One of the downsides of this new shop space is the height of the benches....38", and the floor is concrete. Maybe it's an aging thing with hands' dexterity in handling hardware as you disassemble or reassemble gear. I dunno. Today, it was removing the nuts and washers from a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe, so I could drop down the main PCB for both inspection as well as adding the Drive/More Drive Mod to the second stage. Got the first nut/washer off, lifted both off and placed them into the plastic pint-size Sorbet lid that I use in mass for holding parts in process. The second set of nut/washer....the nut lept out from my fingers and hit the concrete floor running. Those particular nuts I don't have many spares, so down to my hands and exposed knees (I wear shorts year-round out here), with flashlight in hand, scanning the floor's surfaces for the elusive nut. Gone. Logic tells you these parts just CAN'T travel THAT far to never be found again. Back down again for a third search, this time looking forward, where these particular 'benches' have a wooden panel that comes within a 1/4" from the floor, which spans the full width of the bench. I saw just past the front opening what appeared to be the edge of that chrome nut. Grabbed my Wiha #2 screwdriver, gave it a quick recharge off the 12" speaker's magnet in the amp, and moved the tip to the bottom lip of that panel where the nut was just beyond. It jumped onto the tip of the screwdriver, and....sure 'nuff....it was the NUT which took a spiteful trajectory on me.
I was just about to update my notes on the amp when 'sgelectric' (Steve) walked in with the gift of one of his vintage Patton High Velocity Fans he had hanging in his garage down in the Mar Vista / Venice Beach area where he lives. He had called me this morning to tell me he was coming up to Glendale, and had this fan he was going to loan me, having read my ramblings in that recent post about my unsuccessful exploits of keeping Patton Fans alive. So, he popped his head into the shop, just as I was about to start typing my notes. Always a pleasure to have your train of though shifted for a while on a hot day. Though nice and cool here in the shop. Now, hopefully I'll have a bit more success evacuating the heat out of the wall-to-wall carpeted apartment, where it's been remaining well over 80 degs F inside when I get home.
I was just about to update my notes on the amp when 'sgelectric' (Steve) walked in with the gift of one of his vintage Patton High Velocity Fans he had hanging in his garage down in the Mar Vista / Venice Beach area where he lives. He had called me this morning to tell me he was coming up to Glendale, and had this fan he was going to loan me, having read my ramblings in that recent post about my unsuccessful exploits of keeping Patton Fans alive. So, he popped his head into the shop, just as I was about to start typing my notes. Always a pleasure to have your train of though shifted for a while on a hot day. Though nice and cool here in the shop. Now, hopefully I'll have a bit more success evacuating the heat out of the wall-to-wall carpeted apartment, where it's been remaining well over 80 degs F inside when I get home.
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