“Three on the Tree” (for car enthusiast or those of a certain age)

Posted By on February 2, 2021

ThreeOnTheTree

Earlier in the years, this image of a “Three on the Tree” manual column shifter-pattern was tweeted by a automotive friend and it triggered memories for me. Younger people nowadays might not even remember manual shifting on the column with a clutch .. or for that matter ever shifting a “Four on the Floor” … or even manually shifting and using a clutch no matter how many gears!  It brought me back to my life even before learning to drive … or should I say, BEFORE I was really suppose to be driving.

When I was 13-15, I worked with a friend who’s dad was a Lake Erie commercial fisherman. We were paid to pick up dead fish from their holding ponds using an old pickup truck on private property. We would pile up the dead “grass carp” at the edge of the pond (they only shipped “live fish” in aeriated tanks big city fish markets .. and they were “carp” … fish we never or would ever eat) and so the young boys had to keep the ponds clean and bury the 79-nova-driver-s-manual-shiftdead fish using an old manual shift “Three on the Tree” truck to haul them around.

ThreeOnTreeTruck

I know you are asking – yes it smelled, but just as with cleaning manure out of barns, working in dog kennels, printing companies (chemicals), etc., you do get use to the smell. (the above truck is not the one from the ponds, but close to what I remember) 

My second memory was still before I was 16, although may have been very close to driving. I worked on a farm (age 15-16) and again their “more modern” 1970s pickup truck had a 3-speed on the column manual transmission … with the “normal” full width bench seat … universal in trucks for those days. (again, not the truck below but similar)

Chevy1969_C20Pickup

So the question that came to mind for me was … “when was the last column-shift manual transmission car sold in the United States?”

If you ask a bunch of nitpicky car-history freaks to name the very last car you could buy new in North America with a three-on-the-tree, you’ll get a wide range of answers, delivered with varying levels of vehemence. The main candidates will boil down to the Chevy Nova, the Dodge Aspen, and the Ford Fairmont (and the badge-engineered siblings of those cars). The final new truck you could buy with a three-on-the-tree is another subject, but we’ll cut to the chase by letting you know it was a 1987 GM product.

BTW … here is a great article in Autoweek

Music Monday: The Cranberries – “Linger” (Irish Alt Rock)

Posted By on February 1, 2021

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What goes around, comes around … and spins around

Posted By on January 31, 2021

This past Christmas, Megan ordered a fancier turntable for Taylor, which arrived this past week. He was excited set up his gift and shared the photos. It looks nice.

TurntableRoomTurntableOpen

It is hard to believe millennials have gravitated to vinyl record albums and turntables in this century, but like my friend Mark, my son Taylor enjoys listening to music on vinyl record albums. Good figure? 

In Mark’s situation, it is likely the nostalgia in collecting old record albums and then listening to every imperfection … just like we did in the old days.  I’m not quite sure why those who grew up on CD, mp3 and iPods like it?  Well, it is interesting seeing Taylor and his friend Mike “listening to vinyl records” … Hm, I wonder if it plays 45s or better yet, 78s

Woodworking ideas: Workshop dust collection improvements

Posted By on January 30, 2021

My basement woodworking shop is a dust-making mess in our house, but there isn’t much I can do about it now other than to improve how I collect and filter and keep dust from gravitating into the furnaces cold air returns and upstairs.

In our previous house in Hudson Ohio, I was fortunate to have a “large” front portion of a heated garage for my smallish workshop (still attached to the house), FilterForJetDustControl201002but after moving to ShopsmithChipcollectorCincinnati with a full basement, I decided to set up part of it as my workshop. Over the years, I’ve added more power tools and finished off the rest ofHandsawsFromPast201221 basement, but still find that wood dust is nearly impossible to control.

I added a Jet air cleaner which helps …  and to use my 30 year old “smallish” Shopsmith high volume chip collector … but still, cutting, routing and sanding dusts goes everywhere. Thankfully clean up with a broom on the tile floor is fairly easy and a regular changing of filters in the air cleaner and furnaces helps a lot … but I should be able to do more.

Craftsman10inRadialArmSawRemoved190106Hitachi12inMiterSaw190122

I built a hood and vacuum setup for my Hitachi Miter Saw just like the one I made for my now retired radial arm saw (photos above from 2-years ago), but it really doesn’t help much. So after watching this video, am archiving and thinking maybe I could do something similar? (BTW, the YouTube video outtakes at the end are the best part!)

Tech Friday: Our small Echo Dot on the Home Theater ceiling

Posted By on January 29, 2021

Now that the wiring in the basement is no longer laying on the floor in order to feed the kitchen television cable extender and ceiling repairs are finished up, I’ve been cleaning up and moving things back into the home theater and game room areas. With some fresh paint everything looks pretty good, so I installed our original Amazon Echo Dot on the ceiling below the CeilingEchoHomeTheater210119semi-hidden projector for the display. After a quick test, Alexa is doing her thing with the quirky personalize programmed voice routines.

Surprisingly the small Echo Dot on the lower basement ceiling does a pretty good job even though a full-sized Echo would have been better for the room . Perhaps it’s all the extra insulation in the walls?CeilingMountEcho210118

Archive: Professional Brenda and the Hawk Migration #TBT

Posted By on January 28, 2021

BrendaProfessional1997Family_HawkMigration_StJoePeninsulaFL_Oct1997

When searching for a photo of my 1996 Toyota 4Runner (never found one), I stumbled across a couple personal photos from 1997 and will archive them for today’s Throwback Thursday #TBT. StJosephpeninsula

One of “professional Brenda” dressed for the office in 1990’s style (ha!) and the other of our family on an October Hawk Migration birding trip to St Joseph Peninsula State Park on the Florida panhandle. I was on the Audubon board back then and we as a family spent more time hiking and going on outings. In retrospect, those were great years and very good times together as a family. If you are not making time to do outdoor things as a family … don’t put it off … time flies by way too fast (and no … playing Angry Birds together doesn’t count).

While I’m at it, I’ll include this previously used animated gif from 1982/2013 (it flips) that I had forgotten about but spotted when doing some computer housekeeping.

Do all grandparents love their grandchildren as much as I do?

Posted By on January 27, 2021

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Bubblicious, but I am not talking about bubble gum popping

Posted By on January 26, 2021

All I can think about are the stock market “bubbles” BubbliciousGumfrom the past. I’d love to believe the upward trend we’ve seen this past years is genuine and built on an appropriate foundation, but suspect as most know, it is being built on “hope” and “stimulus dollars.”

Now that is not to say that certain companies are not doing well and going gangbusters due to less competition due to the pandemic, but overall, most Americans (and people around the world) are sitting tight, earning less and hoping for brighter days ahead. They aren’t necessarily being productive or adding to a countries GDP, it’s growth and wealth.

The good news is that it does look as if most people are ready to recover when the vaccines begin to slow the Coronavirus spread (no sign of that yet). The questionable part is just how much damage to society’s fabric did COVID19 do?

Part of progress is learning to do things more efficiently, and we have for the most part. Unfortunately just as with automation, computer efficiency and most any advancement in the past … fewer workers will be needed. Some questions are, will we need expensive commercial real estate, malls and stores, office towers or all the businesses that support them and the infrastructure? Is business travel really the most efficient way to be productive? If it becomes unnecessary, what happens to all those employees and the cities they once worked in?

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Music Monday: Lexington Lab Band does 1971 Chicago song

Posted By on January 25, 2021

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A Sunday filler post for those willing to pray for our country

Posted By on January 24, 2021

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"if my people, who are called by my name, shall humble themselves and pray and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land."

2 Chronicles 7:14

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog