Projects: Honey Do's/Home Improvement s that Keep ya Out of the Shop

I'm guessing you have a Computer Science or engineering degree?
In principle I'm a chemist, but I haven't worn a lab coat or done real chemistry in years. In upper level chem you start to specialize and once you go to physical theoretical there is a lot of math, physics and programming to catch up on. This is because mainstream chem is pretty weak in those areas.
 
Richard338 Richard338 Was your PhD in physical chemistry? If not, interesting transitioning to that realm.
Yes it was, as an undergrad you can only emphasize your preferred branch slightly as the overall requirements keep it general. This means if you do choose physical for grad studies, you have a lot of non-chem to catch up on.
 
My longtime lab partner's wife is a P-Chem. Worked at Fermi until she decided to be a fulltime mom once they moved up here for him to work at Abbott. Later, taught. Interesting lady.
Thx!
 
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Recently we had a popular thread here in Shop Talk about real jobs that kept us out of the shop. Talking to a lot of makers lately, both in leather and knives and this seemed to be the summer of home improvements. I thought this could be a companion thread to the other one. What are some of the projects that kept you out of or limited your shop time lately?

Most of our home improvement projects seemed to be horse related. First up, we replaced our roundpen. This is the old one a collection of various lightweight panels. While rickety and with a definite eclectic look to it, it had served well for quite a few years.

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A roundpen is a riding area usually somewhere between 40-60ft in diameter. Its useful for training young horses and gets them looking to you.

Here's the new one, 55 ft in diameter:

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We added kickboards to the bottom to help keep the sand in and that has been really beneficial. The new panels making up the roundpen are all of the same manufacture and are a much heavier duty panel than what we had before. Dang the price of lumber these days it was 6 Benjamins just for the 10 ft 2x10s! Our old roundpen had a rack on it made of horseshoes for holding halters, bridles etc. It was hung on the pen with two horse shoe hangers. I always worried about getting caught up while riding by. Things can get interesting purty darn quick real fast when that happens and I mean western! Although its been years, ask me how I know! So using the portaband on the Swag table we cut that sucker up and using some of the parts came up with a much safer rack, held to the panels by pipe hangers. So nothing sticking out on the inside:

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Course we had to brand it.

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Then on the upwind side we came up with this rack, again attached using pipe hangers:

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We wanted it on the upwind side so it would be pretty dust free. We drilled holes in the bottom of the little buckets for drainage and they are great. The wife sticks her phone in one and her bluetooth speaker in another and I probably got a beer in another too.

So this is a patience pole:

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The top swivels freely and the horse is free to move around. This really teaches a horse to stand still and stand tied, quietly. Because on one of these they've learned there is no where to go, might as well practice my patience. The railroad ties help with pawing if its a high energy horse or an anxious one. You are not always running around with a shovel trying to fill in holes after using it. Have ya ever tried to dig in hardpacked adobe? It took us three and a half days to dig the 12x12 ft hole to inlay these railroad ties. We even hired a very husky 23 year old to help with the digging and the heavy lifting. Have a 12" auger for our tractor, it just bounced off this stuff. Good old fashion pick was what worked. Found out this old guy (62) could still out swing the kid with a pick, so he did most of the shoveling after I got something done that could be shoveled. Shane the 23 year old, said something really profound afterwards. "Never would I of guessed that the day we moved all those heavy railroad ties and put them in place, would be the EASY day!" He was right.

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So then the wife says we need more railroad ties. I say what for and she says I want to build a retaining wall for the new tack room we have coming. Well that means more digging in this adobe don't it? Yeah of course it does. First course laid out. Each is drilled and staked to the ground with rebar.

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These pincer thingies sure make dragging railroad ties around A LOT easier, we got two sets from the neighbor. Thats what they are made for, moving railroad ties.

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Second course is drilled through the first and is staked to the ground as well as spiked to the first. The third course is spiked to the second. There is a drain and gravel behind and then it was backfilled:

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So they delivered the new tack room we had built and of course that involved more railroad ties:

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We hired a friend to build us a hitching rail. Man can that guy weld. There's that hitching rail to the left there of the tack room. Yeah took three days to dig those three holes to install that too. Dang adobe! No wonder those California Missions are still standing. Drill with the auger, then let water sit. Digging bar, then auger, then water, then digging bar, then auger, then water, etc., for three days; to get the holes punched to 36 inches.

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The tack room was leveled on blocks so we put redwood around the bottom of it to the ground to kind of finish it off and then railroad ties around that. We liked the look of the redwood contrasting with the tack room, so we added another decorative course all the way around and built some steps out of more railroad ties all drilled and staked.

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Oh and then I made some knives!

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What are some of the projects that have kept you out of the shop lately?
You live a charmed and blessed life sir! Thanks for sharing a little piece of your neck of the woods.
 
Computer Information Systems. My last semester to go.

This semester specifically:
E-commerce
Data analytics with Python
Photography as an elective

3 classes doesn't usually bother me but these three have been something else, in terms of the homework load.
Easy answer take a pic of the books from the other two classes. No cheating and no giving away answers to anybody. Perfect
 
Here's a screencap of what's due next sunday. There's also a photo assignment and presentation on the 8th.
Screenshot_20211002-162700.png

It did happen, Horsewright, I promise 🤣
 
In principle I'm a chemist, but I haven't worn a lab coat or done real chemistry in years. In upper level chem you start to specialize and once you go to physical theoretical there is a lot of math, physics and programming to catch up on. This is because mainstream chem is pretty weak in those areas.
This is kind of interesting for me, because “way back when” I was getting an undergraduate in chemistry, but as a senior became interested in computational chemistry, and computational methods in general. Unfortunately, at the time computational chemistry was barely in its infancy, and there were no programs for it. So I shifted to chemical engineering (where the chemistry statement of “you don’t need any math after calculus” became “ you need differential equations (regular and partial), integral equations, multi dimensional manifold analysis, tensor calculus, and THEN learn the translation of those into numerical (computational) methods. This coming from someone who literally failed algebra in high school. Sheesh. I came to really love computational methods - and as the previous posters have said, getting in to that stuff definitely takes you away from the lab … so much so that at times when I stepped back into the lab (which I did do at times for some serious hands-on work, some would ask me “what are you doing in here? 😊

I did though get a chance to experience the growth of the computer and computational methods disciplines through all their stages (and contributed to some of it) - been interesting to witness… and could not have done that from the bench top…

Oh well, enough reminiscing…
 
This is kind of interesting for me, because “way back when” I was getting an undergraduate in chemistry, but as a senior became interested in computational chemistry, and computational methods in general. Unfortunately, at the time computational chemistry was barely in its infancy, and there were no programs for it. So I shifted to chemical engineering (where the chemistry statement of “you don’t need any math after calculus” became “ you need differential equations (regular and partial), integral equations, multi dimensional manifold analysis, tensor calculus, and THEN learn the translation of those into numerical (computational) methods. This coming from someone who literally failed algebra in high school. Sheesh. I came to really love computational methods - and as the previous posters have said, getting in to that stuff definitely takes you away from the lab … so much so that at times when I stepped back into the lab (which I did do at times for some serious hands-on work, some would ask me “what are you doing in here? 😊

I did though get a chance to experience the growth of the computer and computational methods disciplines through all their stages (and contributed to some of it) - been interesting to witness… and could not have done that from the bench top…

Oh well, enough reminiscing…
When I was a grad student I felt special when my supervisor spent a bunch of money on a machine for me, dual CPU at 550 MHz. Now we routinely run on thousands of cores, and more if needed.
Sorry to take the thread off course.
 
When I was a grad student I felt special when my supervisor spent a bunch of money on a machine for me, dual CPU at 550 MHz. Now we routinely run on thousands of cores, and more if needed.
Sorry to take the thread off course.
Lol … I know the feeling. I worked on all three of the original cray computers … and it was so cool when we first learned to get two of their four CPU’s to work together. Then I got a chance to do research on the n-cube hyper cube computer (16 processors) … there was a huge amount of research at the time trying to learn how to get parallel computing to work ( along with a series of international conferences on it that I was able to attend). Then along came OpenMP, and with the availability of networked pc’s and multi core computers, the whole game changed. It’s still amazing to me to see hardware that researchers and national labs spent millions and millions putting together and understanding how to use can now be bought at Best Buy for $500.

Getting old I guess….
 
Yes it was, as an undergrad you can only emphasize your preferred branch slightly as the overall requirements keep it general. This means if you do choose physical for grad studies, you have a lot of non-chem to catch up on.
I completely agree. I'm nearing the end of my PhD in pChem and as someone who studied chemistry, math, and physics in undergrad I had a huge leg up on those who only studied one of the subjects in depth.
 
I completely agree. I'm nearing the end of my PhD in pChem and as someone who studied chemistry, math, and physics in undergrad I had a huge leg up on those who only studied one of the subjects in depth.
Very cool. Do you mind saying where you are studying? Are you doing theory or experimental?

Nevermind, I see you are doing experiments with David. You are in a great department, I know lots of your faculty members.
 
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Very cool. Do you mind saying where you are studying? Are you doing theory or experimental?

Nevermind, I see you are doing experiments with David. You are in a great department, I know lots of your faculty members.
It's a small world! I'm very much an experimentalist studying energy transfer in semiconductor nanoplatelets and some more fundamental work using new analytical techniques to look at excited state acidity of laser dyes.
 
Computer Information Systems. My last semester to go.

This semester specifically:
E-commerce
Data analytics with Python
Photography as an elective

3 classes doesn't usually bother me but these three have been something else, in terms of the homework load.
Easy answer take a pic of the books from the other two classes. No cheating and no giving away answers to anybody. Perfect
 
Here's a screencap of what's due next sunday. There's also a photo assignment and presentation on the 8th.
View attachment 1652347

It did happen, Horsewright, I promise 🤣
Aw so it did happen! Good deal. See I was thinking of the pic cause that would check off the photo class while the two textbooks would take care of the other two. But this works.

Funnily enough I'm following your example from an old thread to make a mobile work bench. I just moved and have limited garage space here, so a mobile bench it is. Since we are settling in and only one kid is still on an air mattress, I figured it was time to order a new grinder.
I looked at the tool carts at the box stores to mount it, but they are way too unstable, so I'm building a solid bench.
I must, my friend, hold you to the same standard. Pics?

No worries, on the drift, Richard, I find this all very interesting. But sometimes a guy like me, with out a high school diploma, has to remind other kinds of guys that a python is a snake. I shoot snakes, least ways when they try to bite me! Course round here its mostly rattlers. Did smack one the other day. Opened the door to the feed room and their right on the edge of some shelves, bout chest level is this guy coiled up and hissing at me and playing music with his tail. Big crescent wrench to hand and so smacked him in the head and ended up breaking the dang shelf too. I can assure you that there was nothing theoretical, experimental or even computational about that incident, more reaction-al.

You live a charmed and blessed life sir! Thanks for sharing a little piece of your neck of the woods.
You are welcome sir! Thank you.
 
Aw so it did happen! Good deal. See I was thinking of the pic cause that would check off the photo class while the two textbooks would take care of the other two. But this worksw


I must, my friend, hold you to the same standard. Pics?

No worries, on the drift, Richard, I find this all very interesting. But sometimes a guy like me, with out a high school diploma, has to remind other kinds of guys that a python is a snake. I shoot snakes, least ways when they try to bite me! Course round here its mostly rattlers. Did smack one the other day. Opened the door to the feed room and their right on the edge of some shelves, bout chest level is this guy coiled up and hissing at me and playing music with his tail. Big crescent wrench to hand and so smacked him in the head and ended up breaking the dang shelf too. I can assure you that there was nothing theoretical, experimental or even computational about that incident, more reaction-al.


You are welcome sir! Thanks you.
I think we all like the glimpses of your lifestyle. I did some real work myself before I went back to school. I just never figured out when to stop.

I got the bench put together, and the base kit will arrive today. I'm a bit handicapped without most of my tools, but I'll be moving most of it here next weekend. Hope to be grinding steel in a couple weeks. Pics to follow.
 
I think we all like the glimpses of your lifestyle. I did some real work myself before I went back to school. I just never figured out when to stop.

I got the bench put together, and the base kit will arrive today. I'm a bit handicapped without most of my tools, but I'll be moving most of it here next weekend. Hope to be grinding steel in a couple weeks. Pics to follow.
Looking forward to the pics for sure my friend!

Real work bout to start on this outfit. In the cattle pens I have one whole wall that has to be replaced. The gate post into that pen rotted off at the ground. Shows ya how old these corrals are if a railroad tie can rot off in our dry climate. It'll be a lot of heavy lifting as the walls are wide conveyer belt rubber nailed to boards with hundreds and hundreds of nails. Best bet I think is to just to sawsal it up into pieces and haul it off. Gonna have to replace several uprights and then come back and replace that wall with cattle panels screwed to the uprights. Fortunately the corrals are built on an alluvial fan (I do have two college degrees just not a HS diploma, did take geology), instead of the dreaded adobe clay hardpack, so digging is a lot easier. Was gonna get started on it today but my crew went to a Luke Comb's concert last night so today probably ain't gonna happen. Oh gotta have this done over the next couple of weeks as we're scheduled to work all the cattle on the 23rd this month. Meanwhile I'll get these guys pretty much done today:

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Ok, slightly back on topic, I’ve had a long series of “family-do” (not quite so much “honey-do”) stuff since aug 7 that has kept my time either fully occupied or full-time physically on the road since that date. Won’t go into details … but point I guess is that life just intrudes and has precedence over shop time.

It’s interesting to hear that so many others also read horsewright and the reaction is “I wish I could be doing that” 😊. Maybe it is the uncrowded open environment? Maybe it is the hope for a simpler life? (Though somehow I wonder whether opening up a door to find a rattler singing his song at you qualifies as “simple”?

Or maybe Dave is just really, really good at telling stories? 😊
 
Aw so it did happen! Good deal. See I was thinking of the pic cause that would check off the photo class while the two textbooks would take care of the other two. But this works.


I can assure you that there was nothing theoretical, experimental or even computational about that incident, more reaction-al.
I'll put up a couple when I get home from church later.

But there was computation happening, your brain had to calculate where to land the wrench and how hard to swing!
 
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