I’ve got a bunch of open browser tabs here so it’s time to clean up.
After years of litigation, a fleet of abandoned surplus planes went to auction in Greybull, Wyoming, including a pair of KC-97 freighters (essentially a B-29 with an extra deck), a trio of C-199 Boxcars, and a pair of P2V Neptunes, as well as multiple fuselages of other models. Oh, to have the money and space to save one of those planes.
Brian started a build thread about his EV project, and our video already has more comments than any of the others I’ve posted over the last two years (sniff!) We’ve got a couple of leads on how other people have wired up their projects, and I’m currently diving into those threads to learn as much as I can.
And in musical news, Alex and Geddy from Rush announced yesterday that they’re going back out on tour ten years after the death of Neal Peart. I’m happy for them; they’re working musicians and deserve to be playing live, which they both excel at. They’ve recruited a drummer who has been playing with Jeff Beck and teaching for over ten years; she looks like she’ll be an excellent fit.
I got Darth Haul running well enough to take her down the street for a pizza and beer run. I’m having a little issue pulling gas from the tank, and after a little roadside troubleshooting I believe there’s something in the tank clogging the pickup. I’m planning on driving her 12 miles out and back to Brian’s place on Saturday, so I’m going to take the boat tank and a length of fuel line with me for backup.
Interesting. In a week where I read that AOL has quietly shut its dial-up service down for good, we learned that Verizon will no longer support the copper phone line coming into our house. We upgraded our FIOS a couple of months ago from the original router issued to us in 2006 to a modern 300GBps unit, and soon after that our telephone handsets all started reading LINE IN USE, and a couple of days later we got no dial tone at all. A call to Verizon verified they are no longer supporting the copper cables coming into the house, so our choices were to switch over to a FIOS-based telephone or simply give it up. We chose the latter, which means the number Jen was using for 25+ years is no longer in service.
