Clouds and leaves

A cold front moved through Wednesday afternoon, bringing clouds and rain. After the front, there was some clearing, just enough for the sun to illuminate the clouds to the east, over town.

The more I look at this shot, the more I like it. I took it with the panorama mode on my iPhone. I keep being impressed with what nice shots it can make.

I walked the dogs before noon, while it was cloudy but not raining. We are past the fall peak for the leaves, but some maples still held onto some color.

I hope everyone has a good Thanksgiving.

Pink clouds

A cold front moved through Sunday. Before it passed, it brought some high clouds. I noticed them as I was driving home from running an errand. Most were cirrus uncinus, or mare’s tail clouds. Later, near sunset, when I took the dogs out, they were tinted pink by the setting sun. They looked like a painter had dabbed pale pink in the sky, and then whipped the brush up and away. I immediately dragged the dogs back inside to get my phone. By the time I got back outside, just a matter of seconds, the clouds had changed. They were still nice, though.

If you look carefully there is a hint of a bright spot and a little color in one of the clouds. It’s in the left third of the picture, about two thirds of the way from the top. Here’s a closer look.

I’m not quite sure what caused this effect. It was too far from the sun to be a parhelion, or sun dog, but it was about at the same elevation as the sun, which was out of sight behind the mountain. The cloud seems to be too far from the sun to be iridescent clouds, and the colors don’t like quite right to me. I thought it might be part of a parhelic arc, which circles the horizon at the same elevation as parhelia, but those are generally white, without color. If it were part of a parhelic arc, you might have expected to see other parts of it in the clouds, since some seem to be at the right elevation. But maybe not. I’m not aware of any other arc or halo that would appear where it did, so, in the absence of better information, I’ll just assume it’s part of a parhelic arc.

Is it just me?

We’ve had some problems lately. I posted about our power outage. After we lost our power for four and a half days, we learned the value of water. And then a couple of days later our septic system backed up and we couldn’t use any of the plumbing fixtures, including toilets. And then we learned the value of indoor plumbing.

We were without indoor plumbing for a little over two days. I called the company that installed the system the day after I found our problem, but they couldn’t come for a couple of days. When they came, it was some of the same people who installed the system, and then the next year repaired damage to the system caused when one of the contractors drove onto the leach field. So, they knew the system. I was fearing the worst, but the problem was caused by a clogged filter that keeps solids from getting into the leach field. The repair was fairly quick, and not nearly as expensive as I was fearing.

So, what else can go wrong, right? How about a microwave oven? Yes, it can. And it did. It simply died. And then we learned the value of a microwave oven. Leah couldn’t warm up her coffee and I couldn’t warm up the beef broth I put on the dogs’ food. And we couldn’t prepare frozen dinners, which we have been eating lately. Nor could I heat up the gigantic marshmallows I sometimes eat as a dessert, although they are big enough to make an entire meal. You should see them when they puff up in the microwave. OK, it’s not as serious as no water or no plumbing. But, still.

I did some online investigations and found a reference to a couple of thermal protection devices that could be reached right behind the control panel. I pulled the panel off and checked the two devices. They are like fuses, only different. One is normally closed (that is, it makes a continuous circuit unless it fails). It fails when it gets too hot. It was fine. The other is normally open; when it fails, it makes a connection and a fan comes on. It was fine, too. There are other places to check, but it requires getting into the back of the microwave, and that means taking it down from over the range. At that point, I decided that replacing a part on the oven, replacing it, and then possibly having it not work, or fail again, was not worth the effort. So we replaced it.

Installing an over-the-range microwave oven is not exceptionally complicated, but it is a little bit of a hassle. They are heavy, and it’s hard to lift them into place when you’re leaving over the range. But we did it.

Installing a new microwave from a different manufacturer means taking the old bracket out and putting in the new one. It also means drilling new holes in the upper cabinet floor to match the two bolts and power cord on the top of the oven. Drilling the holes in the right place means some fairly precise measurement and marking. That’s not my strong point. My practice is usually measure once, then cut two or three times. But this time everything was in the right place.

The microwave failure was disappointing. It’s the second appliance to fail in the three years we have been here. We put in all GE appliances, all in the same finish, when we moved into the house. The dishwasher logic board failed about a year ago, and then, a year later, the microwave oven failed. That is not a good record. I couldn’t recommend getting GE appliances at this point. We have two more GE appliances, a range and a refrigerator. So far, so good with them.

Our record with various problems at the house is making me wonder: is it me, or is this house jinxed?

A short family history

told in cars

My father had a somewhat unconventional automotive side, made all the odder by the fact that he started as a Buick man.

Aside from the ’32 Chevrolet (“Chivvy”) he had when he and my mother were dating, he chose Buicks. This is my parents’ first, a 1949, with me and my brother Henry acting as hood ornaments, or rather, bumper ornaments.

Mostly what I remember about this car is that the radio antenna was mounted at the center of the roof right above the windshield, and you could turn a knob and move it around. I think I can still smell the interior. Can you guess who’s who? OK, not hard, since Henry is older than me, and therefore taller than me at that early age. Also, my ears stick out.

Then came the ’54 (or possibly 1955), the ’57, the ’64, and the ’66.

These following photos are ones I found on the internet. The cars are similar to the ones we had.

1955 Buick. Snazzy.
1957 Buick. Jay Leno has a similar model.
1964 Buick Lesabre, not metallic bronze like ours.
1966 Buick Wildcat, almost identical to ours.

Shortly after we got the brand new 1964 Buick, Henry took it out for a ride in the rain and ran it into a telephone pole. That was a glimpse of the shape of things to come.

It was repaired and we drove it for another two years. We saw it around town for years after my father traded it for the ’66 Buick. We could always recognize it, not only because it was a fairly distinctive style, but also because the paint on the repaired front end didn’t fade like the rest of the body.

Then my father’s eccentric side surfaced. When Henry turned 16, he needed a car to drive himself and me to school. So naturally my father chose a Renault Dauphine.

I don’t remember much about the Dauphine, or how long Henry drove it before someone ran into the back of it, totaling it. I’m not sure there was much to say about the Renault Dauphine, other than it was French and the engine was in the rear. It is a great cartoon car.

Next came the Austin Healy Sprite, the early bug-eye version. It was baby blue, or Robin’s egg blue to be more accurate. I never got a chance to drive this one before someone ran into the back of it, totaling it.

The Sprite was a funny and fun car. The hood, including fenders, was hinged at the front, so you tilted the entire front end up to check the oil. There was no trunk lid; you had to tilt the seat backs forward and toss your luggage back into the trunk. If you look at the doors, you will notice that there are no door handles. You had to reach inside the car to unlatch the door. One did not store valuables in a Bugeye Sprite.

Next came the 1959 Triump TR-3A. This photo is not our car but it is identical except for the interior, which was red in ours.

I want to hug this car. If we ever win the lottery, I will get one of these. I was 15 when we got it, and my father let me take it for the first test drive. But Henry got it. This car went through as much automotive hell as a car could.

One day he was competing in a high school track meet at another school, and ran too hard in the heat. He was overcome and kind of passed out. One of his classmates thought the emergency warranted taking Henry’s car and driving it back to their school. Somewhere along the way he managed to strip the first gear, because he didn’t understand what an unsynchronized gear was. So we had to get a new transmission, which this time included a synchronized first gear.

My father found a mechanic who could find a new transmission and install it. There is something a little fantastical about this episode. I can’t recall the mechanic’s name, but it sounded like it could only belong to an English sports car mechanic. His shop was somewhere in the country around Rome, I’m convinced located in some time warp because I have drive all over this county and have never seen it. By the time my father found a way to get the transmission fixed, reverse gear had also failed, probably because of loose first gear teeth floating around inside the transmission. He overshot the entry to the mechanic’s shop and had to continue until he found a driveway that sloped up from the road so he could drive in and let the car roll back out to turn around.

Henry took the car off to college at Georgia Tech. In his second year he began working in the co-op program at Oak Ridge National Lab in Tennessee. On his way up to Oak Ridge one night, he ran it off the road and rolled it. He was almost miraculously unharmed, but the convertible roof frame and the windshield were broken. After he got back to Rome we drove it around without a windshield for a while. You can remove this car’s windshield, or the frame that used to hold a windshield, by turning four large screws. It was actually made to be removable. Once Henry and I were stopped at a police road block where they were checking for inspection stickers. Henry pulled a piece of the broken windshield out of a door side pocket and showed the officer the sticker, which was still stuck to it. The cop just nodded and waved us on our way.

When I needed a car to get to school, I got the Triumph and Henry got a more modern Renault, an R8. This was a nice car for the time. The seats were like thickly padded easy chairs. The shift lever was vague, to put it generously, but the right gear was almost always where it was supposed to be.

Right after Henry got , he took off from home to show it to a friend who lived a couple of blocks away. The car left a trail of transmission fluid behind it. Someone had somehow left some kind of metal piece inside the transmission. That unknown metal piece got itself wedged between a gear and the aluminum transmission casing, and was punched through. The used car lot welded the hole shut, and it never gave any problems. I have no idea what kind of thing could have ended up in the transmission.

The Renault was totaled when a drunk Georgia Tech alumnus ran a red light and hit it broadside. It was drivable, in a manner of speaking.

Henry and his car, with slightly fractured wrist and slightly dented doors. “It’ll buff out!”

I think Henry had to start driving the Triumph again after the R8 went away. That left me without a car, so my father selected a specimen of one of the worst cars ever made in England, a Morris Minor. I’ll take suggestions, but I think this is it.

Again, this was not our car, but it could be a twin, including the dark red interior. Ours was perhaps not the best example of the type. The brakes were bad, and there was a knocking rod in the engine. But it got me back and forth to the local college I first attended, until we could get something slightly better.

Next up for Henry was a Volvo PV544, around a 1960 model. This is not his car, but it’s pretty close.

This was the first car Henry drove for any length of time without wrecking.

I loved this car, too. If we ever win the lottery, I will get one of these — maybe two, one in black and one in deep red. The black will be for old times’ sake, and the red because it looks really cool, especially from the back.

Since Henry had the Volvo, I got the Triumph. I drove it to high school, and I drove it around town during the summer. Of course there was no air conditioning. Are you crazy? Dan, my best friend from high school (and my current brother-in-law) and I would drive around all day on a summer Saturday. It had no power steering, of course, and no power brakes, so it required some exertion to drive at city speeds. I would be exhausted by the end of the day.

Winters were not much better, but in a different way. The Triumph had side curtains.

Side curtains are completely removable. The ones here are $1299 from Moss Motors. Here is a link, in case you need a new pair. Those two metal tabs at the bottom fit into sockets on the interior of the door. If you need a replacement for the sockets on the doors, you can get a chromed one for $99.99. Yes, one, as in not two.

And this is why you should never actually rebuild a classic English sports car, but rather buy one that someone else has spent their entire fortune rebuilding.

Side curtains do not prevent drafts. They are more in the way of a suggestion. The heater core in a TR-3 is a round radiator about the size of a gallon paint can. It sits below the dash right over the transmission hump. There is a fan that draws air though the cylindrical radiator and pushes it out the bottom Two semicircular doors are fitted to the bottom. They are hinged in middle so they can be opened to direct air towards a small spot on the driver’s right thigh, or a small spot on the passenger’s left thigh, or perhaps to both driver and passenger, if you can get someone to ride with you in the winter.

The fan for the heater, which, again, is more of a suggestion than an actual “heater”, is controlled by a switch. The flow of hot water is controlled by a faucet under the hood. It looks like something you would connect your garden hose to. And I did say that it’s under the hood. That is, to turn on the heat, you need to stop the car, open the hood, and turn a faucet on. This is something one typically does once a season, on warm days relying on the fan to actually control what little heat that is produced by the heater core. It is not generally a problem even on the warmest winter days.

When I took the Triumph to school in Atlanta, it was my turn to get into a wreck. I had an after-class job, and was driving in rush hour traffic back to my apartment. A young woman in a new Corvette ran into the back of the Triumph. The collision left the Triumph slightly bent. The Corvette driver wanted to give me a few dollars not to report the accident, but I refused. Her insurance company totaled the Triumph, but let me keep it. After all, it was essentially worthless. Her car didn’t look bad, but I noticed two cracks right over the top of the front wheel wells. I imagine it was not cheap to repair.

The Triumph stayed in my brother’s driveway near Georgia Tech for a long time. I finally found someone in town who had a good, straight frame, and a separate good, straight body.

As I write this, I’m having a hard time believing that could have happened. It makes me wonder if I might be living in some kind of boring, unlikely novel.

I’ve thought about this some more, and here almost 50 years later, with a PhD and much improved understanding of the physical world, I cannot think of a single plausible explanation for how I got the frame and body from the place where I bought them to my brother’s driveway. I have no memory of it at all, and I can’t imagine how I did it, or if I even did. If this is a novel, it has a lot of plot holes.

Anyway, we unbolted the body from my bent Triumph and took it off. It was held on only by a few bolts. Then we mounted the running gear on the replacement frame. Then we picked up the straight body, lowered it onto the frame, and bolted it into place. We put my old interior into the new car, and hooked up a few wires and tubes so it would run, and it was done.

So, we repaired the car by essentially replacing everything, and then put our engine and transmission into it. Of course it had a different VIN, but no one ever looked at it, and we never told anyone about it.

I do not remember what we did with the spare parts, namely a bent automobile body, and a bent automobile frame. I know they wouldn’t fit into a garbage can.

I drove the repaired Triumph for a while before I got my Fiat, which I have written about and which I drove for a long time. Henry kept the Triumph.

A few years later he told me that he had lent it to a friend, who was driving somewhere on I-285, the Atlanta perimeter road, when it caught fire and burned. There was no repairing it after that.

Most of our automotive experiences after this period were not particularly remarkable. Henry got a Saab, which was only a little strange. I got a 1972 Triumph TR-6, which I wish I still had. Then I got a 1971 VW bus, which I also liked quite a lot, despite the fact that it was hot in the summer, freezing in the winter, struggled to maintain 65 on the highway, and used your feet as crush space. Then I got a little Honda Civic station wagon, which was roughly the shape and color of a lemon. All it needed was a complete engine rebuild, and then it was good to go, assuming you checked the oil frequently. After that, we drifted into pure conventional automotive life.

If this really is a boring novel, it never gets any more exciting after those early days.

Power!

I’m a little late posting this. We got our power back around 5:30 pm Monday, almost exactly four and a half days after we lost it. We were among the last to get power restored, not only in our area, but in the entire state.

We used about three gallons of purified water from the grocery store and probably three five-gallon buckets of less pure water every day that the power was out. We lost almost everything we had in our freezer. Since I couldn’t connect the refrigerator to our generator, it didn’t occur to me right away that I could connect the freezer.

I suppose it’s good that we don’t keep much in the freezer.

Just a note: ice cream is not good after it has been thawed for a few days and then refrozen.

It was quite a relief when the power came on. It was nice to have lights actually come on when I flipped a light switch. It was especially nice to have water come out of the faucet when I turned the handle. I was happy to take a hot shower that night.

This has made it clear that we need to be better prepared for the next power outage. The biggest problem was, of course, no water, since we’re on a well. My plan is to have an electrician wire a circuit breaker lockout and a fixture where we can plug in a generator. Without a big generator we will be able to power only part of the house, but that will be OK. If we can power the refrigerator and freezer, a few light circuits, and some outlets in the living room, we will be fine. Oh, and, of course, the well pump.