poi

poi
fire dancer

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Out with the Old?

November 01, 2010 at 5:13 PM


A recent magazine advertisement touts Subarus as old reliable automobiles, pointing out that there is a very high proportion of old Subarus still on the road. The photo illustrating this ad shows a dashboard with an odometer reading in the two hundred thousands. So why did we take our good old Subaru out to the wrecking yard at the edge of the city to get squished like that?  When a giant yellow machine squashed our faithful old car flat last fall, its odometer reading was just over two hundred and twenty-five thousand.

Why did we do it? On the way back to town, sitting in the back of the dealer’s courtesy vehicle, I’m pretty sure I saw at least one Subaru on the road wearing a black armband.  Didn’t I?

Okay, the Subaru was getting old. About fifteen years old.  An old car means greater gas consumption. Substantial carbon emissions. That is where our new, younger car comes in. The Subaru had been a faithful, steady performer, had never needed serious repairs, never been in a real collision.  However, I don’t look around me carefully when I am driving. I bash into pillars in parking garages.  In ten years I had bumped, dinged and scraped the Subaru front, back and midships.

The salesman intent on selling us our new vehicle acknowledged that we had very little going in trade-in value.  But he had news for us.  We could get maximum value from our old car at just the point where we purchased a new car. We would surrender our Subaru to the B.C. Scrap-It program and receive a generous allowance of money, provided we purchased a newer, younger, cleaner vehicle. Our friendly sales guide was able to show us the numbers.

Ooh!  That did it.  Let’s sign up right now; let’s just do it.  We did. Faxed away our eager response, got the okay two days later, signed the papers, surrendered our 1994 Subaru to the big yellow crusher, drove home in a 2005 gas miser.

There were some ominous moments.  The auto wrecker was not easy to find, behind the back of the beyond, down a dead-end road, hidden from sight by tall, dark fir trees. Why would that be?  The fellow who took our car, a laconic cowboy type, seemed decent enough. Did he enjoy conducting vehicles to their violent deaths?  Herding the wide-eyed, frightened four-wheeled creatures through the last moments of their lives, bringing them face to face with the giant machine whose name is Nemesis, whose nature is Doom?

The lady doing the paperwork in the office seemed as bemused by this business as we were. The regulation that the cars are to be crushed in their entirety, that nothing, no part of them, is to be removed or salvaged, bothered her.  “We had an old Mercedes in here with lovely leather seats, well cared for.  Seemed awful to crush it, but that’s the rules.”

We like our new car.  Clean, comfortable, modish colour, good sound system. However, watching our granddaughter watch the animated movie Robots recently, we heard one of the evil characters in that film declare that it made more sense to manufacture new machines than to repair the old machines. We found ourselves thinking about the Scrap-It program. We had not thought about the program when we bought into it.

It makes car-buyers like us happy. It makes car manufacturers and dealers happy, by creating turnover, getting older cars off the roads, newer cars off the car lots.  Is this good?  It’s good for business, good for General Bullmoose.  George Monbiot suggested in a Manchester Guardian article last year that “scrappage schemes are nothing but hand-outs for the car firms, resprayed green to fool the incautious buyer.” He points out that “up to a fifth of an automobile’s emissions are produced during its manufacture.”

How does a Scrap-It program look in less prosperous parts of the world, where automobiles are harder to come by and are maintained and fixed with a view to keeping them going indefinitely? How would it look to our parents? Our grandparents?

How will it look to our grandchildren?

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 by Mike Matthews

Waves and Hulls



Waves and Hulls:
Just finished Susan Casey's "The Wave" and it got me thinking about some waves I have met.
We were in a 42' Monk through all these waves.
Scarey #1 was nothing really on the horizon. We were running past Ballinas and had just phoned in to be picked up in Nanaimo in an hour or so.
Looked to me to be about 4' South East swell and a few days earlier we had survived "6 metre North West Swell with 3 - 4 ' South East wind wave and 40 knot outflow from the inlets" according to the Marine forecast off Cape Caution.

So what could these small waves in the Salish Sea have to do with us?

Maybe because of the number of hours standing by the captain off Cape Caution and willing us through the next basher while wiping the windshield I was watching (quite relaxed) as we nosed into an unusual series and the bow went under the third wave. We had certainly had green water over the pilot house in the big swell but something about this series was totally different. For one thing it blew the Helmsman's window in and water and broken glass flooded the cabin. Now we were staring at the next waves with no glass.

What I wish to record:
I think the wave period (or related wave length) related to the hull's length is more important than the significant wave height.

I'm way out of my depth here but that is what I saw.
Ken LeDuc

Batteries and chargers and cordless tools: What a bunch of nonsense!

Batteries and chargers and cordless tools:
What a bunch of nonsense!
You buy a Makita or Milwaukee - should be top of the line and I guess they are whatever passes for "top" these days -DeWalt was pretty good a few years ago but somebody in marketing probably figured out that you really do not want to build a durable tool (most sales are gifts to folks who imagine they might someday need a drill or a saw).
I use these tools every day.
Over the years I have purchased and used all name brand tools and I have a bin full of drills and dead batteries. Lately all manufactures seem to favour the 18 volt Lithium.
'Course Milwaukee won't fit Makita and vice versa. No charger or battery you owned then is any use today.
I saw this coming early on and asked the people I work with to "standardize" - buy all the same tools - Makita  would be my choice and at that point I had the 24v NiMh drill and saw combo. Both drill and saw are fine but the batteries cost more than a new 18v lithium combo.
"we will give you the tool -you will buy the batteries"

The ubiquitous cell phone or ipad system is probably an even greater disaster because more consumers contribute. The world wide "Talk and toss"  or "free blackberry with each purchase" has few tangible results beyond the mountain of high tech trash produced.
An old Motorola charger will not even charge a newer motorola phone let alone any other make. Somewhere I read that the European Union was threatening to legislate compatablity of all cellular battery/charger combinations.

Let us take that idea further:
All portable power should be standardized.
one well engineered/well manufactured battery!
One charger
World wide



Ken LeDuc


The Link

I'm guessing the year was 1974.
"How I wish I was in Sherbrooke now!"
The picture is of the M.V. "Link" which I bought from my Basement Landlord, Michael.
"She was broad and fat and loose in her stays."
In fact The "Link" was quite narrow for her length: 36'  overall length and 9' beam. Just a bit "loose."
The Chrysler Crown power plant was not the first engine in the boat and not the last, but when Mike keyed it up it hummed like a good thing.
The smell of old bilge and the hum of the Crown got to me and I said: "You want $1500 for the boat?"
Mike said: "For you one grand."
I was now the captain of a nicely sized boat complete with a "C" license.
I was also zero on the "learning curve" regarding salt water navigation but no stranger to danger.
As this blog evolves I hope to pass on some of the details I have learned running various types of craft in various types of water.
My first lesson was: Exactly what is "Slack Tide?" 
Obviously high and low tides turn at predicted times in an open ocean environment. Some narrows also are well documented and any mariner with a working chronometer and a copy of Canadian Hydrographic Survey's "Tides and Currents" should be just fine out there.
However, when you run a boat into an area where C.H.S. has no data you take some chances: Lagoons tend to have a water level which may or may not have anything to do with high or low slack tide. When "Slack High" is at the mouth water pours into the lagoon. During Slack Low water pours out. A river running into the lagoon at high tide can be a creek running out at low slack.

Ken LeDuc

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Whose Car IS That?

My subject today is BMW’s. As you know, they are a well-made German automobile, and expensive. I do not hate them for being the kind of car that only wealthy people can afford, even if the sort of wealthy people who own them tend to be thoughtless, shallow twits.
The BMW’s that I hate are seagoing BMW’s, for this expensive European import is part of the carscape in this province, and as such it finds its way onto the BC Ferries. Here is where the hate comes in: comes in when we are just a little way out and there’s oh, just a little choppiness on the ocean and that alarm in the BMW goes off. For these cars usually have an alarm that responds to a little agitation with a “high-pitched” hooting or mewing or caterwauling or yowling or howling. Yeah, the Beamer is a screamer.
It is not by the way, the only screamer. Several other brands have alarms, but the BMW is the car most likely to spoil your voyage on our Supernatural seas.
You know how it goes: you have driven madly from Vernon or Kamloops or, God! Quesnel! and you got a richly deserved four-hundred-dollar speeding ticket on the Coquihalla. You got to the ferry, and you sat and sat in the lineup and finally crept on board, and now you just want to stay in the car on the car-deck for a little down time, a little snooze maybe, before you go upstairs for coffee from you don’t want to be told where and a dish of greasy chips and reformulated fish or a big Dixie cup with chopsticks sticking out of it. The ferry starts up and that chirpy American girl hectors you to come up and enjoy all the on-board excitements, the Bread Garden meals, the facilities with disabilities, just ask any crew MEMber. She can’t help the way she talks; and you will ignore her until it is time for offLOADing. You settle back, you recline the seat, relax. Yeah. Maybe a snooze.
The ferry is out of the bay now, the water is more open, a zephyr breeze raises three-inch wavelets on the surface of the sea. HWEANHH HWEANHH HEWEANHH. There she blows! And thus she shall continue, with brief intermissions while the BMW alarm system rests and gathers its juices for the next four-minute assault on us.
The announcement asks “the owner of BMW licence number AMK107 please return to the car deck….” You know the futile routine. Nothing is gonna happen. The alarm might run out of juice and stop doing its thing, or at least take a rest till we get to The Fingers, near Departure Bay. If the owner shows up at all, he will shrug and kvetch his way out of it by proclaiming that he has no idea how to turn it off.
BC Ferries could deal with the Beamer beeper if they had the balls. Just post a sign at the ticket booth, maybe another at the on-ramp: “If your car alarm sounds during the voyage, our deck crew will strike your vehicle with sledge hammers until the noise stops.”
What would take more doing but be more fun would be a big mobile sling that could amble around the car deck and hoist the beeper over to the side of the ferry, then hurl the effing Beamer out into the ocean. The sound made by the car hitting the water would be a very nice sound, a “fwormk.” Quite a big “FWORMK.” I believe that is the correct spelling. Then the car would disappear neath the waves forever, and if a couple of yuppies were in the car, or had clung to it desperately trying to stop it being slung out to sea, and thus shared the fate of the vehicle?
Even better. 
Mike Matthews