Moderator: Soñadora
avramd wrote:So I have a new inflatable dinghy - side note, it's a Saturn "kaboat 12" (kayak/boat), it's a really cool use case for a small trimaran tender, it's like 3.5' wide, and weighs 45 lbs - super easy to haul up on the tramps, and fits between the shroud and the cabin.
Anyway, the silly thing I'm proud of is that I needed to replace one of the oar-lock caps, and I managed to get exactly the right nut at the hardware store on a single try, without bringing the boat to the hardware store or buying multiple $2 nuts knowing I'd only need one. I am OCD when it comes to waste, so for me the dilemma is "I don't want to waste $2/nut for extras that I'm not going to need, and I don't want to waste the time to drive back to return them either." It's ridiculous b/c it's not like I can't afford the extra $6 - it just drives me "nuts" (had to) that nylock nuts in any remotely beefy size cost this much.
Anyway, I have one of those handy jig-type plastic sheet things for measuring ID/OD, etc, and fortunately the oar-lock bolt turned out to match one the holes that only had a metric size on it, so I didn't have to wonder whether it was metric or standard. My sheet doesn't have a thread gauge on it, so I just measured the thread with the ruler, there were 5 teeth in 1/4 inch pretty much exactly. In stainless, my hardware store didn't appear to have more than one option for thread, all M10's were "1.5." But more importantly, the M10 1.5 bolts they had also appeared to have exactly the same teeth/inch.
Why did I measure the thread in inches? B/c there was exactly 1/4" of thread to measure.
I just felt like sharing this here b/c I figured maybe at least one of you is similarly OCD about waste. What I really should do is buy a large kit of nuts and bolts in the whole range of sizes I might ever need, b/c while it would "waste" a lot of money in that I'll never use 90% of them, it would save a staggering amount of time not needing to go to the hardware store for shit like this. Then whoever is going through my crap will hopefully recognize it as something worth giving away, and it won't go to waste either.
Charlie wrote:[...] they’ve ensured that every nut and bolt head anywhere on the camp grounds is 3/8”. One only ever needs one size nut, bolt, and wrench. Brilliantly simple.
Charlie wrote:My brother-in-law works at a summer camp in New Hampshire. It’s been in operation for 70 years. In that time, they’ve ensured that every nut and bolt head anywhere on the camp grounds is 3/8”. One only ever needs one size nut, bolt, and wrench. Brilliantly simple.
Charlie wrote:Beau,
Your MIG story reminds me of an anecdote (which is not exactly true) about the Space Race between the US and the Soviet Union. As the story goes, the US spent million developing a pen that could write in zero gravity. It required a special ink cartridge that was pressured so it could work regardless of its orientation in space. The US spent all this effort to make a space pen.
The Soviets used a pencil.
BeauV wrote:Ages ago, when the Soviet Union was collapsing, they were selling off old MIG jets. (weapons removed)
BeauV wrote:[...] You couldn't get the torque wrong, you didn't need to look it up, you just needed to remember how you took it apart and put it back together in the same way.
I was stunned at how brilliantly that plane was designed.
TheOffice wrote:The US Air Force spent tens of thousands on rear view mirrors for F18s. The Israelis took some automotive mirrors and bolted them no is 15 minutes.
avramd wrote:TheOffice wrote:The US Air Force spent tens of thousands on rear view mirrors for F18s. The Israelis took some automotive mirrors and bolted them no is 15 minutes.
Ahhh, see now this story is definitely fake. The devil is in the details... The US Air Force does not use F18's...
:lol: :D
avramd wrote:I wonder if their motivation to make the plane so simple not just that they're inherently that much smarter than us, but that they had to be to compete with us on so many fewer resources - they just didn't have the numbers to have squadrons of maintenance teams everywhere.
avramd wrote:I wonder if their motivation to make the plane so simple not just that they're inherently that much smarter than us, but that they had to be to compete with us on so many fewer resources - they just didn't have the numbers to have squadrons of maintenance teams everywhere.
TheOffice wrote:avramd wrote:TheOffice wrote:The US Air Force spent tens of thousands on rear view mirrors for F18s. The Israelis took some automotive mirrors and bolted them no is 15 minutes.
Ahhh, see now this story is definitely fake. The devil is in the details... The US Air Force does not use F18's...
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My bad- wrong US service branch.