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wista sp 45 / super angulon 90mm f5.6 / rollei retro 80s / ir720 filter / pmk pyro 1+2+100 cpp2 dev. / horseman 612 holder

This is one of the trucks that I drive...

Here's a teaser of what I'm currently working on.

The Milan cathedral seen from the Museo del Novecento. A cathedral builder's work is never done...

Best place to work on the Honda RC164 nice and warm and quite

*CINELLI* mash work complete bike

BLUELUG CUSTOM

SPEC

Frame: *CINELLI × MASH* work frame

Stem: *THOMSON* elite x4 stem

Seat post:*THOMSON* elite seatpost

Handle:*CINELLI* mash bullhorn bar

Head set:*CHRIS KING*

Front Wheel: DT SWISS*RR440 x *PHILWOOD* high flange track hub

Rear Wheel:* DT SWISS*RR440 x *PHILWOOD* high flange track hub

Tire: *CONTINENTAL* gatorskin

Brakes:*TRP*

Brake lever:CANE CREEK* crosstop brake levers

Crankset: *SUGINO* sugino75 DD crankset

Saddle:*SELLE SAN MARCO* zoncolan urban saddle

People at work think I'm crazy about my Dog Sky!

The wall behind me in my cubicle is filled with pictures of SKY! HeHe!

I also have a wall of my family.

 

This is what I look at 9 hours a day 4-5 days a week!

Hands are starting to feel carpel tunnel syndrome .

I need to get away from the computer for a while.

It's like a Drug I can't go a day without turning it on.

Leuven Animal Contest, Leuven Kermis, 4th of September

On the Chesterfield Canal , Nottinghamshire, England , UK.

Photo of my two daughters on my desk at work. Brightens my day whenever I look at them and always keeps me motivated.

Tree trimmers work across the street from my home, cutting back maples and oaks. The estate is populated with trees, and the men's work took several days. A neurosurgeon and his family reside there.

 

As you can see, it was cold, wet work, and, yes, a light snow was falling. That's enough to give any man the "Working Man Blues," a good Merle Haggard song if you have about four minutes. Despite his blues and his sometime musings about a different life, the workin' man of the song gets the value of work and a paycheck.

 

It's a big job just gettin' by with nine kids and a wife

I been a workin' man dang near all my life

I'll be working long as my two hands are fit to use

I'll drink my beer in a tavern,

Sing a little bit of these working man blues

 

—from "Working Man Blues," by Merle Haggard

 

(for Poetography, Theme 243—Work)

   

bighugelabs.com/scout.php?mode=history&id=2756292817

 

[...] Your work is to discover your work and then with all your heart to give yourself to it [...]

-- Quote by Buddha (Hindu Prince Gautama Siddharta, the founder of Buddhism, 563-483 B.C.)

 

Nikon D70, Sigma 70-300 f/4.0-5.6, 195mm - f/5 - 1/1250s - Kenko Macro rings

 

Rome, Italy (March, 2008)

Limited edition Yamato

F:19x11J +6mm Rdisc

R:19x12J +23mm Wdisc

 

Photos posted to link to this car's project thread on the Cadillac message boards.

 

Wow, I think this marks my greatest length of thread-neglect! Almost 5 months! This isn't the new normal though, I will have some time again to work on the car and clear out my parts shelf which once again is getting a little cluttered with the crap I buy on ebay.

 

I have not done much to the car since my last update besides drive it until the first snow in December. The alternator remains un-rebuilt. Fortunately (?) I made a discovery that the noise I was hearing under certain conditions was not the alternator at all, so it won't need anything besides diode replacement (coming soon).

 

Now, I did find where the noise was coming from-one of the A.I.R. check valves had failed and sounded something like an accordion for a few minutes when the car was restarted hot. The A.I.R. system switches between two modes of operation-one in which the pump pushes air into the exhaust manifolds, and another in which air gets shot into the catalytic converter-both of which help to keep emissions down. The mode selected depends on what conditions the ECM sees. The check valves keep the boiling hot dirty exhaust from flowing into the hoses and pump which would ruin them in short order-ironically kind of like a diode! In my case, the check valve for the exhaust manifold had failed or was beginning to and on a hot restart the air from the pump would disturb it to create that annoying noise. So it needed to be replaced. Here is the part in question in case you have never heard of/seen it (I didn't)

 

It is in the vicinity of the power module

 

The little bastard screws onto a "T" fitting that looked more like plumbing equipment than an auto part to me. On each side of the T, there is a metal line that runs to each exhaust manifold. Clean air flows through the check valve when the switching valve directs air to it.

 

While the two lines came off easily, the check valve itself was stuck like you would not believe. The tee fits into a 7/8ths wrench, and the captured nut on the valve is 1 inch, and using my two largest wrenches on each with every ounce of strength I had I was only able to break them loose after soaking in transmission fluid for a few days. And even then just barely.

 

The exact part number of the failed valve was not available so I substituted another one that was otherwise identical. I suspect the differences in part numbers (there are a ton of them) have to do with unique backpressures for every engine configuration GM made across all their cars. I bought one spec'd for a 307 Olds V8, which I figure is as close to the 4100 in terms of back pressure as I could get. Could be totally wrong on that too. Anyway, it no longer makes the noise!

 

Now the other part of the A.I.R. system is for the catalytic converter. The check valve on this one was good, and I suspect it lives a much easier life than the one for the manifolds as it is not subjected to the high pressures or heat. But it needed love too, when I had the catalytic converter changed, the shop cut off the end of the pipe which entered the old bead converter at a 90 degree angle and used high temperature hose to make the connection.

  

I can't say I was happy with the way it looked but it seemed to do the job. Except that when braking or accelerating hard, the hose would allow the metal tubing (now loose) to move back and forth which made for an annoying knock. I wasn't sure what to do but I was certainly surprised when I learned Rockauto still stocks this pre-bent metal tubing unique for the 84-85 Eldorado. Go figure. I ordered it and when it arrived, I was disappointed to discover that it lacked the mounting bracket that goes up near the engine. So I ended up taking my old and new tube to a welder who transferred the bracket to the new one for me.

 

I also put a new check valve on it. Note that this valve lacks the captured nut. That is a catalytic converter check valve and it is physically smaller than the one for the manifold. They thread size is the same, but the nipple is the part that won't allow you to put the other diameter hose on it.

 

Here it is mounted to the "new" cat. I have to spin that clamp at the Y fitting, it should face the passenger side. Bah shops! So, that concludes today's edition of what invisible repair I managed to waste my time and money on!

 

JennWonder |JennWonder.com|

Back from Brazil.

Back to work! ^u^

 

This weekend, workers replaced panels of track along the J/M/Z Line near Hewes St. This photo shows a worker lagging down tie supports. Photo by Metropolitan Transportation Authority / Leonard Wiggins.

Two London Midland class 350 'Desiro' units go about their business as construction work on the 'new' Northampton Castle station continues.

 

This view wasn't possible until a few weeks ago, when the old concrete footbridge was removed. I suspect that it will go again once the new one is in place.

it's pretty easy to pretend you're at the beach when there actually IS a beach at work.

 

(this is almost sooc, except for a gray hair that i had to clone out [eeps!]. the lens vignette is there because i have too many filters on my lens, and they're visible when it's zoomed out to 18mm.)

 

for 365 days.

this girl moved into my place. But she`s soon moving out

Audrey said I looked like a J. Crew ad, so she posed me and took my picture.

I have had a couple of enquiries about what we do for work, so I thought I would show you.

We install internet satellite for those who cannot get broadband on the telephone line. My hubby (husband) puts the roof mount up, while I put the dish mount on the dish on the ground. Then I pass things up to him when he is ready for them. This is one we put up in Andamooka during the week.

Taken for ODC - WORK

 

Pulling weeds is tedious work but at least it's outdoors and a good stress reliever.

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