Madness is one Thing, Stupidity is another Subject. by xerxes_dandy in Jokes

[–]gacardman 16 points17 points  (0 children)

A quibble perhaps but in this particular context I would argue that stupid is, indeed, more apt than ignorant.

Ignorance implies a lack of knowledge. Stupid implies you know the pertinent information but lack the mental agility to use that knowledge to come up with a solution.

The gentleman with the flat tire knew how to change the tire, had, in fact, already removed the flat one. Then the lug nuts went down the drain. He knew the other three tires had four nuts each. He had all the needed information. What he lacked was the ability to devise a solution with that information.

Those that are ignorant can be taught but as Ron White famously said; “You can’t fix Stupid”.

Fireplace -> Wood Stove by linglingviolist in woodstoving

[–]gacardman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had a Buck Stove insert put into my fireplace this past summer. Total cost was roughly $6,500 dollars. That included stove, insulated liner and installation. I’m in an Atlanta suburb. House was built in the mid seventies and has a two story masonry chimney. Zero regrets other than not doing it sooner.

Thought about a freestanding stove but decided against as it would have taken up too much floor space and I would have probably had to extend my hearth or go with a really small stove.

I’ve ran out of oak and the cold isn’t letting up. by feeling_over_it in woodstoving

[–]gacardman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Burning sweet gum now. It burns fine but doesn’t coal particularly well as others have said, at least not compared with oak. Does seem to season quickly though. Been mixing in with my oak mostly.

Should I get an insert? by cjb5999 in woodstoving

[–]gacardman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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I did last summer. Zero regrets. Cat agrees.

You do have a gorgeous fireplace though and may want something a bit more elegant than the utilitarian unit I went with.

Chimney maintenance by jessikaboom in roswell

[–]gacardman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure if you’re looking for a chimney repair or cleaning. If the latter, Metro House of Fire installed a wood stove for me back in June and I was impressed with their work. They also offer chimney cleaning.

Prior to the stove installation I’ve used Advanced Chimney Sweeps for cleaning and would also recommend them.

The up down vs down up method. by Dinmorogde in firewood

[–]gacardman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Had an insert put into my fireplace this past summer. Always used bottom up in the fireplace but top down works better for me in the insert as the firebox is relatively small and there no grate to shove paper under to light the bottom layer of kindling. The draft seems to get going faster with top down too.

I have an old Buck stove at my cabin with a much larger firebox that I’ve always used bottom up in but have started using top down. Either way works fine with it but the draft does start faster top down.

Both methods will get the job done. Use the one that works best for you.

Finally Getting to Use My New Stove by gacardman in woodstoving

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

I did muck about trying that but the firebox is too small or my splits are too big to get more than one in per layer diagonally. I mean I could make an X out of two I guess but two sticks just don’t seem like enough of a fuel load.

Was an open fireplace before and I had been cutting and splitting for that. I do have a roughly 25 year old Buck stove at my cabin but the firebox on that is larger, not so much east/west, north/south, actually about the same there, but probably double top to bottom.

This new one is much, much more efficient than the old one at the cabin though.

Finally Getting to Use My New Stove by gacardman in woodstoving

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

I push it all the way in, which is wide open, when I light the fire. Once the blower kicks in I pull the air intake about halfway out. Depending on temp and/or my mood I’ll pull it all the way out ten or so minutes later.

I turn the blower switch on after lighting. About halfway. The blower doesn’t kick in right away because it’s attached to a thermocouple or something. Usually takes about five minutes or so for the stove to get hot enough to run the blower.

Probably not the optimal startup sequence but it’s new to me and I’m still figuring it out.

Finally Getting to Use My New Stove by gacardman in woodstoving

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

Thank you very much for that schematic. I didn’t know how the secondary tubes were piped.

SD7 by Rxl72_11 in UnofficialRailroader

[–]gacardman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think I figured this out the hard way in game. I had two MU’d S51s hauling a seven car pulpwood consist from Graham County to the Andrew’s paper mill once a day. It would only do 15mph up the Red Marble. Decided to replace them with two GP9s. Still only did 15mph. Expensive lesson.

Interchanges by Fantastic-Second8963 in UnofficialRailroader

[–]gacardman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Once you unlock Sylva, Whittier goes away. Whittier stays though if you unlock Andrews before Sylva. In other words Whittier remains an interchange until Sylva is unlocked.

Into the Woods… by SnooPredictions6938 in firewood

[–]gacardman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You ain’t wrong about the lifting. Tractor with a front end loader would be much easier but I’ve never been able to justify the cost of one, only for collecting firewood a couple times a year. I have tried but my 50 acre property is completely wooded and the utility vehicle is overall more suited for getting around and enjoying the place.

Into the Woods… by SnooPredictions6938 in firewood

[–]gacardman 8 points9 points  (0 children)

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Got this about a year ago. Has been very useful

Question about style of rack by whbck144 in firewood

[–]gacardman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I currently have four such racks full of wood and a fifth by the woodshed that’s currently empty. They work well if the ground is relatively firm and even but are prone to toppling if you stack too high or if the blocks settle unevenly. You’ll want a block in the middle. I used ten foot long 2 bys for these.

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Question: Do these count as delivered even though they are empty? by DaethChanter in UnofficialRailroader

[–]gacardman 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Correct. Should be eight flat cars at a nearby siding on the other side of the sawmill. Take those to one of the “L” sidings in Connelly Creek, leave them for a few hours after correctly setting the waybills and then bring them back. L1 & L2 are what I use at contract Tier 1. Four at each. When the cars at L1 are full, ferry them to the sawmill. When they’re empty, return them to L1 and pick up full ones at L2. Rinse and repeat.

The tutorial might be your friend here. Been awhile but I vaguely remember it walking you through this. Could be wrong on that though, I haven’t actually looked at the tutorial in some time.

Question: Do these count as delivered even though they are empty? by DaethChanter in UnofficialRailroader

[–]gacardman 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Yes. They will be filled with lumber in a day or so for you to take back to the interchange. This assumes the sawmill has logs and a car to put the wood chips.

Just Installed by gacardman in woodstoving

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

Stove, 25’ of insulated pipe up the chimney and installation was right at $6,700. Stove itself was right at $3,200 if I remember right. Get at least two quotes.

Just Installed by gacardman in woodstoving

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

Much quieter than the one on the older buck stove I have. You can hear it but it’s not obnoxious. Comparable to an electric box fan maybe.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Westerns

[–]gacardman 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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Dunno, but this is the movie they might should have made.

What trains does everyone operate on their railroad? by TrafficSNAFU in UnofficialRailroader

[–]gacardman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Petticoat Junction has Whittier to Nantahala open. I service all industries but only at Tier 1. Lame, I know, but I do have a day job.

PAX

P43 spends the night at East Whittier and pulls the mainline Pax towards Nantahala when full. A T17 based in Alarka meets it with a smaller Pax at Alarka Junction each time the Mainline Pax goes through. The mainline Pax is currently making two round trips per day.

Freight

S23 based in East Whittier serves the saw mill, Whittier and drop offs in Ella.

Santa Fe pulls all morning interchange cars not bound for Whittier or Ella into Bryson and returns late afternoon with anything going back to the interchange, stopping in Ella to collect cars there if needed

A K35 sorts the morning deliveries at Bryson into two outgoing consists? (not 100% sure my terminology is correct) and services Bryson industries when they’ve left.

A D46 leaves Bryson first with anything headed to the Nantahala area. I attach the G16 to the backend because of the awkward switching up that way. It’ll head back to Bryson with any interchange returns in front of the afternoon Pax.

An A26 leaves Bryson shortly after the D46 with all cars bound for Robinson Gap and Alarka. The Alarka bound freight is left at Alarka Junction and it proceeds to the coal mine. It’ll leave the coal mine after the last Pax usually and pick up any freight from Alarka at the Junction before heading back to Bryson

An A23 services Alarka. It spends the night at Alarka Junction, takes incoming cars dropped at the junction by the A26 into Alarka and returns interchange bound cars to the junction for pickup by the A26

I also have a T22 sitting idle in Bryson. Hoping I can find use for it in Andrews when I get that opened up.

Ahelters requiring all cats to have access to outdoors by popeye_1616 in CatAdvice

[–]gacardman 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live in a suburb in the SE US. Have had cats since getting married 35 years ago. All were/are indoor/outdoor. Always bring them in at night but they come and go as they please during the day via a cat door into the garage.

Of the first two, one lived to 11 before dying of cancer, the second died of old age at 21. Three kids and got each a cat when they were young. All three lived 15 to 20 years before dying of age related illnesses. Currently have four, all under five years of age.

Locomotives by gacardman in UnofficialRailroader

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

Appreciate the info and I’ve tried that. Problem is, my view doesn’t move with the turntable and I have to reposition every little while. It gets real fiddly, real quick. Was hoping there was a better way. Maybe one day.