Hrm. This feels so... wrong. Almost like watching a Roman road get dug up to be re-used as fill dirt for a strip mall.
Friday, May 22, 2026
Thursday, May 21, 2026
In My Former Professional Life
However, not by choice, and certainly not for fun. These awkward units are always an easy route to unforced errors.
<permalink to xkcd> click through for mouse-over bonus punchline
Monday, May 18, 2026
That New Chain Feel, Part 2
Last week, the gravel bike; this week the mountain bike. Surprisingly, the cassette's still running strong now on a fourth chain. Usually they only last for three, and that third one can be dodgy. What's more, the latest third chain lasted for eight hundred miles. I tell you, I had my doubts about 12-speed drivetrains initially, but wow they are tough. For comparison, back in the day an 8-speed chain would last right at three hundred miles, and a cassette nine hundred.
BTW & note to future self, the previous chain was a SRAM GX and the new chain is the slightly less expensive NX. It'll be interesting to see if it holds up as well.
Onward. I've got miles to ride this morning.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
Hurricane Season Kick-Off Recap
And today's event (mentioned previously) went pretty well. Perfect weather, blue skies, and an enthusiastic crew putting it on all made it come together. At the radio tent, we had HF & VHF/UHF radios, field-worthy antennas, and solar power. Here are some pics:
Yaesu FT-450D HF & FT-7250D VHF/UHF radios, along with solar controller and a few other do-dads
leftmost: VHF/UHF vertical; two other poles: HF W3EDP antenna
60 watt solar panel; easy up, easy down
As usual, there was a good bit more interest in the solar than in the radios. That's OK, emergency preparedness info got passed along in all ways at hand.
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Hurricane Season Kick-Off
Details on poster below. For more info, check at the Franklin County Emergency Management site.
Hey! That's it's Saturday! If you're going, don't forget!
Friday, May 8, 2026
Ah, That New Chain Feel
When the gravel bike's transmission starts treating shifter input as a suggestion for eventual action rather than as an immediate command, that's an indicator that it's time for a new chain. A quick check with a chain stretch gauge confirmed it – not in the red zone yet, but edging onto it – and the change went smoothly. No need to swap the cassette or chainrings yet, not if you change out a chain in time. Usually get about three chains to the rest of the drivetrain components, before those need swaps too. One down, two to go. And yes, I do keep a log book of these things, because keeping track of multiple bikes would be impossible otherwise.
The ride today was noticeably more snappy. Funny how these little wear items creep up on you.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
It's Getting Better
My last couple of months:
As spring winds down and (finally!) a few rains have come, it's getting better. I've been living on zirtec, claritin, and flonase (spelllings... who cares; made up words anyway), but that's winding down too.
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