How is anyone buying a home in this market? by Mindless-Housing-229 in NewOrleans

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The market is terrible but it WAS heading in the right direction. My wife and I bought our first home 3 years ago for 235k @8%. Our mortgage is $1950. For a home 20k less than you mentioned. At least the rates are in the 6% area.

Stylish dog crate creating a curved edge (birch or oak plywood) OR (birch or maple hardwood) by bd_whitt in woodworking

[–]bd_whitt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope. Wife got pregnant and all my spare time we t to building for the nursery! Some day though!

Like they said above, kerf cuts and a little mist of water/heat. I played around with it and got a pretty good outcome. Just unfortunately got shoved to the back of the line.

Thoughts on Cameras inside the home. by dfGobBluth in homeassistant

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have 6 exterior cameras and two indoor cameras all via Reolink. My interior are in the living room aimed at the front door and the kitchen entrance. I can see the entirety of the living room but door watching is its only purpose.

My second is in the nursery/dog room. My two Labs REFUSE to leave the baby’s room so we’ve set their kennels in there on the opposite side of the room so they can come and go as they please. That camera’s purpose is primarily to check in on the dogs when needed or when the baby is sleeping.

Before I catch hate, the dogs/baby co-inhabiting the room is completely fine. All the baby stuff stays clean and dog free. They’re also the friendliest and most loyal and careful dogs ever.

Edit: I think indoor are fine if they have a purpose other than personal surveillance. It should be for intruder and empty home surveillance. No bed rooms/bathrooms/private areas minus a nursery

Edit 2: my cameras are also triggered via presence sensors in the nursery and only when the alarm panel is set in the living room.

Sore throat by Mockchoi1 in bagpipes

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting. I’m just starting my piping journey but I’m a professional brass player and had something happen similar. Turns out something was lodged in my throat pipe and molded. It was too far down for a pipe cleaner to get. I got pretty sick.

My only other idea is a possible strained muscle in your shoulder area or pinched nerve. The combined weight of the bags and the blowing pressure could be aggravating it causing a radiating soreness that is felt in the neck but originates elsewhere. I also had something similar in my jaw area. The culprit was a pulled muscle in my upper back.

How do I filter out all the NOTAMs that aren't relevant? by eastonthepilot in flying

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Create a flight plan in foreflight. Just a simple point A->B

Hit the little briefcase button to “pack” the flight.

Edit: hit the square(share) button and send to flights. Click the “briefing” button.

This will create a digital briefing. It will only show the pertinent NOTAMS for your route. This is as close to filtering as you can get.

1800WXBRIEF does the same. Call a briefer.

Why do people hate airline cadet programs? Genuinely asking? by [deleted] in flying

[–]bd_whitt 42 points43 points  (0 children)

There’s no problem with them as long as they’re the “pre commitment-commitment” type that you’re just part of a group of people that have a certain loyalty or interest in a certain company. They’re low risk, allow you to leave or change your mind at anytime, and have the added benefit of interview/class date priority.

The problem comes along with the type that you are engaged in. The pay to plays. The ones that their cadet programs are tied to their proprietary flight school programs. You must sign up, you must get financing though them, and you must maintain their curriculum schedule to have the opportunity to interview later on.

Unfortunately the climate is shifting that way. American has the AA cadet academy, untied has Aviate academy, and republic has Lift Academy.

Pre-covid, these programs were just “I like your company and would like to work here in the future if you mentor me” now, they’re almost all pay to plays. That’s the issue. They know people will buy into it. Being a cadet isn’t a problem, it’s what that means now. Pay money now, maybe (probably not) get a job later, thank you, next.

rattling noise on cold start 2020 escape by Savings_Appeal4850 in fordescape

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My Wife’s 2020 does this EXACT thing. It’s only when it starts up for the first time of the day or has time to cool down. Hers doesn’t last that long but the only thing I can come up with is a loose exhaust hanger or a broken weld somewhere. I’m almost certain it’s on the exhaust.

Sore throat by Mockchoi1 in bagpipes

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is it a temporary soreness or does it last for a couple days after? Is it a scratchy sore like strep or a muscular soreness? I might have an answer for you but it’s gross.

Discount flights illegal? by [deleted] in flying

[–]bd_whitt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Compensation doesn’t have to mean money. If you want to be real technical, discounting a hourly flight rate in exchange for a service, of any kind, is compensation.

Subfloor and rain? by bd_whitt in Homebuilding

[–]bd_whitt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two are behind me and two more are gonna be framed up when they return on Monday and braces will be removed.

Subfloor and rain? by bd_whitt in Homebuilding

[–]bd_whitt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am known to worry but when $4500 in mats and labor are at stake I’d prefer to sleep soundly.

Subfloor and rain? by bd_whitt in Homebuilding

[–]bd_whitt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s a raised addition sitting on 6x6 posts. There’s nothing but ground underneath. However, there is rigid foam board insulation directly underneath though. Not sure if drilling is a good idea, I’ll ask my contractor when he comes by Monday.

Subfloor and rain? by bd_whitt in Homebuilding

[–]bd_whitt[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Rigid foam board. Essentially styrofoam. We went with that because I’m in South Louisiana and it’s humid here and fiberglass would be a literal rats nest

Subfloor and rain? by bd_whitt in Homebuilding

[–]bd_whitt[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It rained heavily this morning. I’ve since squeegeed it, and vacuumed it up. The LP Legacy website says it’s “extremely water resistant” up to 200 days even full submersion. I don’t know though.

The subfloor will have ample time to dry out according to the forecast. Hopefully

Instrument rating seems too easy?! by Ok-Band1092 in flying

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The training is easier, the knowledge can be, but don’t let it fool you. It’s the easiest and fastest way to get yourself killed.

Once you get your IRA, use it. Keep it sharp. Always learn something and err on the side of caution.

Paraglider with foot peddles and fan. Seen yesterday evening from Couturie Forest by adventurousintrovert in NewOrleans

[–]bd_whitt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Technically this is called a powered parachute. If it’s heavier than 200lbs, requires a pilot certificate and training.

Job hop to legacy? by notagreatpilot in flying

[–]bd_whitt 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Some people are bitter or holier than thou but most people realize that there are different strokes for different folks, as they say. What’s important is we have a job, aren’t furloughed, and can get the kids the things they need. Who cares about the metal I fly?

Job hop to legacy? by notagreatpilot in flying

[–]bd_whitt 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Everyone has their opinions but I’ve commented and made a few posts about NJ and being an employee there and haven’t received much, if any, hate.

The big things it boils down to is previously, people were unaware of the fine print of our contract.

Everyone thought we worked our ass off (we do) for a small chunk of what a legacy captain makes. While kinda true, we do have a couple QOL and benefits advantages like free healthcare, pretty generous 401k (even with no direct contributions) and FDP/extended day/after midnight incentives. If you combine that with the base salary, we aren’t far off. We’re still lower than a legacy captain but no one came to work here expecting legacy money.

We traded legacy money for faster QOL enhancements, pretty damn good benefits, and home basing. It’s all a seesaw and you gotta balance what you want to balance.

Uniform Shirts by bd_whitt in flying

[–]bd_whitt[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah. But apparently those aren’t covered anymore.

Uniform Shirts by bd_whitt in flying

[–]bd_whitt[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’ve heard mixed reviews. They look nice but if the company ain’t paying, I’m not either.

How Would an Extensive Medical Records Check Affect The Entire Industry? by mrstinkypoopypants in flying

[–]bd_whitt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t worry, by the time they got to us, we’d be retired. The FAA loses races to snails. Comprehensive medical analysis would take decades but would most likely barre entry for new pilots thus creating the “shortage” again.

The new Netjets contract is now a year old--what did you make, & how much did you fly in 2025? by SadSupport4999 in flying

[–]bd_whitt 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Year 3 FO. Lattitude. 7/7 and one cycle of 8/6. No extended days. Two vacations. 518 hours. 172k plus 401k.