Cleaned, polished, greased and fuel additive in the tank ready for winter storage. Can’t wait for next spring already.
Looking good Do you ever get condensation inside your garage over the winter? If so, how do you go about preventing it? The reason I ask is, I have a dry garage until the condensation inside it appears when the temps drop
went to a bass guitar convention and watched a couple of lectures - a real eye-opener. one of the speakers was Guy Pratt who related many funny stories.
Rode to Capel Le Ferne Battle of Britain memorial with other members of KAMG, to pay our respects to those who fell during the battle of Britain.
With short wet and cold nights meaning no after work golf, sorted out my winter activity space this week and now working good…just need a spin bike
@Chris The next thing you'll be running is a competition how many guitars can you fit into a 1970's Roller.
That’s what I figured so I caught the 10 minute train into New Street, I thought it might be nicer. How wrong can you be? It was awful, like a 1950’s motel made out of cardboard and wood chip in a crap area. I can’t understand why anyone would think it’s a good idea to spend billions on a train that gets there 20 minutes quicker.
Meaco DD8L junior dehumidifier. I phoned them up, tech advisor said that was the best one for garages. I fitted an 8mm pipe to vent the water outside, which will be fine until it freezes. I wrapped it in 15mm pipe insulation to try and help but fully expect it to freeze. Whereupon I think it should switch itself off.
Bought a new watch -trading in my two year old Seamaster 300 - for this PLANET OCEAN. What a cool name for a cool watch. Happy Days
The dehumidifier I use switches itself off when the the tank is full via a float switch I take it you’ve bypassed the tank with a length of tubing What I don’t understand is how will it detect a frozen pipe and know when to switch itself off?