CONTAINTERS, CHRISTMAS, AND A CENTRIFUGAL FAN I had a quick look back through my posts to see whether I've got a tradition of Christmas posts here, and I guess I sort-of do. Last year I was just grumpy with myself, and expressed my Christmas-eve self-loathing in 2021-12-24Stupid_Mistakes.txt, where the holidays just confounded my frustations by repelling me from the shops in town when I needed to buy something I'd left off my weekly shopping list. The previous year I got you all a present (oh how nice I am), in 2020-12-26Christmas_Conversions.txt. So I hope you liked your currency converter because I ain't getting you anything this year, I've been spending too much time at the computer as it is. Oh and back in 2019 I told you all the meaning of life (2019-12-25.1The_Meaning_of_Life.txt)! Plus that of art as well, for that matter (2019-12-25.2A_Definition_of_Art.txt). Boy, the weight of my content here has really lightened over the years. Anyway this wasn't even online yet then, I was still establishing whether it was worth the trouble, so it only left the spinning platters of the ~25+ year old HDD inside this old PC and flew out into the gophernet a week later on new year's eve (2019-12-31Finally_on_the_Net.txt). I don't know whether I mentioned it before (it's not like I'm going to wade through all that crap again just to find out), but I guess you can figure from all that, I'm not much of a traditional Christmas person. Besides not being religious, the whole idea of people travelling across the country on the one day to be together strikes me a extremely impractical and dangerous on a logistical level. I'm sure it made sense back when people lived close to family because they didn't really travel, but if you have to go great distances, surely the day when everyone else is doing that is the worst time possible. But then again the whole emotional side of Christmas is something I've pretty well lost touch with anyway. It's a good excuse to make themed electronics gizmos to give to my mother (who scarcely understands them) as presents, but at best I see it all as a cringe-worthy game that everyone, once a year, has been coerced into playing, first by religion and then by retailers. Still, my own sales figures show that I benefit from it a lot myself, so why should I complain? Except that the flood of late international parcel complaint emails is now imminent, oh what a joyful time of year [rolls eyes]. But then I have at least given myself some joy this Chrismas, because I bought myself a present! A big one too, and in a way it was a bit of a surprise. Behold, a 1983-vintage refridgerated (minus the refrigerator) shipping container, complete with some free, umm, artwork: gopher://aussies.space/I/%7efreet/photos/malthouse/container_received.jpg You see I set out looking for some supports to rest an old truck tray on, so that I could cut a hole in the middle, build a ramp, then drive my car up onto it and use it like an inspection pit, except wihout the hassles of digging a hole in the rocky soil and having it fill with water (plus I eventually want to build a shed above and store the car there, out of reach from all the mice that keep eating it). So last week I want back to that old brewery place which last got me pondering about epoxy-sealed timber in the ideas section (2022-11-22Epoxy_Sealing_Timber.txt), and looked at a particularly solidly-built work platform thing that people ride in while getting lifted up by a crane, such as for window cleaning. It turned out to be built at exactly the dimensions of the Jag's wheelbase, so that was perfect. Then I spent a few hours wandering around collecting other bits and bobs to buy (first time I've bought VHS tapes from inside a rusting/rotting 1950s bus), and taking some photos (although I was a bit too distracted, so they're not very good): gopher://aussies.space/1/%7efreet/photos/malthouse/ Then I decided to buy this shipping container: gopher://aussies.space/I/%7efreet/photos/malthouse/container_there.jpg You see I've long wanted somewhere to set up a darkroom, and the old greenhouse that I was going to patch up is pretty beyond it now. I'd thought of a shipping container before, but they get very hot in the sun so I'd end up only being able to work in there when the weather was right. Plus they tend to be too expensive for me, and arranging pick-up/delivery is a further complication. So this one is insulated (the refrigeration unit has even been replaced by an air-conditioner, which might work), priced at $2000 (better than most regular uninsulated containers (although they're usually newer)), and it turned out the bloke who owns the place had something they wanted a tilt-tray truck to pick up from out in my direction, so he'd have the truck drop the container off on its way for $200. Plus the work platform fit inside it, so I didn't have to get my father to pick that up later on his (smaller) truck. I paid a deposit and agreed to have it dropped of in a couple of days, but I was a little sceptical given the looming Christmas holidays at the end of the week. Still, the next morning I cleared a space, and at lunch time he called to ask if it was OK to drop it off that afternoon! So almost within 24 hours it was here, complete with a work platform within its stainless-steel interior - that's pretty good! I can't even get a 500g parcel delivered from that city to me by the next day (even when it's not before Christmas). The truck driver turned out to be deaf, so that made things a little interesting, but with aid of some hand waving it ended up where I wanted it fine. Now of course the real work starts, firstly water-proofing. In contrast to the stainless steel inside, the outside walls are fiberglass-coated plywood, and unfortunately that coating has suffered some punctures over the last fourty years. The side in the first pic is its good one, the other has a number of gashes where water has been getting in and causing the side to swell out a little. Worse, the bathtub that was on the roof turned out to be covering a tear in the fiberglass up there. So now I need to seal up the holes, and eventually build a slanted roof over the top of it to deflect the water away entirely. Annoyingly it rained the night after it was delivered, so I've been waiting for it to dry out before sealing up the holes. I cut out pieces of galvanised sheet steel to cover them, and, as it was hot and sunny on Christmas day, this morning I was going to screw them down with a ton of silicone sealant between, but there was a dew so got it all got wet again. Too hot during the day today (the weather has gone from barely getting past 20degC, to a looming 39degC peak tomorrow, within just a couple of weeks), so I'll do that this evening. Christmas day, while the container was drying (only to get wet again), was alright. The arrival of some warm weather means I can embrace my nudist tendencies which have been so far restrained by the cold, so after doing some gardening (which for me just means clearing areas around the house to make a fire break) I got to be naked all day, which is one more plus of spending Christmas alone (although I suppose naked with a pretty woman would be better :) ). Normally I have some project or other that I work on, but it took a while for me to settle on one this time. I ended up with this 3D-printed centrifugal fan design that I printed many years ago but could never quite get to fit together properly (I scaled it down and some tollerances became too tight, plus the ABS warped a bit). It's one of those things that I've gone back to over and over, tinkered with a little, decided it's almost workable, but never quite figured out the plan for assembling it (mounting the motor was another complication). So yesterday I messed about with it for a few hours, cutting bits away, trying different adjustments of screws, fixing the motor when one of the electrical connections inside annoyingly broke, adding spacers to counter the warp of the housing base. In the end I had a terrible-looking, but more or less functional, little 3D printed air blower. Do I need an air blower? Well I did a few years ago, but actually not anymore. Still I was rather excessively pleased with myself for finally assembling something that had been kicking around in the "too hard" basket for so long, and actually I still am. If nothing else it's a nice demonstration of something (particularly the slanted vanes of the fan itself) that would be really difficult to make without 3D printing. Well, ignoring the fact that I also found it really difficult to make _with_ 3D printing. Now I guess I'll go and 3D-print something else that I can't assemble. Actually I want to try printing lithophanes in glow-in-the-dark plastic to see whether they work in their own glow instead of with light shining from behind. - The Free Thinker