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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Electronic Door Lock


Replaced this:












With this:

New digital lock from Schlage
I picked up at the big box store.
Took about 15 min to install and program.

Zero problems installing it in an existing door.

Rather than give out keys, you can program in a 4 digit code for visitors. When done, the code can be erased.

Very simple to use and program.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Midwest Weather

Only in the Midwest can you have a Tornado Watch, Tornado Warnings & Flood Watch with 65 degree temperature two days after Christmas and still a 50% chance of snow that night.

Sweet.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

What's in St. Bernard Slaiva?



















This lovable dog slobbers something terrible. Her food dish after eating looks like the most disgusting thing! Cleaning it requires a scrub brush and a brillo pad. No amount of soaking will loosen this stuff.

I have worked in food related business for quite some time and stainless steel is the industry standard for food contact. The bowl is Stainless steel and even after washing it, there is a film of 'Nard spit!

If 3M was smart, they would do some R&D on this stuff!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Snow Pre-Treatment Test #2 = Not so well

This doesn't seem to be an exact science....but learned a few things Sunday night:

  • When the NWS in STL says there will be less than .01 ice accumulation, they could be wrong.
  • Either watch Football or watch the weather, not both.
  • Have the salt solution already made up. The 30 min to add water and mix was pretty much the failure of this test.
  • Waiting to the last minute sometimes is the coldest.


More fun in store for this Thursday. 1/4"+ of freezing rain in the forecast.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Bad Weather Ahead?

Sleet, Freezing Rain, & Snow?

Looks like test #2 is in store for the Pre-Treatment machine.

Not looking forward to the late Sunday night / early Monday morning freezing here!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

SPREAD OUT

Liked this Blogger Template but DAMNED ! The post column was too small. Played around w/ it tonight and think I have it wider.

Me playing w/ HTML is not pretty.

Sorry for the three of you who read this.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Snow Pre-treatment Pt. 1

This was going to be a test on a PRE-snowfall treatments, but thing didn't go as planned. Went into work Monday to find that the temp had dropped below 32 and froze most of the snow that had fell Sunday night.

Oh well. It says it is supposta works as a de-icer as well as a pre-treatment.


The test is on !








Here is what I came up with:

Heard some stories and read some info on the internet of using a brine solution sprayed down before a snowfall to prevent snow and ice from bonding to the pavement. Iowa DOT has had some good results and are currently using this now. Did some research and found out that the best solution is a 23% brine solution. This works to -6 degrees.

Rigged up this from items around the work place and came up with something I think will work. Made a collapsible boom that extends out to 16' span with 14 jets total. ( Work currently has about 5 acres of concrete that needs to be cleaned off ) Each jet dispenses .3 gpm at 40 psi. That means the rate for all 14 jets would be 4.2 gpm. In order not to overheat a 12vdc pump I sized it smaller at 3.9 gpm. Current draw on the pump is around 7 amp and since I just bought a battery for the wheeler for $60+, I decided to used a deep cell battery for the same amount. Picked up the pump thru Grainger, hose, piping, jet, battery @ Farm and Home supply.



















Mixture on the solution seems to be a 1-2-3 ratio. 1 gallon of water to 2.3 pounds of salt. Since I had 55 gal barrels that were readily available at work, I used them. It worked out pretty well. I added 3 - 40 lbs bags of rock salt and fill the remainder up with water.

Mixed the solution up with a barrel mixer we had at work and I was off.



















First trip was on a slight downhill slope and I quickly learned I was pulling quite a bit of weight. 1154 lbs of Brine solution alone. That explains why my 400 lb Rancher w/ my 225 lb ass was slowly being pushed down this incline.
Go figure.


Looking behind me, I could see that the brine solution was working. Travel speed is a bit slow. Objective is to cover the ground with the brine solution and evenly spread it without causing excess waste. This on the Rancher is slightly over idle in second gear. Slow to say the least. Last pic I took here is after I had made one pass and missed a spot. Looks like it worked and I only used 240 lbs of salt to do the entire lot. Normal usage for something like this is around 600 - 800 lbs per use with the traditional salt spreader. Something I am testing around with is a home version with a sprayer on the driveway. 2-3 gallons could easily cover the average drive. I have found a sprayer tank that could be mounted on my 4 wheeler for home use laying around the mess/ garage and may be playing with that after some tests with the hand held sprayer !!!