I'd give Mozy credit for the thread identification. 1/8" IP is about 3/8" in diameter. I thought the first and read the second and never noticed the discrepancy.
Heh Heh ... Hey, I don't make the industry standards... I just go by them.
I was commenting on how the brain works. Mozy or I would have grabbed the right part out of a box but ordered the wrong thing at the counter.LeChatNoir wrote:I'd give Mozy credit for the thread identification. 1/8" IP is about 3/8" in diameter. I thought the first and read the second and never noticed the discrepancy.
Heh Heh ... Hey, I don't make the industry standards... I just go by them.
Snarkily phrased, but I really want to know.Bin Noddin wrote:So I should NOT use the aluminum vent cap on the steel vent for the store heater? Those idjits at Home Despot don't know nuthin . . . and they only have aluminum ones.MozyBonz wrote: As far as I know Aluminum is the worst for Electrolysis Corrosion.
It will be fine I just did the roof on my house and went with all aluminum vent caps.Bin Noddin wrote:Snarkily phrased, but I really want to know.Bin Noddin wrote:So I should NOT use the aluminum vent cap on the steel vent for the store heater? Those idjits at Home Despot don't know nuthin . . . and they only have aluminum ones.MozyBonz wrote: As far as I know Aluminum is the worst for Electrolysis Corrosion.


Elliot wrote:![]()
We now interrupt this galvanizing discussion with a brief Comical Interlude.
Somebody, a couple of pages back (while I was on the road), asked for The Stories Behind The Contraptions. There was even a Personal Challenge, naming... moi.
So, I'll start with The Two Ton Tricycle:
Two Ton was built around year 2000 and was my first Kinetic Sculpture Racing Kontraption. The basic concept came from seeing all those giant satellite dishes that people used to have for watching television from Mars. And I had a neighbor who installed such things -- newer, smaller ones -- often bringing home dead big dishes. To me, those things were obviously wheels.
The first idea was named The Satellite Voyager. I'd assemble six dishes into three hollow wheels and build a Star Trek looking space ship. For some reason, it failed to discourage me that Star Trek Enterprice saucers, and flying saucers in general, were horizontal. I thought people would easily turn my wheels 90 degrees in their minds.
But when I got three wheels assembled in a frame with a steerable front fork, it didn't look like a space ship at all. Not even to me. But it sure looked like a kid's tricycle. So I renamed it, and added (fake) saddle and handlebar, and The Two Ton Tricycle came to life.
The picture shows it in the Sacramento River in... maybe 2001 or 2002 -- the first time it completed a Kinetic Sculpture Race.
It is currently retired, but WILL be rebuilt sooner or later.
P.S.
Of course, I did build a Flying Saucer also,
...but only as a static display for Halloween -- a re-creation of the Roswell Incident.





LeChatNoir wrote:Oh jeez... you're right you know. Removing a steel plug in a few years from the steam side could be a booger... damn it.
**smacks self in forehead**
DOH!!!