-
Posts
38,330 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Gallery
Everything posted by Ace-Garageguy
-
Gas prices... how low will they go?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Harry P.'s topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
When someone has a special-purpose vehicle that's intended for a particular function, I agree...who cares about fuel mileage? That's not the primary concern. On he other hand, when someone commutes, ALONE, in a massively-huge shiny truck that never gets used for hauling anything other than its owner's butt, it's really pretty stupid. -
Auto ID #193 Finished.
Ace-Garageguy replied to otherunicorn's topic in Real or Model? / Auto ID Quiz
I don't know, and I don't think I WANT to know. -
I've seen lotsa armor and sci-fi models use it for exactly that.
-
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Nah...I jab myself in the eye with a sharp stick for fun. Self-flagellation is strictly for penance. -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
I've seen "mirrow" (is that even a word?) for mirror, "draw" for drawer, ink "pin", the non-word "marinaise" used for both marinate and mayonnaise, "garders" for garters, "hugh" for huge...these are all pretty common. -
1:24-1:25 scale battery cables.
Ace-Garageguy replied to om617's topic in Model Building Questions and Answers
I understand the issue with confusing measurements. Couple of problems though..."ignition wire" will most likely be intended to represent spark-plug wires, and it's simply too thin to look right for most battery cables. AWG means "American Wire Gauge" and refers to the diameter of the conductor inside the insulation, and the thickness of insulation can vary. Your best bet is to buy your wire based on outside-diameter....NOT AWG. Typical real-car battery cable OUTSIDE diameter is in the .4 to .5 inch range, or about 10 to 13mm. Divide by 24 or 25 to get the correct diameter for a model in 1/24 or 1/25 scale. Typical real-car spark-plug wires are in the 7mm to 12mm range, but 7 to 9.5 is most common. Sacle wires correctly representing this will be too small to look correct for battery cables. However, a lot of modelers disregard correct scale measurements, and end up with plug wires that look like long sausages, and battery cables that look like garden hoses. It'sup to you. -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Oh boy. Even followers of wielders of the Force aren't immune to the phenomenon. I saw one the other day going on and on about "lite savers". Then there was the TV talking head who kept referring to Mr. Solo as "Hans". When she was corrected by one of her co-blonds, she said "I thought it was plural". -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Pretty sure I've missed the space on occasion. I was just typing too fast, really. Honest. I'll go flog myself now. -
When a hobby goes too far ?
Ace-Garageguy replied to mk11's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
X2. Time passes unnoticed, all the stupid intrusive BS from the "real" world fades away, life is good...big cars or little cars. -
Eric Goodrich`s:: "IRON LUNG" - On the Workbench 2/8/16
Ace-Garageguy replied to John Teresi's topic in WIP: Model Cars
This should be worth watching. -
1:24-1:25 scale battery cables.
Ace-Garageguy replied to om617's topic in Model Building Questions and Answers
Go outside, open your hood, measure the diameter of the cables. Divide by 24 or 25, respectively. Late-model cars typically have pretty thin cabling to everything. Earlier cars, and 6-volt vehicles (and high-performance applications that need a lot of starting current, or have batteries mounted far from the engine) will typically use much heavier cables. -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
She probably found fame and fortune after releasing her "Coney Island Whitefish Cookbook", published by a bunch of pencil-pants-wearing delta-male hipsters who wouldn't recognize one if they saw it, and who have no need to engage in the ridiculously passe practice of "knowing anything at all about what you're talking about". Her first financial success was followed shortly thereafter by the best-selling "1001 Things To Do with Coney Island Whitefish", after which she took her new-found riches and moved to a more rural north (with several former members of her publishing house) where she's once again blogging to newcomers under the witty handle of "Ploughed in Poughkeepsie". Delish indeed, and guaranteed gluten-free. -
Thin white glue with water. Just about any recipe will work. All you need is for it to dry somewhat stiff...kinda like dried snot on a Kleenex.
-
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
-
Pinholes In My Resin Parts-HELP
Ace-Garageguy replied to 69NovaYenko's topic in Model Building Questions and Answers
I respectfully suggest you open up one of the "dimples", if it will open. Besides being flaws in the mold transferred to the part, as Art suggests, they may also be bubble-flaws in the part itself. In my own experience, "dimples" are sometimes depressions in the part-surface caused by underlying bubbles, where there's nothing to support the very thin surface membrane. The only fix is to dig them out, one by one, and fill. -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Well, if you want to get REAL technical, as far as I'm aware, the Bell X-2 had no "reaction-controls" (thrusters), and most likely, its main engine burned out before it achieved apogee. So to split hairs further, the 125.000+ altitude of this particular aircraft would have seen it approach a ballistic flight path immediately after engine shut-down, and before it re-entered atmosphere of sufficient density to allow the full return of control-authority. Yup. Kincheloe's record flight began with a trouble-free drop at an indicated airspeed of 225mph and at an altitude of 30,000 feet. Approximately six seconds later, the XLR25 was ignited, and the X-2 was pitched nose up and allowed to accelerate freely along its flight path. Propellant was exhausted at a pressure altitude of 104,000 feet. The X-2 then continued upward on a semi-- ballistic trajectory that took it four miles higher. After reaching the apex of its ascent, it stabilized in a gentle, nose-down attitude, and Kincheloe gingerly maneuvered it for the return glide to Edwards. The landing proved routine. From: http://www.456fis.org/BELL_X-2_STARBUSTER.htm -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Awesome !!! -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Right up there with "boss" is "big man", apparently a favored form of address used by panhandlers in several parts of the country to preface a request for a handout. -
Pinholes In My Resin Parts-HELP
Ace-Garageguy replied to 69NovaYenko's topic in Model Building Questions and Answers
Art...didn't you do a several-part article in the magazine on resin casting, mold making, etc., a few years back? -
Words/Phrases You're Sick Of Hearing?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Snake45's topic in The Off-Topic Lounge
Misuse of "your" and "you're". Same for "whose" and "who's". And "its" and "it's". The language has its share of inconsistencies, and it's sometimes not really obvious as to how to use your words right, or if you're going to make little mistakes that make you seem illiterate. Of course, who's to say whose place it is to correct mistakes in English, and why should anyone care anyway? -
Then there are the more obvious themes, including the futility of trying to "replace" someone that one has loved, and the possibility of deep human / intelligent-machine emotional relationships. If you like to learn, use what you've learned to think, and have any interest in AI (artificial intelligence), the link below is a pretty good overview of the development and problems associated with the technology. It's a jumping-off point for further reading and research on the subject. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_intelligence
-
This is a consumer version of the stuff used in bodyshops to bond plastics like PP and PE... http://www.loctiteproducts.com/p/sg_plstc/overview/Loctite-Plastics-Bonding-System.htm And check out Alibaba for rotsa kinds of frexible straws. High minimum order, but hey...repackage them and sell for 2000% markup as modeling specialties. http://www.alibaba.com/showroom/paper-drinking-straws-flexible.html
-
I liked the thing for its originality, its production values, and the story-line. All done on a very small budget. Different people will get different things from it, but for me, it's got a definite "hook". I see a subtle underlying theme about what kind of responsibility a human may have for the welfare of a robotic machine of human creation, assuming that machines can ever be self-aware and feel emotion...which I believe is entirely possible (talk to Mr. Kurzweil). Your results may vary.