You have to admit, without the Dog's supervision things would've probably not worked out ...My wife was raised in a well-to-do family. Her dad was a lawyer with little technical ability and less spare time, so the SOP was "If it's broke, call someone to replace it."
I was raised to repair / salvage everything.
In 1989, about 1 year after we were married and bought a house, the dishwasher stopped washing dishes. It made most of the right noises, but the dishes always were dry and still dirty. Opening it in the middle of a cycle showed no water in the basin. At this point the dishwasher was 17 years old, so she went straight to the phone book to buy a replacement. I suggested another path.
She knew I was an engineer, partly because we first met when one of her PC's died. But she also knew I had no training in dish washer repair, let alone that specific model, so she got increasingly more and more nervous as I removed more and more parts.
I laid out each screw and panel on the floor in the order I removed them, with her dog inspecting every part. Behind the access panel below the door were all of the fun parts - the motorized controller, pump, plumbing, hoses, and solenoid valves. Of course she got the mandatory tour of the innards. Since we could hear water going into the washer at the start of a cycle, my thought was that the drain valve must be stuck open. I didn't know if it was supposed to be normally-open or normally-closed, but the coil measured the same resistance as the input valve.
I removed the drain hose, and pulled a cocktail spear (the little plastic spear that you stick through an olive) from the drain solenoid valve. Put everything back together, let her dog inspect my work, fired it up, and enjoyed the sound of splashing. That washer was still running in 2014 when the bottom pan rusted through and we finally had to replace it. Before it was hauled away, I got back in there and removed the pump, all of the hose clamps and solenoids (which I in fact used for a sprinkler system modification), and the controller because of the date stamp - March, 1972 (42 years).
After three years of dating and one year of marriage, I think this was the first time she started to understand just what she had married into.
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“If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy.”After three years of dating and one year of marriage, I think this was the first time she started to understand just what she had married into.
I was raised to repair / salvage everything.
I think my wife already knew what she was getting when she married me.“If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy.”
― Red Green
After you. fix them do you give them back or sell them on Ebay?They drop things off on my front step to be repaired.
I give them back, no charge. They come and reclaim it.After you. fix them do you give them back or sell them on Ebay?
Watch a few of these videos and you may catch the bug.I am often surprised and wonder why many stick to the centuries old technology of mechanical time pieces.
Must be the aesthetics,
e.g. my digital wrist watch is around 25yrs old I think I replaced the batteries 3 times!
Same with the digital house clocks.
This is a discovery made over and over by knowledgable people and ignored by clock makers. There are various workarounds that people invent.I recently noticed two of my quartz clocks would only run on fresh AA batteries, stopping once the voltage dropped to around 1.3V. I also noticed that the clocks stopped with the second hand at the 9 o’clock position.
I deduced this was because at this position the motor had the greatest load, lifting the second hand – with the clock face laid flat the clock would continue to work.
I could either continue replacing the hardly used batteries or thrown the quartz clocks away.
I effected a fix by adding a second battery in series (operating the clocks at a nominal 3V) using a 2x AA battery holder taken from a set of LEDS that I was powering from a USB supply.
The battery holder was glued to the rear of the clock, and attached the wires at the clock’s battery terminals by pushing them between the terminal and the case edge. I’m very hopeful that the clocks will now keep time until each battery is depleted to less than 0.7V.
You remind me of this young lady from China whose YouTube channel I happened across due to a rabbit hole excursion. You two share some spirit of repair and a dose of altruism. This is a random example of her many videos...I give them back, no charge. They come and reclaim it.