Chaotic42
Lifer
That's 2g of each and my 2400 square foot basement still smells like thanksgiving. I have something like a kilo of it.How does it smell? I bet it's pretty strong.
That's 2g of each and my 2400 square foot basement still smells like thanksgiving. I have something like a kilo of it.How does it smell? I bet it's pretty strong.
So I massively overbuilt this thing, way more than in this pic, and embedded it into epoxy. I pulled a vacuum and it's only lost 5psi in a month. Not bad.Homemade Schlenk line to pull a vacuum and then add in argon.

I printed hangers for some of my battery tools and the battery's. It's handy being able to use the underside of a shelf.A Frankenstein variation of this:
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Something to store cordless drills, tools, and batteries. Mine is a bit taller...has 3 shelves spaced father apart, and made out of whatever scrap wood I could scrounge in the garage. A couple of the shelves are made from the "wings" of a 75 year old drop-leaf table, some parts are from a 20+ year old sheet of plywood that's been used for a couple different applications, some pieces of cedar, siding, etc. Fugly as hell...but it works.


My friend I work with is terrible at knots. He knows just enough to do the job. I try to teach him stuff, but he just doesn't get it. I guess it's the way his brain's wired. He's a fantastic climber though. When we work together, he's in the tree, and I do the ground stuff. It's the most efficient setup.I am horrendous at knot tying. Probably best I didn't follow my advisor's footsteps and go into knot theory. 😛
Looks like hyalite.Failed making water glass - I didn't use enough lye - and ended up with Sodium Metasilicate crystals, which look neat even though it's very caustic
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Please go into knot theory. I want to understand why cords of differing thickness always entangle whenever they come into proximity of each other. It's a field effect, contact isn't required to initiate entanglement.I am horrendous at knot tying. Probably best I didn't follow my advisor's footsteps and go into knot theory. 😛
Have Red send you some of his hair. Dwarf hair never fails.View attachment 135946
I was using some Samson Treemaster the other day to yard some logs. I knotted the rope to make an attachment, and couldn't get the knots out. Treemaster doesn't like giving up knots once it's loaded. It's a nasty gnarly line. Difficult to deal with in every respect, but it wears like iron.
I cut the knots out, and spliced eyes into the ends. I *can not* splice Treemaster worth a damn. Ugly splices, but they should hold, and the eyes will be useful.
The oak slab the stuff's on is from the MD champion white oak. I got to climb it a few years ago. Dead wood got cut out, and I kept some of it.
It really does. When I pulled this stuff out, I'd never seen it before and I did check it with UV just to see what would happen. No green 😛Looks like hyalite.
Dope with uranyl ions.It really does. When I pulled this stuff out, I'd never seen it before and I did check it with UV just to see what would happen. No green 😛

Regular bread recipe, but I made the dough and put it under +20 PSI of argon as it rested. Ended up making another 2 PSI or so of CO2 as it offgassed. I lowered the pressure over about 30 minutes and baked it as normal. It's considerably more sour than normal and has a much softer, fine texture. The GF was very skeptical, but said it's solidly better than normal. I may try something like +40 PSI next time.
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I've had it a week and it has been running non stop lol. Either toys for my kids or "3d printing stuff" like those above, and I even created a little tray in Tinkercad that we put our kids silverware in in our silverware drawer, as well as a piece to put behind our silverware tray so that it just puts something in the void of space that would make the tray slide back when you open the drawer.Ooh. I'll be curious to see how you like it. This might be the year I pull the trigger on a 3D printer.