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Episode: 3647
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Title: HPR3647: Weekend projects
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3647/hpr3647.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:47:28
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,647 for Tuesday the 26th of July 2022.
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Today's show is entitled Weekend Projects.
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It is hosted by Rosen, and is about 17 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Rosen rambles about some Weekend Projects.
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Hi, this is Rowan, and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today I thought I'd just jot down some Weekend Projects I've had, or well, started out
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as this Weekend, but it'll end up spanning a couple years at this point, although they
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are all pretty much related.
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So we'll kick this off.
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We have an outside patio furniture, and the table has the cut out so you can have a sun
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umbrella to provide you some shape.
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And when we got this table and outside furniture set, actually, in the right before the
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lockdown on the pandemic, I guess, in 2019, and we had that first year.
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It came with an umbrella, but it was in really bad shape.
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So we purchased one, and we didn't, you know, spend a whole lot of money on it.
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That was a little over $100 US dollars.
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And it was fine.
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It worked good until the pulley system basically broke on it.
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So you have, like, on these umbrellas, they have a crank that then pulls it tight into
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cable, or loosens a cable that then expands and contracts the umbrella.
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Well, I guess, you know, in the ever driving to cost down, they go to cheaper components.
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So the pulley is made out of, like, the actual pulley is made out of, like, plastic.
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Well, at some point, I guess the plastic on the side of the pulley that the channel that
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held the cable failed, and then the cable would get pulled down beside the pulley, and
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you could see it really couldn't crank it up or down anymore.
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And I tried to, like, pop the cable back up onto the pulley, and I just couldn't do it.
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And it was like, there, I didn't see any way to take it apart without, like, destroying
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it to actually fix it and put in maybe more decent parts.
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So this year, we bought a new umbrella.
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And I looked online, and I, you know, I was like, well, let me pay for something a little
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more expensive.
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I mean, it was less than $200 US dollars.
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There wasn't a whole lot more expensive.
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And then I also went instead of a sort of more traditional, I think it's octagonal or
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shape.
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I went with a rectangular shape with the thought that maybe that would provide better
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sun coverage, because it would cover the whole table.
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But anyway, we'll bet more on that later.
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So we got this.
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It was nice.
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It is nice, but I came home.
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Uh, that's like, I guess it's been a couple of weeks at this point ago.
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And my girlfriend works from home, and so she had been a nice day, so she was out and
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she put the umbrella up while I come home.
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And it's like bent across the table.
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And it's like, well, what happened?
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And she's like, I was just sitting here, and a gust of wind came and caught it.
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And it pushed, you know, because it's coming up through the table with a little circular,
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it got, I guess, pressed it at the ankle, at the right angle, and it was strong enough.
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And it wasn't like it was like storm weather or anything.
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It was just a gust of wind, and it basically folded the pipe in half.
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And almost, it didn't cut, like, completely break it, but I mean, it was basically pinched
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together and split in places.
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So it was very frustrating.
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Of course, then I look at it, and of course it's like maybe 16th inch, like white metal tubing.
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So I guess at a certain level, I wasn't surprised, but I mean, come on.
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It's an umbrella.
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It's going to have to deal with a certain amount of wind.
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But anyway, to my point, I was very frustrated.
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And I was like, I do not want to buy a new one.
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I probably should still go look to see if it's under warranty to get it replaced.
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But then I'm going to repair this feeling overwhelmed me.
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And so I took a couple of weeks thinking about it and trying to find time on the weekend
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to get to it.
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And this weekend I got to it.
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So my solution initially was I broke it in half, like, at the joint, and started push
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the reformed the crimps.
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So it was more or less circular again.
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And my idea was to find a solid dowel rod that was big enough to just sort of slide in
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there.
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And the tube at that point is about an inch and a half wide, sorry, to our non-imperial
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and it's users, I don't remember exactly how many millimeters that is.
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And I went to the various big box hardware stores around and the wideest I could find
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was an inch and a quarter, not an inch and a half.
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So I just broke down.
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I was like, OK, I can make this work.
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So I bought some brass wood screws to go into it, both the top and the bottom.
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I think you're figuring, well, maybe I can just get this tight enough and it'll work.
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So I came home and, well, yesterday I was working on this and it worked pretty good.
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I got it in there that it was still crimped at the top enough that it was a smooth tight
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connection there.
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And then with the screws, it seemed to have a pretty good stability.
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But once I put the um, this piece that I'm fixing basically is the bottom half of the
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umbrella and it just locks in place.
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So it was like an extension tube so that I guess they could ship it in two pieces.
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So it only had to be like five foot long instead of ten foot long.
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So this part, it broke right at the top of that bottom extension, like maybe five inches
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below it.
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So there wasn't a lot of dowrod up at the top part.
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So when I put it back in with the umbrella all together, it would be fine, but I figured
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the first strong wind, I didn't know if it would break, but it would probably end up
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at some weird canted angle with just not perfect and it would just drive me nuts anyway
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is looking at it.
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So I went back to a local hardware store that was just up the road, just a smaller sort
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of corner mom and pop shop.
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And just was talking to the guy asking him what he thought might work and he ultimately
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showed me this, it's basically an epoxy bandage and it was advertised for fixing an axe
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handle.
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So it's just like a wrap that's soaked in a, you know, epoxy with a resin in it.
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And so I came back home and you just basically soak it for five or ten seconds in water
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and you wrap it tight about two inches above and below the break and then you try to make
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sure you wrap as many times as you can around the break itself.
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And then it hardens in about 15 minutes and it makes a very strong bond and it works
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perfectly.
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And actually the color almost matches the color of the pole.
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So I don't even, it's not even like it really stands out on that much.
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So I was very happy actually with that repair.
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So I think between having the dowel rod in it and then this extra strength and rigidity
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at the break, the original break should let us keep using this for a while until I break
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down.
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Next one I buy if I buy one is definitely going to be like a solid, I don't know if I
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go to a hard wood one, I mean I'm probably going to pay more money than I really want
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to, but I'm not buying anymore cheaper aluminum ones.
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I mean it's too many crappy parts that you can't fix easily.
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So anyway, so that was the start of my weekend projects.
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For this weekend, this is June 26, 2022 right now.
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My other project is, we have our girls are into basketball and we had purchased a basketball,
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like an outside basketball free standing unit that actually has adjustable height so you
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could change it from like, I think about six foot up to about 10 foot in height for
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the basketball hoop.
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And we bought that actually, we found it on eBay or not eBay, but Craigslist, somebody
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was had this things like over 20 years old at this point.
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They had got it when their kids were little and now they were off to university and I guess
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he just didn't, you know, feel like he needed it in his driveway anymore.
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So we snagged that, which $20 is great although I thought when we got there I took my tools
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and we'd just like take it apart and you know, fit it in the back, we have like a little
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hatchback figured that it should, it should break down because I'd seen boxes of new ones,
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you know, it would fit.
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But we got there and the guys like, you're probably going to want a bigger truck because
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this has been sitting outside for 20 years and I don't know if you're going to get it
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apart.
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And I looked and like all the screws are kind of bolts are rusted and I would have been,
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I probably there hours if I got it apart without like destroying things.
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So that turned into like a half a day adventure going and renting a 10 foot box truck and
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going back to his house.
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So probably overall it was $100 purchase but I like the fact that it's, you know, recycled
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and now we'll get to use it.
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So we've got that set up sort of hanging over the edge of our backyard into the alleyway
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and it's sort of turned into a neighborhood things our neighbors have even younger kids.
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So you know, we tell them that they can just come adjust the height whenever they want
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to and the kids can play and so we'll come home and they'll be out there shooting basketballs
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and stuff and then our girls will go and shoot so it's all good, it's fun.
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So that was, that was yet another weekend activity that was a couple months ago.
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But what brought the basketball on is they were playing basketball about a month ago and
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we have a chain length fence sort of the backboard, well, it's not the backboard but that's
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like what they're shooting, you know, towards and apparently the ball actually landed right
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on one of the tops of the chain, I don't know if it's a pole, it hits something sharp
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enough to poke puncture the basketball.
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So I've been trying to fix the puncture and I've tried super glue the first time that
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I was about, I don't know, a week or so ago and that never really worked and almost fixed
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it but I kept getting air bubbles so yesterday while I was at the hardware store I picked
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up some rubber cement and so I've been trying to do that but I just don't know.
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I mean, we didn't pay a whole lot for these basketballs and maybe $15 US dollars so I
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may just end up buying another one trying to avoid that but so far fixing a puncture without
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going over like, you know, 50% of the cost to replace the ball is starting to get hard.
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The only other thing I've seen on YouTube is people find it's like, I don't know, it's
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not quite the same as the like the goop that you can buy to like inflate your car tires
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if you get a puncture but something similar I saw somebody do for like a soccer ball
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or something and they would just put this stuff in it, roll it around and then it's basically
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gives a coating on the inside. That probably would work better but I just haven't seen anything
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like I said that you can buy in a small enough cheap enough quantity to, I mean, I guess this
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could happen again but I don't know. So I'm going to mess with this, I do. So this morning
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I tried again with the rubber cement and I think yesterday I was just too impatient not giving
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enough time before I put pressure on it and so I went back this morning and just sort of put
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the glue on it let it sort of get the rubber or soft and kind of worked it back into it and now
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I'm going to let that set up and then the other thing I was trying yesterday is I have bike patches
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so I'm going to cut that I cut down so they weren't quite so big although that may have just been
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an issue so I may try like like gluing them back on just to give it a little extra support. We'll see
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so that's project two I guess three two well two with the basketball and the umbrella were the
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big things yesterday and actually getting this one for a nurture was a weekend labor of love
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on Valentine's Day weekend in 2019 as I said that's when we got it um we this was actually a
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free set it's pretty nice lawn furniture it's like a I don't know a big table I mean you can get
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it came with one two three four five six six chairs so it's like a full dining room table size
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and then it also came with a little side table and two stools the only thing that we had to do
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was go get it which you know we were happy to do the problem was it was on the porch the third
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floor porch of a townhome and that particular February we just had like a snow and ice storm so
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there was about three inches of snow and ice covering the the porch and the table so we had to
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like go up there and clear that off and then the house of the townhome was in like an older one
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probably built I don't know like 1800s but basically what that means is it was not a very wide
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house to begin with and the steps were new but still like fairly steep and they had put in
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floating steps so like which means they basically didn't have like backing so you could see through
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them so that was a freaking my girlfriend out so she we worked well together she cleaned off the
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table and would like stage things but I trudged up and down three flights of steps carrying all the
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various pieces of the furniture to the the back carport where we could stage it to then put in our car
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so that was a was a fun it was a fun Valentine's Day and it did get me out of having to think of
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what gift to get but overall so these all sort of tie together to a degree that's kind of
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those have been my weekend projects nothing too exciting but I just it does drive me nuts like
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the the pole thing and then I didn't want to throw yet another umbrella away because of you know
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cheap parts it just felt wrong so I'm glad that worked out I would highly recommend if you've got to
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like fix a you know broken tubing or an axe handle for whatever reason that this wrap
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I wish I don't have the packaging in front of me I can't know what it's called exactly but um
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I'm sure you can find it at the hardware store but it's just uh you just you know dip it in the
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water wrap it around and it sets strong in 15 minutes and then you're off whacking at things or
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blocking the sun or whatever you're trying to do with it uh anyway that's enough of my rambling
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for now uh thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio you have been listening to Hacker Public
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Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself
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if you ever thought of recording podcast you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it
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means hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com the internet archive and
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