Tow bar update

One of the things left over from the Tow Bar install was the wiring for the trailer. All that was required was to find a place to run the wire through the body, make sure it seals and find a place to mount the socket.

It’s a simple 7-pin flat plug, but the plug’s way too wide for going through any sensibly-sized hole, and the other end of the harness looked too compled for me to remove the pins to push it through a bung. I decided to un-wire the plug, feed it through the bung then re-wire it. Fairly simple:

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Leather notebook holder

I fairly regularly carry a Field Notes notebook around, because I’m a terrible scatterbrain. Unfortunately, living in my pockets leads to their rather quick ruin, so I needed to find a way to make them last a little longer.

$14 worth of leather from the local leather shop and a few minutes work was all it took. I wasn’t looking for anything particularly fancy - I found an offcut which was just the right size and made some folds.

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Moving to hugo

This blog has been running for eleven years today - first on Mambo CMS - then transitioning to Wordpress in September 2005.

It’s time for another move, this time to Hugo. Written in go, stored in Markdown syntax and generating static HTML it fits my needs well. I don’t need a crazy CMS, I just need something I can post content with and use as few server (and mental) resources as possible.

Wordpress has been great. It’s very simple to use, and provides incredibly powerful publishing tools, but at a cost. The security implications of running a hyper-extensible PHP-powered site are pretty terrifying at times, and the server resources required for keeping a relatively small site running keep going up and up. I host all my own sites, with a locked down server running on a VM somewhere in cloudspace. The less I have to do with securing that the better, so a static site’s perfect.

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2013 Pulsar Tow Bar

A couple of times a year I need a car with a tow bar, for things like the two-weeks-away medieval festival I go to, or taking things to the dump. Hiring a vehicle for these things would work out to be a thousand dollars a year or so, which isn’t viable.

Since owning the Pulsar I’ve wanted a tow bar on it, and after a fairly tight pack for festival this year I was determined to get one to be able to tow a trailer. I like the look of my slightly-racier-than-stock turbocharged ST-S model, and didn’t want a big honking cut out of the bumper like I’ve seen on some others. After shopping around a lot, I couldn’t find enough information on what this model required, as Hayman Reese (the main manufacturer really left in Australia) and some others said their kits were “All models”. A local company refused to even bring one in as they would be stuck with it if I didn’t want the required modifications.

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2016-04-30 Week in Review

Wednesday/Thursday

  • Bought a tow bar for my Pulsar
  • delivered in 24 hours flat
  • missing a part of the loom, was delivered in 2 hours!
  • installed the wiring without incident - ignored the hole-cutting instruction, routed the wire sensibly.
  • learnt to run a tap through painted holes
  • screwed up a high tensile (ish) bolt, fixed it with a file

Thursday

  • Learn to double check Google Maps’s public transport instructions. Ended up in stones corner instead of Windsor. Ugh.
  • Got my car serviced. They washed it (great!) but also made it smell like cigarettes (ugh!)

Friday

  • Started fitting tow bar, got bumper bar off, cut hole in rear panel of chassis rail, holes don’t QUITE line up. 🙁

Saturday

  • Finished installing the tow bar!
  • Got confirmation that expanding the holes is fine, did so.
  • Cut second hole with my angle grinder - done in under a minute - compared to an hour of careful messing around with the dremel the first time.
  • Bolted it all together rather easily, carefully cut the lower part of the bar. The supplied dimensions were a little excitable, but would have done.
  • Was a great feeling to do it myself 🙂

Work

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2016-04-24 Week in review

Creations

Stuff

  • Bought some ridiculously cheap shelves and put them in the sewing room and the office. I wouldn’t recommend the 4x2 clever cube shelves from Bunnings unless you despise whoever’s going to use them, or you only need them for ridiculously light things. I’m going to nail/glue some pre-painted particle board to the back of these in a few months, just because I’m expecting them to warp.
  • Bought a Ryobi shop vacuum, finally
  • Set up the sewing room
  • Sewing machine
  • Bought some lovely scissors
  • Helped Mary remove some stumps from her yard on Sunday. Wow my back hurts, I woke up 1am Monday with arms that were on a special kind of fire.
  • Went to IKEA for a work light, bought a step ladder. It may sound ridiculous, me (6’9" tall) owning a step ladder, but they’re super-useful for at-roof-level-need-to-be-stable things.

People

  • Went to the Buffalo Bar for Rachel’s birthday. Amazing food, great drink, lovely atmosphere until the band turned up. My ears still hurt.

Work

Can’t think of anything in particular I achieved this week (that I can write about).

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Quick and simple SSH things.

Add these things to ~/.ssh/config and you’ll get magic powers.

Put your keys in ~/.ssh/ and name them by the hostname you ssh to, and you’ll automagically add them to your config without having to edit it each time. Change the directory to whatever, if you’re picky.

Login to your splunk boxes as bob, and your web servers on port 2280 as bob_web. Wildcards are great, and you can use “Host *” for everything.

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