Sunday, December 22, 2024

Plumbing day. Again?

Our master shower has been running cold lately. It occurred to me that our other shower would do fine. 

I was wrong. The push-pull hot-cold part didn't provide any water of any temperature.

While looking into the magic cartridge that controls such taps I leaned that a lack of heat or cold is a possible sign of failure. How nice: they both need replacing!

I tried to visualize what the correct part would be on the local store's parts shelf, but clearly the best option was to bring a part with me - both parts, in case they differed.

The main bath cartridge didn't want to yield at first, but the master tap cartridge let go without trouble. I went back and did the same on the other and finally extracted a much smaller and incomplete part :√(

Exhibit A: 1½ cartridges

Off to the repair store again - this time with a samples! As I'd suspected the Moen 1200 was the right choice, and the specialist agreed that they were probably both the same despite what I carried. Once home I used a big drill bit and some pliers to yank out the remaining cartridge bits. Everything went smoothly after that! 

- Until I visited the water heater, where one more task waited me. While putting a light amount of pressure on the outlet post on top, the one task became two:

Exhibit B: outlet hose failure 

Off again to the store, and I decided to grab two hoses. I'm tired of digging into this closet to change out fittings!! I needed threads on one side and a slip-on clamp for the other, and it went together pretty well. All done?

Oh no - not yet. I'd totally forgotten the original reason for visiting the water heater, and it took full advantage of my forgetfulness when I restored the water pressure. All the hose work I performed had caused the suspect part to fail - so off with the water supply, again.

The problem was another fitting I had put in a year ago. The cold-water pipe had failed lower down, but a slip-on clamp solved the problem; parts for the hot side were in hand but it hadn't been updated. I knew it was a matter of time.. and that time had now come. The hard way.

After inspection I decided this last problem was in fact two, or perhaps more: two suspicious connectors (one showing it had failed, the other waiting its turn) plus poor routing of my new hoses from the water heater. One final store visit brought home a longer pipe, another slip-clamp connector and the right tools (locking pliers and pipe cutter) to see things done right.

I rerouted the heater hoses, shortened them a bit and replaced the old tubing and two connectors with a solid piece. I also marked the pipes to ensure the slip clamps were fully inserted, as a few drops along one hose weren't reassuring.

So my two-plus days of shopping drilling cutting and yanking are done, and everything is currently holding! Both showers have hot water again, toilets and dishwasher are functioning, and a bunch of wet towels are off the ground and in the laundry.

Oof.

Later - wow that was a hot shower! Perhaps the heater can be turned down a notch..
Also later - I found my pipe-cutting tool right after returning home with a new one. I look forward to all my missing lock pliers coming out of their hiding places soon!


Friday, December 20, 2024

Christmas in liquid form

 

Our hill-top forecast for Christmas looks mighty wet. It's been this way for a few days now, so it's getting harder to ignore. Christmas Eve isn't too bad, but if we head north to the in-laws neighborhood we have no decent day for the return trip. Rivers would be high and possibly dropping debris into the Puget Sound, possibly affecting ferry service. That would force us into Seattle traffic.. seldom pleasant even in a light rain, and forecasts there are 1/2 inch each day. Not ideal.

Cliff Mass blog is on it as well: 

https://cliffmass.blogspot.com/2024/12/an-intense-christmas-atmospheric-river.html


Friday, December 13, 2024

enough.

I've wasted too much time and funds on adapting SA-mount lenses, so I cashed it in (Sigma 70-300, MC-21, USB dock) & will pick up a Lumix-S 70-300. 

What changes?
Weather seals, silent focusing, 0.5x closeups with no zoom/click clunkiness, a focus limiter and bonus OIS for Dual-IS stability. 

 -  More grams and cubic inches.. but no other lens fills the gap except truly bulky and spendy ones.


 That part is Stupid! But ..

when a smaller 50-200ish f/5ish zoom is available, I can dump this thing if it feels like the best move for me. The S9 practically demands that such a lens be made by someone, regardless of my thoughts.