making it easy to find (and use my 'droid as a remote!):
- XMBC -> Program -> XBMC Settings -> Static IP
- Change the default password (raspberry): sudo passwd
- sudo apt-get update
- sudo apt-get install mysql-server-5.5
# Installs 10 packages
# Choose a sql root password
- sudo nano /etc/mysql/my.cnf
# comment out Bind-Address 127.0.0.1 to allow external connections.
- mysql -u root -p # set up xbmc as a user
mysql> CREATE USER 'xbmc'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'xbmc';
mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'xbmc'@'%';
mysql> quit
Then, the following needs to be done for each XBMC installation that is to connect to this server (including the one just set up with MySQL!):
- cd ~/.kodi/userdata
- put the following into a newly created file advancedsettings.xml:
Miscellaneous notes:
I like my pi at a static IP making it easy to find (and use my 'droid as a remote!):
- XMBC -> Program -> XBMC Settings -> Static IP
- Change the default password (raspberry): sudo passwd
- sudo apt-get update
- sudo apt-get install mysql-server-5.5
# Installs 10 packages
# Choose a sql root password
- sudo nano /etc/mysql/my.cnf
# comment out Bind-Address 127.0.0.1 to allow external connections.
- mysql -u root -p # set up xbmc as a user
mysql> CREATE USER 'xbmc'@'%' IDENTIFIED BY 'xbmc';
mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'xbmc'@'%';
mysql> quit
Then, the following needs to be done for each XBMC installation that is to connect to this server (including the one just set up with MySQL!):
- cd ~/.kodi/userdata
- put the following into a newly created file advancedsettings.xml:
<advancedsettings>
<videodatabase>
<type>mysql</type>
<host>192.168.1.33</host>
<name>xbmc_video</name>
<user>xbmc</user>
<pass>xbmc</pass>
</videodatabase>
<musicdatabase>
<type>mysql</type>
<host>192.168.1.33</host>
<name>xbmc_music</name>
<user>xbmc</user>
<pass>xbmc</pass>
</musicdatabase>
</advancedsettings>
Miscellaneous notes:
- "Sources" are stored in ~/.kodi/userdata/sources.xml
- Source format for a SMB file share: "smb://servername/ShareName/[Folders]"
- List remote SMB shares: smbclient -L servername -Uusername
- Logging can be enabled via Settings → System → Debugging # filename given onscreen
- If you find the need, the MySQL database can be deleted:
- mysql -u xbmc -p xbmc
- mysql> DROP DATABASE xbmc_video90; # 'show databases;' if your version is different
Monday, January 12, 2015
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Montana thermostat replacement complete
This is the tool (available from Amazon) to have to get around the exhaust manifold that stands in the way of getting access to the bottom bolt of the thermostat housing.
Instead of making my own video, I simply refer you to the video that helped me figure out I *could* tackle this myself. The link starts you where he describes using an S-wrench - similar idea but this one leaves the handle out and accessible. He doesn't advertise this one as a solution, but I found it in the comments to his video and certainly does the job!
Some of the comments say you should be able to leave the bottom bolt in, as the housing has a slot instead of a hole. However, I couldn't get enough clearance with it in place to get over the protrusion of the thermostat itself, so the bolt had to come out, then get started (one finger from the bottom plus 1 screwdriver from the top had access for that job!)
All told, with the purchase of 13mm wrenches, a gallon of Prestone, the thermostat and cabin filters I dropped $75.59 on this project that my mechanic wanted $275 for. Then probably after he got into it and attempted to remove the exhaust crossover pipe and broke something off the price would have gone up from there.
Some of the comments say you should be able to leave the bottom bolt in, as the housing has a slot instead of a hole. However, I couldn't get enough clearance with it in place to get over the protrusion of the thermostat itself, so the bolt had to come out, then get started (one finger from the bottom plus 1 screwdriver from the top had access for that job!)
All told, with the purchase of 13mm wrenches, a gallon of Prestone, the thermostat and cabin filters I dropped $75.59 on this project that my mechanic wanted $275 for. Then probably after he got into it and attempted to remove the exhaust crossover pipe and broke something off the price would have gone up from there.
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Friday, October 31, 2014
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Wind exceeds tower's ability
It has become apparent that this tower won't handle 88mph winds (as measured at the nearby airport).
Back to the shop!
Saturday, August 9, 2014
Who'd think?
That you'd ever hear that "I had to Thompson's water seal my VW"?
This is a cross between auto repair and woodworking, to get rid of the non functioning 3rd brake light and install a generic.