MadModder
The Breakroom => The Water Cooler => Topic started by: websterz on December 03, 2009, 10:24:27 PM
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That's -9 C for you folks that don't do Fahrenheit. I have a ton of stuff to do in my unheated shop tomorrow...the one with all the holes and gaps in the walls...where it's 5 degrees colder than outside! Just making it through the door to switch on the lights will be a test of will. I hate winter!!! :bang:
Next spring I have some serious insulating and wall repair to do. I am plumbed for natural gas so I think a nice big forced air wall furnace will also e on the shopping list.
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Webster
Next spring you won't need the insulation, it will be plenty warm. :lol: :lol: :lol:
Cheers :beer:
Don
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Webster
Next spring you won't need the insulation, it will be plenty warm. :lol: :lol: :lol:
Cheers :beer:
Don
Which is why it didn't get done THIS year. :bang:
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Here in sunny Manchester :lol: :lol: -9 C would be considered very very cold indeed. It rarely gets below -5 C, but even so, I share your dislike of winter. You might consider a low-frequency infra-red radiant heater, as used outside pubs, bars and pavement cafes over here to keep me warm when I'm outside puffing at my pipe. We use them over the firing points in the indoor ranges of my .22 target club, because any other way of heating leaky 100' x 25' buildings which are only used for 3 hours each evening would be impractical and expensive. They give the sensation of warmth on the skin, without warming the intervening air.
Andy
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Some means of warming the machine handles would be a great help....... :thumbup:
David D
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Some means of warming the machine handles would be a great help....... :thumbup:
David D
Don't they have heated handle bars on motor bikes:------------------ :smart: now there's an idea :proj:
:D :D :D :D :D
Stew
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I put a small heater on in my garage yesterday, now remember the doors are not sealed yet, hopefully I'll do that this weekend.
Midday 5.6C, half hr later 10.2C and the heater was on and off with the thermostat, mostly off ...... Nice :) I find 10C just fine.
Now to get the door sealed and leave the heater on over winter .... Insulation, insulation, insulation :thumbup:
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Darren,
It'll take a couple of weeks for your machines to reach ambient temperature.
But once they do, everything becomes a lot more stable, as there will be like storage radiators all over the shop and when you touch a machine, you don't recoil back because of the cold.
Mine has been on a fair while now with a first walk in temp of 14 deg C, and it is soon up to 17 or 18 once the machines start running.
In my shop, it is t-shirts all year around.
All that for less than a penny an hour during the winter months.
John
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All this talk of the cold makes me glad I live where I do.
In Sydney, a hard winter is one where you need to wear a jumper. I don't even have a heater in my house.
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Yeah, but we can enjoy the sun in the summer, not hide from it :lol:
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Here at southern Finland, coldest season has been between january and march, when it gets bit chilly. Anything between -15C and -35C.
Same pattern is to be expected in the future also.
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Here at southern Finland, coldest season has been between january and march, when it gets bit chilly. Anything between -15C and -35C.
Same pattern is to be expected in the future also.
And that's the South :jaw:
I guess that's why no-one lives in the North then !!
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I guess that's why no-one lives in the North then !!
In fact, there lives a lot of polar bears people, who just doesn't mind the annual ice age ::).
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All this talk of the cold makes me glad I live where I do.
In Sydney, a hard winter is one where you need to wear a jumper. I don't even have a heater in my house.
In Ponca City we don't have killer spiders. :poke:
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All this talk of the cold makes me glad I live where I do.
In Sydney, a hard winter is one where you need to wear a jumper. I don't even have a heater in my house.
In Ponca City we don't have killer spiders. :poke:
Australian spiders get a bad rap. There's not that many that are really dangerous, there's probably only one or two that can actually kill you.
Snakes on the other hand ...
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All this talk of the cold makes me glad I live where I do.
In Sydney, a hard winter is one where you need to wear a jumper. I don't even have a heater in my house.
In Ponca City we don't have killer spiders. :poke:
Australian spiders get a bad rap. There's not that many that are really dangerous, there's probably only one or two that can actually kill you.
Snakes on the other hand ...
That damn Sydney Funnelweb is enough to keep me from stopping by for a visit. :bugeye: Snakes I don't mind so much...spiders are the devil on 8 legs!
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I think spiders get bad press they do a darn good job keeping the flies down.
This is my shop spider:- I call him Stanley
(http://i431.photobucket.com/albums/qq32/sbwhart/100_1072.jpg)
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Stew
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here is last years shop spider doing his best work
(http://i217.photobucket.com/albums/cc274/aermotor8/IMG_2690.jpg)
my shop/garage is were we have to keep the garbage cans so i get lots of fly's in my work space, so this guy got fed well.
come to think of it he kept the wife way to.............she hates spiders...........hmmmmm just for that i should adopt another spider :lol: :lol:
chuck :wave:
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Well, today we got a break from the cold. :bow: It is 48*F / 9*C, sunny, and no wind. A perfect day to open up the shop and do a little cleaning. It's been a few months since I have been able to attack it with the leaf blower and move all the dust back outside where it belongs. :dremel: This will also give me a chance to plug a few holes and make the building a little easier to heat. I would take pics but mostly it's just open floor space and I don't want to make the 10'x10' guys jealous. :poke:
No killer spiders either! :lol: Although I did see a field mouse run along the wall the other day, the first one I have seen out there in the 3 years since we bought the house. The alley cats usually do a fine job in that regard.
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The other day our temp went to a -17 there goes the gas bill. Cliff
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Blimey, us lot in the UK moan a lot about the weather but -2C is about as bad as it gets :bugeye: ........... I don't envy you guys ........ take care and "keep warm" :zap:
CC
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It is a beautiful sunny day here today! We live within a few hundred metres of the Pacific which tends to moderate the temperatures somewhat although the winds can get a bit wearisome at times.
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John Hill:It is a beautiful sunny day here today! We live within a few hundred metres of the Pacific...
I might need advice from you and any other NZ members, John. I've always wanted to visit NZ, and a woman I've known for 40 years wants to go there for a wedding in Aukland on 3 April. Her husband doesn't travel well, and she doesn't want to go 12,000 miles on her own so, being a widower, I volunteered myself as chaperon. No comments, please - there's no physical attraction at all. Plan at present is to land in Christchurch 2 weeks before the wedding, and work our way north, seeing the sights which I am assured by friends who have lived there as ex-pats are five-star spectacular.
But I'm hijacking the thread, so I'll start one of my own when plans firm up.
Andy
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It is a beautiful sunny day here today! We live within a few hundred metres of the Pacific which tends to moderate the temperatures somewhat although the winds can get a bit wearisome at times.
Hey with global warming you'll have that ocean front right at your doorsteps. :lol: :lol: As he talks the temps out side in lovely up state New York is going down to 14* F (-10* C )
Bernd
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Gee some of u folks from the North could leave your freezer doors open for warmth.
Its a very pleasant 26 deg C here at the moment. Think I might put some shorts on. Down here minus 1 deg C at any time of year is considered a cold nite. When I lived in the tropical North I used to hear the locals complain when it dropped to a miserable 17 deg C, not to mention put on jumpers. I kid u not.
Mind u last Summer it got to the mid 40s on a few days. The wind was so hot it here it killed some of the plants. Leave a piece of steel outside and u almost need gloves to pick it up.
UK - Summer is that u call it!!! :lol:
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Blimey, us lot in the UK moan a lot about the weather but -2C is about as bad as it gets :bugeye: ........... I don't envy you guys ........ take care and "keep warm" :zap:
CC
Not typically no, but I did measure -27C one winter right in the mountains. Down between two mountains there is a small lake that I used to frequent. It had frozen over so hard the ice expanded with such a force it split across the middle. One side had been pushed up and the ice showing was thicker than I am tall.
All the reeds had 2" of ice on them and the nearby quarry lakes were frozen over (only ever seen that once in my life) The whole quarry floor was thick with ice balls up to 1" round where they had been blowing around in the wind. Damned hard to walk on .... !!
On the way down from the mountain we were hit by a snow blizard and had to take shelter between some rocks for around an hour. It was too dangerous to keep walking when you couldn't see your feet.
Those were the days, we used to get winters back then unlike now. But that was an exceptional year.
I was 15 so be winter of 1981. I used to walk across the mountains with our dog almost daily, a Welsh Collie. Sometimes over one mountain and up to the top of the next. Imagine a kid doing that today !!
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Minus 2 outside and plus 30 in the workshop, gotta love that wood stove.
Even get about a tonne of wood offcut delivered every week so the local furniture factory don't have to pay to tip it.
John S.
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Plus 30 :bugeye:
You're spoilt , don't you find that a bit warm ?
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Ah, Darren, when I was young and dinosaurs roamed the Earth, we used to get proper seasonal weather here in Sale. But the last respectably cold winter I can recall was in '63, when I was 16. It was easier to get the 2 miles to Altrincham (it had something to do with a girl, as most leisure activities did at that age) by cycling down the frozen Bridgewater Canal than along the roads.
But the summer of that year was great - spent it hitchhiiking round Europe. Like you, I don't suppose many parents would give their blessing to that sort of adventure today.
Andy
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They used to hold a faye on the Thames when it froze over .... imagine the Thames freezing to hold that sort of event today ... can anyone remember it freezing?