TQA
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 20 Feb 2005
- Messages
- 6,815
- Location
- Carribbean currently Grenada
Well I hand out out with a bunch of long term liveaboard cruisers and most of them fix stuff themselves sometimes dipping into the collective pool of knowledge for help and diagnostic ideas. I have always fixed my stuff if I can, partially because it made good economic sense but also I like knowing ' How Stuff Works'.
But cars are getting too complex for me to do much with beyond an oil change. Fortunately the boat engine is a simple old Perkins.
Like the OP I am bemused by the people who cruise in far away places but have to call out a marine engineer to adjust their fan belts. Better still are the ones who pay someone to fly out and fix their boat because they don't trust the locals.
So are people becoming useless. It is not as simple as 'becoming'. You need to learn to puzzle out ' How Stuff Works' and how to use tools. I was lucky growing up in a garage with access to lathes and welders and a father who knew how to use them. I picked up stuff by osmosis. Also in days gone by more stuff was 'fixable'. I can remember the dismay when the radio I listened to Radio Luxembourg died, but it was easy to spot the tube that did not glow and was blackened go down to the TV repair shop in the High Street and buy a new one. Try and find a TV repair man today never mind diagnose a fault on a modern coms device.
But cars are getting too complex for me to do much with beyond an oil change. Fortunately the boat engine is a simple old Perkins.
Like the OP I am bemused by the people who cruise in far away places but have to call out a marine engineer to adjust their fan belts. Better still are the ones who pay someone to fly out and fix their boat because they don't trust the locals.
So are people becoming useless. It is not as simple as 'becoming'. You need to learn to puzzle out ' How Stuff Works' and how to use tools. I was lucky growing up in a garage with access to lathes and welders and a father who knew how to use them. I picked up stuff by osmosis. Also in days gone by more stuff was 'fixable'. I can remember the dismay when the radio I listened to Radio Luxembourg died, but it was easy to spot the tube that did not glow and was blackened go down to the TV repair shop in the High Street and buy a new one. Try and find a TV repair man today never mind diagnose a fault on a modern coms device.
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