1920. The 70,000 horsepower hydraulic turbine component for the Niagara hydroelectric power plant at the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA |
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Silicon Forest
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1920. The 70,000 horsepower hydraulic turbine component for the Niagara hydroelectric power plant at the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA |
Don’t worry, he’s got this. |
SPOILER ALERT!He goes on for a bit, and it's very funny. Made my day. Read the whole thing.
(Note: I’m not sure it matters which John Wick movie you see. They’re all the same John Wick movie. I say that even though I haven’t even seen the one in theaters right now. “John Wick Episode III: the Wickening”.) The plot of John Wick is all about pre-paid emergency contingency services. There’s a lot of splattery killing but that’s true of most Hollywood crap, it’s the contingency planning that makes Wick special.
To summarize: Neo from the Matrix gets righteously pissed when low end thuggish criminals act unforgivably low end. They go full thug on his pet. Never go full thug! Never mess with a man’s dog! That’s a key plot point in Wick. Thugs ignore the limits of acceptable behavior and that’s not OK. Once they’ve taken a shit on society, the rest of us cheer for a violent nutjob who kills them in box lots. We see ‘em get stabbed, bludgeoned, kneecapped, shot, burned, blown up, bent, folded, and spindled… and it’s fun to watch. Kids, here’s some helpful Curmudgeonly advice, don’t go into a career of thuggery! (Also, you might want to avoid politics, but that’s another story.)
Dog gate for small dog |
A couple things accomplished this weekend: got all the drawer pulls installed on the downstairs cupboards -- no more tugging on the edges of the drawers with fingertips to coax them open. These are the tiny efficiencies that lead to greatness.
Also fashioned a dog gate -- zip-tied two pieces of dog fence together, and mounted them using pipe supports from the plumbing box. A bungie keeps Tickles from opening it -- so far. He's not too bright so I think it's sufficient.
Uniberp at his Muskegon Cottage |
So here is what I've been working on, 3rd year. Finished (nearly) the new steel roof this past weekend.
In reality it only took like 6-8 working days to strip and replace the roof but i had long periods of recovery between so the roof took about 6 weeks.
The 5th and 6th pics show some the extent of the gutting inside, and all new sewer, plumbing, HVAC, 2 additional bedrooms upstairs,
It's still gonna take a lot to make it habitable. Siding done on 2 sides, the 4 sides showing are left to be done, about the same sq footage as already done.
18 foot cathedral ceiling. 1.5 bath. I demolished and removed ~30,000 pounds of debris (300 barrels, 10 at a time, to the county dump). Demolition is pretty much done, one section of ceramic floor to go.
Some floor joists had to be replaced, I may replace them all at some point. The upstairs is all new anyhow, so new joists and flooring.
It originally had 10 foot ceilings with a tall attic kneewall as well.
Double lot. 30 x 30 garage on the alley. 2 blocks from Lake Muskegon.
I got a DIY Foam-It spray insulation kit for the crawlspace foundation wall.
For the cost of a 2014 Chevy Suburban.
Plus $1500 property tax annually. Not really using any significant amount of utilities.
6 Attachments
USS Edson Saginaw, Michigan |
Saginaw River, left, flowing into Saginaw Bay The industrial complex on the left is an electric power plant |
Atlantis - The Lost Continent movie poster |
"Plato had a cyclic – or “spiraling” – view of history, in which the cycles bear the regular scars of catastrophe, the plural catastrophes being epochal in the root sense of articulating a dehiscence between one age and another. . . . one effect of the regular cataclysmic events is periodically to interrupt the record of history and reset cultural development at its degree-zero. When the earth shakes or fire falls from the sky or the oceans rise to inundate the land, civilization, painfully built up over the centuries, vanishes under the onslaught of nature; only a few mountain-dwellers or lucky, remote people survive. Since the simple, unlettered survivors take no custody of the written lore, almost every verbal trace of the smashed civilization also vanishes. The priest tells Solon that quirks of nature permit a few exceptions, and that the Nile Delta is one of them – a place unaffected by universal disasters, where continuous records chronicle humanity’s adventures going back tens of thousands of years into the past. Atlantis and the Prehistoric Athens attained high civilization; their achievements, technical and political, indeed put to shame all the societies of Solon’s day, including Attic society. A scourge of earthquakes and flooding obliterated both nations and the stunned survivors managed to live at a stone-age level of material culture only." - Thomas F. Beronneau
Dead Wake - The Last Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson |
S.S. Lusitania Sinking |
Return of the Mayflower, by Bernard F. Gribble (British, 1873-1962) |
SM U-20 grounded on the Danish coast in 1916. Torpedoes had been exploded in the bow to destroy the boat |
Ertuğrul Postoğlu as Bahadir Bey |
Cisitalia 1947 202 Spider Nuvolari |
Cisitalia 1947 202 Spider Nuvolari |
Precision ground surface versus standard |
2003 Cassini Radio Experiment |
China Rim Chinese Restaurant |
Tangalooma Wrecks, Queensland, Australia |
1899 Apparatus for steadying guns on shipboard. US Patent 640051A |
Tasty & Daughters |
Google Satellite Image View of Omaha Nebraska |
2019 Spring Flood Omaha Nebraska |
NOAA 2019 Spring Flood |
Zazdin Han |
"The sultan's crown depends upon the vizier's pen.The real-life Kopek may have been just as sleazy as the villain in this Netflix maxi-series, but he also managed to get some things built, like this caravanserai shown above.
If the ink runs dry, his rule will come to an end." - Seljuks' grand emir Nizamulmulk
Beauchamp Tower - Alison Avery Part of the Tower of London castle |
Kingsbury Tilting Pad Thrust Bearing |
Cover illustration from Le Petit Journal (29 March 1914) depicting the assassination of Calmette by Madame Caillaux. |
Henriette Caillaux, pistolet |
The snow-capped Alborz mountain range overlook the Iranian capital of Tehran - istock |
I liked your story about the Sri Lanka bombings. It seemed clear headed and reasonable. This one seems to have more feeling.Previous post about the Sri Lanka bombings.
I am unsure about the Iranians. Most of the Arab states seem to enjoy spouting warlike rhetoric, but they seem to be remarkably ineffective when it comes to actually fighting, unless they are fighting their neighbors.
Blaming the Saudi's for 9-11 is a little misplaced. Near as I can tell, Osama was frustrated in his attempts to effect change in Saudi Arabia, and so attacked the country he viewed as Saudi Arabia's biggest supporter / customer, i.e. the USA.
It might not be possible to bring democracy to Asia. They have always been run by autocrats, it might be genetic, or "in their blood", if you prefer.
If you want to effect change in these benighted lands, you need an massive, long term propaganda campaign aimed at the largest segment of the population, the sheepherders. That's how the commies prepare for their conquests.
We speak for two reasons. One is to convey information, but what we say is often phatic, meaning that what we say is said to affirm that we are on some sort of “speaking terms” with the one we say it to. If I were to meet you on a sultry street, both of us bearing the sheen and stains of ample sweat, and if I (mopping my brow with a sodden handkerchief) were to observe that the day was a mite warm, the remark would be phatic. Insofar as information goes, this would be “needless to say.”He goes on a little more. The whole thing is pretty great.
But I would not be talking about the weather. I would be talking about us.
My remark would serve to acknowledge that I knew you, and that our connection was of the sort were meteorological pleasantries are not out of order. They are neither offensively forward, as they might be if offered to a perfect stranger, nor offensively reserved, as they might be if offered, without embellishment, to a dear friend.
Now there is a portion of our race, predominantly male, who do not understand, and are often intensely irritated by, phatic speech. And there is another portion, predominantly female, who seem not know there is any other kind.
Completing the Transcontinental Railroad |
Diolkos - Ancient road for transporting ships across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece |
Map showing location of the Diolkos railway in Greece |
Statue of Yuri Dolgoruky in Moscow erected in 1954 |
Career Day in Russia |
"One of the things I’ve been noticing here is that all the crazy sh*t Californians dream up is taken like gospel truth is. I had to fight for table salt, EVEN THOUGH I ALWAYS HAVE LOW BLOOD PRESSURE and actually lose salt (which is how I ended up in the hospital some years ago) and Mom — damn it — knows this, because “Salt will kill you.”
It’s like cargo cult modernity and there’s nothing as “modern” as fracking Cali, so they believe everything that comes out of there as the “new great way to be.”
. . .
Guys, we’re going to have to put a silencer on California. They’re screwing up the rest of the world." - Sarah A. Hoyt
Anatolia has always been an interesting region in a historic point of view. Indeed, that is where the biggest empires ever were created and where they spread from.From the Achaemenids to Byzantium, from the seleucids to the Ottomans, see the history of this complex region from 1550 BC to today. - Khey Pard
Netwalk |