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#1
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Blanche wrote:
A job. Then I can buy my own toys, thank you. Yeah. That's a present I'd like under my tree too. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
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#2
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George Patterson wrote:
Blanche wrote: A job. Then I can buy my own toys, thank you. Yeah. That's a present I'd like under my tree too. George Patterson So, perhaps we should create a consulting business together? UAG, Ltd? (Unemployed Aviation Geeks, Ltd) |
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#3
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Jay Honeck wrote: As usual, that's the question I'm hearing from relatives. Also as usual, I have no friggin' clue what to tell them -- I need nothing. Nothing except the following items? 1. XM weather for my Lowrance 2000c (According to Lowrance, this is supposedly "in the works" and "to be ready to roll out at Sun N Fun '06") Is this official? I have been holding up upgrading to the 2000c awaiting XM weather capability. Appoach plates display will be another nice item to have. 2. A new faceplate for my Narco CP-136M audio panel (yes, I'm STILL looking for one...) If the faceplate is plastic, you can repair it yourself. We repaired all the interior cracks in our Cardinal with ABS plastic (Royalite is ABS plastic) and cement then spray-painted with SEM vinyl paint. The panels looked almost like new (one has to look real hard to find the repaired area). 3. A DVD recorder that will let me quickly and easily transfer 15 years of home movies onto DVD.... You must have flying movies to include this item in your aviation-related wish list ;-) The DVD recorder is easy to operate but extremely limited. I transferred all old home movies and tapes to DVD using a video capture card (for something like $20 with nice video editing software - just got another card for another pc for free after rebate). The software allows me to mix slide show with movies with editing, music addition etc. or just straight converting avi, mpeg files to DVD file format. For the last two years, I have been sending these DVDs as Christmas presents showing both old and new movies and pictures which are greatly enjoyed by recipients. Can you add to the list? What do *you* want for Christmas? Good health! Hai Longworth |
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#4
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1. XM weather for my Lowrance 2000c (According to Lowrance, this is
supposedly "in the works" and "to be ready to roll out at Sun N Fun '06") Is this official? I have been holding up upgrading to the 2000c awaiting XM weather capability. Appoach plates display will be another nice item to have. It's "official scuttlebutt" off the Cherokee Pilots Association "Cherokee Chat". Take that for what it's worth... 2. A new faceplate for my Narco CP-136M audio panel (yes, I'm STILL looking for one...) If the faceplate is plastic, you can repair it yourself. We repaired all the interior cracks in our Cardinal with ABS plastic I've repaired it -- twice. When the temperature gets down to near zero, it just cracks again... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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#5
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"Jay Honeck" wrote I've repaired it -- twice. When the temperature gets down to near zero, it just cracks again... You are having a problem with different coefficients of expansion. I don't know exactly how the face mounts, so this suggestion may not be exactly right. You need to fix it again, the enlarge the mounting holes and not tighten them up so tight, so when the metal of the radio vs the plastic gets cold, the can shrink how much they want to, without putting pressure on the faceplate. -- Jim in NC |
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#6
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You need to fix it again, the enlarge the mounting holes and
not tighten them up so tight, so when the metal of the radio vs the plastic gets cold, the can shrink how much they want to, without putting pressure on the faceplate. Yeah, that's what I tried last time. Trouble is, the screws come through from the *sides* of the audio panel, meaning that they are necessarily too small for the job, and the plastic that they must go through is too thin. Worse, one side (where the screws go through) of the faceplate is completely gone, after breaking numerous times. I have replaced this entire missing side by building up successive layers of JB Weld (a 2-part epoxy-like product that is drillable, sandable, and just about indestructible) and then carving/cutting it to the proper dimensions with a Dremel tool. It was painstaking work. It lasted six months or so, until it got cold. The push-buttons for the audio panel are slightly smaller than the tip of your index finger, which means when you push them in turbulence, you tend to jam the plastic faceplate, too. This, of course, puts stress on those four little side screws, which is what broke the thing in the first place. Add cold weather, and *pink!* -- it breaks pretty easily. It's a dumb design, and Narco (incredibly) wants $200 just for the faceplate! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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#7
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Have you thought of taking 'it' to a machine shop at your local high
school or tech school and paying the teacher or one of his best kids to make you one(douplicate) in aluminum? Probably cost you $50.00. The Monk |
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#8
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Jay Honeck wrote: If the faceplate is plastic, you can repair it yourself. We repaired all the interior cracks in our Cardinal with ABS plastic I've repaired it -- twice. When the temperature gets down to near zero, it just cracks again... Hmm, did you reinforce the cracked area with fiberglass fabric? It is needed to provide structural strength. Hai Longworth |
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#9
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Hmm, did you reinforce the cracked area with fiberglass fabric? It is
needed to provide structural strength. No. We're talking about an area the size and thickness of two quarters, in spots. I might try laying in a few strands (if I ever try this again), just to see if it helps. Maybe I'll try embedding a couple of reinforcing strands taken from a piece of heavy duty packing tape... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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#10
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Jay Honeck wrote: Hmm, did you reinforce the cracked area with fiberglass fabric? It is needed to provide structural strength. No. We're talking about an area the size and thickness of two quarters, in spots. Maybe this is the reason why the patched area cracked again. We put a layer of fiberglass fabric soaked with ABS cement on all cracked area big a small then either add more ABS cement or a small piece of thin ABS on top depending on the size of the cracks. Both the fiberglass cloth and ABS cement were quite cheap ($5 or less - we got the cloth at automotive store and ABS cement at Lowe). Cracks tend to occur at high stress areas (screw holes etc.). The fiberglass is quite essential to prevent future cracks. Hai Longworth |
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