• Refining my tool kit

    From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jun 17 23:23:04 2021
    Thursday, 17 June


    I found a better bag to put my tools in.

    Since I haven't found a suitable saddle bag (all seem to be either too
    small or huge) I've been putting my tools in a drawstring bag, looping
    the drawstring through the handle on my rack, rolling the bag up in
    the drawstring, and strapping it down with a bungee that also steadies
    my cable lock.

    The orange bag I'd been using is too deep, and in addition to making
    it difficult to get at the contents, it has to be rolled and rolled
    around said contents before it's small enough to pass through the
    drawstring.

    I was throwing away a little bag that had contained a pair of belts,
    when I realized that it was a tough drawstring bag, and just the right
    size. Well, it's a tad small for an eight-inch Crescent crescent
    wrench, but I can put it in diagonally.

    So I threw it onto my rack, and today (anticipating a long ride the
    day after tomorrow) I switched the stuff over.

    The first thing I found was a sample-size bottle of Eucerin, the
    culmination of a years-long search for a leak-proof way to carry olive
    oil to clean my hands with. But I'd forgotten it completely, since
    the lip-salve box of A+D Ointment in my pocket is easier to get at and
    easier to use. And it's probably dried up by now, so I set it aside.

    That left me with a bobbin of nylon thread in a "pill pouch", a cable
    tie, a ten-millimeter combination wrench, an eight-inch crescent
    wrench, and a Rema patch kit. Since I no longer carry a frame pump, I
    ought to cast that out too, but I've added to it a band-aid, a
    merthiolate swab, a chip of soap. three Presta valve caps, a
    valve-stem nut, and three greenbacks. Hey, there's room for the
    thread in there too!

    I carry a pair of folding pliers in my wallet, and they have been
    handy on many occasions. I also carry scissors, nail clippers, a
    tape measure, and two knives on my key chain.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Fri Jun 18 11:57:48 2021
    On Thu, 17 Jun 2021 23:23:04 -0400, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    Thursday, 17 June


    I found a better bag to put my tools in.

    Since I haven't found a suitable saddle bag (all seem to be either too
    small or huge) I've been putting my tools in a drawstring bag, looping
    the drawstring through the handle on my rack, rolling the bag up in
    the drawstring, and strapping it down with a bungee that also steadies
    my cable lock.

    The orange bag I'd been using is too deep, and in addition to making
    it difficult to get at the contents, it has to be rolled and rolled
    around said contents before it's small enough to pass through the
    drawstring.

    I was throwing away a little bag that had contained a pair of belts,
    when I realized that it was a tough drawstring bag, and just the right
    size. Well, it's a tad small for an eight-inch Crescent crescent
    wrench, but I can put it in diagonally.

    So I threw it onto my rack, and today (anticipating a long ride the
    day after tomorrow) I switched the stuff over.

    The first thing I found was a sample-size bottle of Eucerin, the
    culmination of a years-long search for a leak-proof way to carry olive
    oil to clean my hands with. But I'd forgotten it completely, since
    the lip-salve box of A+D Ointment in my pocket is easier to get at and
    easier to use. And it's probably dried up by now, so I set it aside.

    That left me with a bobbin of nylon thread in a "pill pouch", a cable
    tie, a ten-millimeter combination wrench, an eight-inch crescent
    wrench, and a Rema patch kit. Since I no longer carry a frame pump, I
    ought to cast that out too, but I've added to it a band-aid, a
    merthiolate swab, a chip of soap. three Presta valve caps, a
    valve-stem nut, and three greenbacks. Hey, there's room for the
    thread in there too!

    I carry a pair of folding pliers in my wallet, and they have been
    handy on many occasions. I also carry scissors, nail clippers, a
    tape measure, and two knives on my key chain.

    What do you use the 8 inch Crescent wrench for on a bicycle?
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 18 22:52:13 2021
    On Fri, 18 Jun 2021 11:57:48 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    What do you use the 8 inch Crescent wrench for on a bicycle?

    The *handle* is eight inches.

    I must look around for a six-inch wrench when I pass by Lowe's
    tomorrow.

    I've spent all day getting ready for this ride -- but ironing my veil
    for going into stores entailed ironing two shirts that I washed last
    Monday.

    And putting salt into my emergency-food bag led to neatening up the
    go-bag I'll put the emergency food into next week, and that somehow
    required me to put away the dishes Dave washed yesterday. I forgot
    how putting dishes away got onto the to-do list while I was still
    doing it.

    This will be my first quarter century of the season.

    I had to put a gratuitous garage sale on my map to get the milage up.

    The barbecue-kit sale at Duck Down and Above is over today. I hope
    this means that the special well be something worth riding to Leesburg
    for next week.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John B.@21:1/5 to jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid on Sat Jun 19 10:44:32 2021
    On Fri, 18 Jun 2021 22:52:13 -0400, Joy Beeson
    <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:

    On Fri, 18 Jun 2021 11:57:48 +0700, John B. <slocombjb@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    What do you use the 8 inch Crescent wrench for on a bicycle?

    The *handle* is eight inches.

    Yes, I know what a 8 inch crescent wrench is. Crescent is of course
    the name of the company that originally made the tool and, of course,
    it's name is based on the approximate length of the wrench. Depending
    on the maker it has a jaw opening of about 1" to perhaps 1-1/4"

    But the question remains "what is it used for on a bicycle" :-)


    I must look around for a six-inch wrench when I pass by Lowe's
    tomorrow.

    I've spent all day getting ready for this ride -- but ironing my veil
    for going into stores entailed ironing two shirts that I washed last
    Monday.

    And putting salt into my emergency-food bag led to neatening up the
    go-bag I'll put the emergency food into next week, and that somehow
    required me to put away the dishes Dave washed yesterday. I forgot
    how putting dishes away got onto the to-do list while I was still
    doing it.

    This will be my first quarter century of the season.

    I had to put a gratuitous garage sale on my map to get the milage up.

    The barbecue-kit sale at Duck Down and Above is over today. I hope
    this means that the special well be something worth riding to Leesburg
    for next week.
    --
    Cheers,

    John B.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pH@21:1/5 to Joy Beeson on Sat Jun 19 20:32:18 2021
    On 2021-06-18, Joy Beeson <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:
    Thursday, 17 June


    I found a better bag to put my tools in.

    Since I haven't found a suitable saddle bag (all seem to be either too
    small or huge) I've been putting my tools in a drawstring bag, looping
    the drawstring through the handle on my rack, rolling the bag up in
    the drawstring, and strapping it down with a bungee that also steadies
    my cable lock.

    The orange bag I'd been using is too deep, and in addition to making
    it difficult to get at the contents, it has to be rolled and rolled
    around said contents before it's small enough to pass through the
    drawstring.

    I was throwing away a little bag that had contained a pair of belts,
    when I realized that it was a tough drawstring bag, and just the right
    size. Well, it's a tad small for an eight-inch Crescent crescent
    wrench, but I can put it in diagonally.

    So I threw it onto my rack, and today (anticipating a long ride the
    day after tomorrow) I switched the stuff over.

    The first thing I found was a sample-size bottle of Eucerin, the
    culmination of a years-long search for a leak-proof way to carry olive
    oil to clean my hands with. But I'd forgotten it completely, since
    the lip-salve box of A+D Ointment in my pocket is easier to get at and
    easier to use. And it's probably dried up by now, so I set it aside.

    That left me with a bobbin of nylon thread in a "pill pouch", a cable
    tie, a ten-millimeter combination wrench, an eight-inch crescent
    wrench, and a Rema patch kit. Since I no longer carry a frame pump, I
    ought to cast that out too, but I've added to it a band-aid, a
    merthiolate swab, a chip of soap. three Presta valve caps, a
    valve-stem nut, and three greenbacks. Hey, there's room for the
    thread in there too!

    I carry a pair of folding pliers in my wallet, and they have been
    handy on many occasions. I also carry scissors, nail clippers, a
    tape measure, and two knives on my key chain.

    You could always substitute a *six* inch Crescent (tm) wrench for the 8".

    I'm curious why the tape measure...do you like to check the local fish
    market for legal size catch before you buy? (just kidding)

    But you could also substitute a dollar bill for a tape measure: It's 6"
    long. So fold in half for 3", triple it up for 2" and fold that in half for 1......multiple bills for longer lengths.

    Of course, you'd have to estimate your fractional inches.

    This all applies to "weight watchers", so you may not care at all.

    pH in Aptos

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  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jun 21 00:02:50 2021
    On Sat, 19 Jun 2021 20:32:18 -0000 (UTC), pH <wNOSPAMp@gmail.org>
    wrote:

    I'm curious why the tape measure...do you like to check the local fish
    market for legal size catch before you buy? (just kidding)

    I use it while shopping, mostly, but the last two times I got it out
    of my pocket, I used it to measure the width of a bike lane.

    Found one of the notes:

    :: Saturday, 23 January 2021

    :: Left 11:22

    :: 12:09 Paws 'N Claws

    :: 12:18 stopped to measure "buffered bike lane" on Market street. 27", 43", 71"

    :: 12:35 - 12:39 Old Jail

    :: 12:45 - 12:59 courthouse steps

    :: 12:31 Home


    The "buffer" was twenty-seven inches, the lane proper was forty-three,
    the over-all width was seventy-one. I *think* that I measured from
    the outsides of the four-inch stripes, but that isn't mentioned in the
    note.

    The Old Jail Museum has outside steps suitable for exercise -- since
    the door at the top is nailed shut, I wasn't likely to get close to
    anybody. (I'm still wondering why there's a doormat in front of the
    door! Probably to make it look as though it were in use.)

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pH@21:1/5 to Joy Beeson on Tue Jun 22 00:57:58 2021
    On 2021-06-21, Joy Beeson <jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid> wrote:
    On Sat, 19 Jun 2021 20:32:18 -0000 (UTC), pH <wNOSPAMp@gmail.org>
    wrote:

    I'm curious why the tape measure...do you like to check the local fish
    market for legal size catch before you buy? (just kidding)

    I use it while shopping, mostly, but the last two times I got it out
    of my pocket, I used it to measure the width of a bike lane.

    Found one of the notes:

    :: Saturday, 23 January 2021

    :: Left 11:22

    :: 12:09 Paws 'N Claws

    :: 12:18 stopped to measure "buffered bike lane" on Market street. 27", 43", 71"

    :: 12:35 - 12:39 Old Jail

    :: 12:45 - 12:59 courthouse steps

    :: 12:31 Home


    The "buffer" was twenty-seven inches, the lane proper was forty-three,
    the over-all width was seventy-one. I *think* that I measured from
    the outsides of the four-inch stripes, but that isn't mentioned in the
    note.

    The Old Jail Museum has outside steps suitable for exercise -- since
    the door at the top is nailed shut, I wasn't likely to get close to
    anybody. (I'm still wondering why there's a doormat in front of the
    door! Probably to make it look as though it were in use.)


    Ah, thank-you. Well, the dollar bill trick would certainly be too tedious
    for that.

    pH

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