Humblebee
Well-Known Member
OK at home for tools but left my flute on board the last time I visited the boat - at Oban Marina _ and now it's out of bounds.
Ah well, worse things happen at sea...
Ah well, worse things happen at sea...
Electric
Or Ether?
I can possibly lend you any taps and dies you might need.Cr
Crimping tool and taps and dies
I find flying my models on my own a bit boring. We have a brilliantly friendly club of 70 members and a good field where if something is amiss with a model there is immediately 4 heads stuck in it. They do not all know how to fix it, but one of them will. Most of the fun is the chat.Club has not shut down our normal field - but we are not a big club and often on your own there ... but its a 30 minute drive ..
Ether ?? That's the old diesel's ... haven't seen a Diesel model engine for many years now ...
Today its basically down to 3 types :
Electric
Methanol (Glowplug)
Gasoline 2 and 4 str
I find flying my models on my own a bit boring. We have a brilliantly friendly club of 70 members and a good field where if something is amiss with a model there is immediately 4 heads stuck in it. They do not all know how to fix it, but one of them will. Most of the fun is the chat.
No drones just choppers & fixed wing
I bet once this self isolation phase is over there will be 2 things
1) lots of crashes due to in familiarity
2) lots of new models built over the lay off
There will be plenty to talk about & i am looking forward to it.
In my twenties I raced my Stella & i was talking to an elderly gent about why I always got left behind. I was unloading the boat & he saw that i had 4 identical screw drivers. He asked why I needed 4 & I did not know. His first tip was to take everything i did not need off the boat & I have done that ever since. At the end of the season I empty my boat. I is surprising how much i had on board after the first couple of years of my new boat but gradually this has been reduced. It makes room, It is easier to find stuff. It stops stuff I do not need going rusty. & in the end the boat sails better with better weight distribution & lighter.I'd imagine that a lot of people were in the middle of getting set for the season, so will have had all sorts of stuff on board which would then get moved home again.
For me it is normally the other way. I go down to do some work and leave some tools at home. With a 200 mile round trip it has ment a trip to hardware shop to purchase missing tool so that work is not held up. Boat is therefore collecting tools ....So far:
Pop rivet gun
Speedi-stitcher
Crimping tool
Copper mallet
Breaker bar
How about you?
"He who dies with most tools wins"!For me it is normally the other way. I go down to do some work and leave some tools at home. With a 200 mile round trip it has ment a trip to hardware shop to purchase missing tool so that work is not held up. Boat is therefore collecting tools ....
I've got a neat little portable bluetooth speaker radio thingy, that I think must be aboard as I can't find it at home. It's annoying listening to everything on laptop speakers!
I gather than a trip to my boat to check things like mooring lines and bilges should count as essential maintenance and is still allowed... for now...
Mine is even further away, and the problem is not what is on the boat, but what is not. I have the boats papers at home and they are needed in Turkey to put the boat in bond.As the boat is 1000 miles away and missing meI have a second (and third) set of everything at home.
Mine is even further away, and the problem is not what is on the boat, but what is not. I have the boats papers at home and they are needed in Turkey to put the boat in bond.
Same here. Also. my crew is at school in the house but having some difficulties because wifi does not easily penetrate 3' thick stone walls. We're improvising with a long USB cable and a fake Alfa USB wifi adapter but I really wish I had though to bring back the Tube-U adapter I have on the boat.I've got a neat little portable bluetooth speaker radio thingy, that I think must be aboard as I can't find it at home. It's annoying listening to everything on laptop speakers!
When my old Dad died he left 55 model aircraft engines from the 40s to the 70s, so for a few fun-filled weeks I got absorbed in that world as eBay dispersed the collection. Amazing how many engines were made on the Isle of Man. The prize item was a very scruffy Caledonian Clansman (bare engine only, no carb) which went to New Zealand for an extraordinary price.Ether (aka Diesel) are still seen but rarely. There’s one guy in our club with a PAW but I’ve never seen it run. Each time he brings the model it steadfastly refuses to start. Just like it was in the 60s ?
I find flying my models on my own a bit boring. We have a brilliantly friendly club of 70 members and a good field where if something is amiss with a model there is immediately 4 heads stuck in it. They do not all know how to fix it, but one of them will. Most of the fun is the chat.