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My dad is a 91 year old retired NASA aerospace engineer.

"Use the proper tool for the job", was pounded into my head.

If I'm gapping a plug, setting point gaps, or adjusting valves I use feeler gauges measured in the thousands of an inch. Don't yall carry tool boxes in yer vehicles? Yall are making me cringe.
 
Gin& Tonic with frozen rhubarb instead of ice cubes.
Best idea ever.
 

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My dad is a 91 year old retired NASA aerospace engineer.

"Use the proper tool for the job", was pounded into my head.

If I'm gapping a plug, setting point gaps, or adjusting valves I use feeler gauges measured in the thousands of an inch. Don't yall carry tool boxes in yer vehicles? Yall are making me cringe.

Right. Proper tool for the job. The '74 clunker going down the local two lane isn't the space shuttle in orbit.
 
Long ago, in a town far, far away, while on a pilgrimage for antiques, books, and vintage clothes, my 78 Horizon split a vacuum hose and I discovered that I had forgetten to leave any tools in my car.. I used a piece of a plastic shopping bag and one of my shoelaces to patch it unitl I could find a shop and buy a roll of vacuum hose and cheap side cutters.
While I absolutely agree and try to live by "The Right Tool For The Job", the most important tool is the one between our ears. I love creative solutions. Maybe we could start an entire thread on that.
:mug:
 
My first few cars were a 1956 F100 Panel Truck, a 1959 Thunderbird, and a 1965 GTO convertible, all used to various extents. I always carried a full tool kit and used it often, frequently on the side of a highway replacing something critical.

Radiators, starters, generators and voltage regulators, even entire short blocks and transmissions, I did it all when necessary. Worst was replacing the entire front of the F100, from bumper to firewall, due to a huge collision. Had to buy an otherwise scrapped F100 pickup truck for the parts as Ford stopped making sheet metal for it years prior.

I don't miss those years...

Cheers!
 
A nephew is using our barn for his 50th birthday this weekend. In France the white tent is called a barnum.
He bought kegs from a local microbrewery, The Little Belgique, that specializes in Belgian beers and is damn good. He's gone from 100 liter facilities to 160,000 liters since I met him in 2019, just before Covid.


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I know exactly where that happened - and was somewhat relieved it was far from Jellystone, being just west of Columbus. Looks like the adjacent Twin Bridges Road has gone missing as well. The river runs left to right in this image so I'm guessing the wreckage ploughed into the highway bridge. That's going to be fun to clean up and fix...

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Cheers!
 
The river is, literally, inches below flood stage which is making cleanup impossible. The good news, according to the pros from Dover, is that the high streamflows will dissipate the contaminants to acceptable levels rather quickly. The Billings water dep’t. has announced that the intake for the water system will be shut down, briefly, early this evening, to allow any contaminated water to move downstream. Getting equipment in to start replacing the trestle is going to take a bit longer…
 

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