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FotonDrv

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Posts posted by FotonDrv

  1. 3 hours ago, Bruce Pearson said:

    Thanks Mac! It was a lot of driving but we had fun and really lucked out on the weather.

    On return leg of your next tripto Yellowstone you might want to stop at Holei in the Ground in central Oregon.  It is about the size of Meteor Crater in Az.  We have camped there and pursued other hobbies using that big hole.

    This was taken at the rim of the hole in November several years ago.  We were visiting a friends nearby ranch and stayeddown at the rim of the hole so we could use its good natural backstop.

    Google Earth has a photo taken during the dry summer. 

    0E9235B1-1BC4-4E89-9BC6-9E5FF24FFF9F.jpeg

    • Like 1
  2. 1 hour ago, tony b said:

    That was a fair amount of smoke you had going there, FotonDrv. How'd it come out?

    Very well!  Nice smoky flavor and still very moist.  A lot of that cloud was steam and drippings when I opened the lid, but I always try to get enough smoke to exit the temp probe holes because that is grill level.

    that was a 350f cook.  

  3. I did make them, by making a 1”thick plywood template of the wing shape and then perfectly covering that with cardboard.  I clamped the copper to the templates onto a work table then used a ballpeen hammer to make the dents.  I flipped the plywood over and used a new piece of cardboard for the other wing.  My only regret was I should have used lighter gauge copper.

    • Like 1
  4. 2 minutes ago, BonFire said:

    Darn that looks good, was trying to make out what finish was on your side tables...looks like copper in that last photo, then realised its the reflection on the stainless.

    I really can't wait :cool:

    It is hammered copper covers for the stainless steel and teak.

     

  5. The 32 is really the way to go.  I have cooked on original kamados (pre-Big Green Egg) and California Kamados (1980's vintage) for years but getting the 32KK has been a revelation in cooking.  Big and heavy (rolls easily) yes, but as a disabled veteran of 72 yrs of youth I still love it.

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    • Like 2
  6. 10 minutes ago, DennisLinkletter said:

    I got thrown off that forum because after my post was erased I asked if they were now censoring my posts?

    Thought is was a pretty honest interpretation of the events that occurred..  LOL

    Yea a forum about all Kamados.. er I mean Kamado Joes!  

    That is sort of a pond scum move on their part!  Truth is not always appreciated but the way in which it is dealt tells all. 

    • Like 1
  7. 1 hour ago, Bruce Pearson said:

    Foton I took a trip around the world back in 1966. Went to 21 different countries met lots of wonderful people 

    That’s when air travel was a pleasure and you actually got silverware in the early 60’s late 50’s. 

    As to the dual damper system i rarely play with them, just run them wide open and shut them to kill the fire.  If i was trying to keep a low slow fire i might stop them dowm and regulate with only the large aperture damper. 

    The top damper is what i use the most. 

  8. 2 hours ago, MacKenzie said:

    FotonDrv, that was a very interesting read, thanks for posting it. I love your friends sense of humour.:) 

    Jack is a very calm fellow, as you would expect an explosives expert to be.  His other hobby is filming race car right down on the track as close as he can get.

    Another buddy of mine was EOD in Vietnam and he really is the epitome of calm.  It takes a lot to get his adrenaline going.  He was one of 6 Marines that I met that were in the ordnance section on the flight line in DaNang loading bombs, and on occasion defusing them if they failed to drop off the jets when on a bomb run.  That would be pretty scary!  He told me of an incident where he was asked to defuse a bomb on a jet that was still hanging on one of the 2 toggles and sitting on the flight line a long way from the hangars.

    • Like 1
  9. 4 hours ago, Bruce Pearson said:

    Funny you Say that I haven’t flown for a long time and probably will not do any flying in the near future. Like you say too much of a hassle going to the airport.

    I have been as far east as Italy and as far west as Vietnam, south to Panama and north to Alaska and it is possible to have just as much fun here in the USA and drive to locations of your choice.  There are some great hotels so drive an economy car (I used my Mini Cooper S) and see America, she is an amazing country and if you want to broaden your horizons use the car north and south of the border (going south you might need armor plate).

    I set off metal detectors because of retained shrapnel so I have photos of xrays on my phone.

     

     

  10. On 2/1/2018 at 4:56 AM, Bruce Pearson said:

    When I move around I clank now LOL

    You must be fun to watch going through an airport security line!  I get beeped, wanded and swabbed to the extend that I no longer go flying.

    I had a hobby that involved explosives and it is pretty hard to convince the average TSA person that such hobbies exist.  Should have heard the commotion that was created by one of our club members that controls the powder magazine for a major timber company since he was their licensed blaster.  When 9/11 happened the BATF tried calling him, but he was off doing something else.  The 3rd message they left on his machine went something lioke this; "Jack, if you do not respond to this were are coming to find you", which he was listening to when they drove up in his driveway.  After a thorough interrogation and a trip to the magazine to inspect it and account for all the explosives they took him back home and were leaving when he calmly said, "I don't know why you were so nervous about all that other stuff, what about the stuff under the sink?".  Needless to say that got their attention so he demonstrated what a proper mixing of grocery store chemicals was capable of doing.  He now flies all over the world giving lectures about I.E.D's for the Feds.  His stories of the TSA are amusing at minimum.

    Remember that shoe bomber the Feds caught after he tried lighting his shoes in flight?  We got a demonstration of the compound and its effectiveness and believe me that a 1/4" thick insole in his shoes would have brought down an airplane.  What was demonstrated to us was a 1/4" x 2" x2" , like a pat of butter, chunk laid behind a hill 100 yds away from us.  When it went off it ruffled my shirt....  I was a weapons track driver in Vietnam and we handled a lot of thing that went bang and this compound was as good or better than anything we had although it was not as stable as ours.

    I steer clear of airports...

     

    • Like 3
  11. 1 hour ago, Bruce Pearson said:

    Hey Fonton dub  how’s that shoulder doing? Better I hope. 

    It is a bit better Bruce, thanks for asking.  Still a work in progress.  Now if the knees hold up I will be golden for a few minutes :)

    • Like 1
  12. On 1/28/2018 at 6:22 PM, Bruce Pearson said:

    I have been just adjusting my temp by the top vent

    I think you might get more smoke down onto the grill by using the bottom vents wide open and the top to choke the draft.  Look at the smoke coming out of the thermal probe plug holes (the little holes that are not filled in the center of the rubber plug), those plugs are down near the main grill surface.

     

  13. Holy cow Dennis!  Spectacular photos but truly a health disaster.  I would bet the acid air would scar your lungs so take it easy to say the least.  My torn meniscus and torn rotator cuff are nothing compared to what you are facing.  And when you got back to the west coast you had smoke from forest fires.  All we need is a volcanic eruption on the west coast again to complete the ring of fire.

    We truly hope the New Year is a healthier one for you and your family.  get well soon.

  14. Yes, intentionally weak.  Not positioned to be able to get bolt cutters on it but a torch would defeat it.  The lock in the photo was switched to a more robust one once Icould source one.

    the doggy is number 6, the two previous ones are pictured here with an ex girlfriend while on a walk.

     

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  15. 12 hours ago, Tyrus said:

    Nice friendly neighbors. Yep, two German shepherds should be adequate. I hope things have mellowed for you now, paradise is hard to find.

    Yep, paradise is indeed elusive :-) , I currently have an easier life but much condensed going from 20 acres to 1/4 acre and a much more noisy, urban life.  Only 1 GSD now, not 2, who is a great alarm system and a continual source of entertainment and companionship for my wife and me.

     

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  16. 46 minutes ago, MacKenzie said:

    Foton, you have such interesting neighbours. They will keep you on your toes. :) 

    They WERE, we moved because of my deteriorating health and need for better healthcare than a hangnail clinic.  A few of the neighbors knew me well enough to know I was an Army combat veteran and liked me, the rest thought there was a crazy person living up there and it was best to not mess around with that person who lived there; possibly a correct assumption.  Of all my immediate neighbors I was the only one to get any permits for anything so the neighbors could not complain about what I was doing on this property.

    This is the compound I built.  It was possible to travel east 35 miles, north 90 miles and south 6 miles without hitting another road.  2 miles west was a paved road and a general store.

     

    Previous Home_2.jpg

    • Like 1
  17. Tyrus, there was a very steepslope, more of a drop off, on the hinge end and there was a corresponding uphill grade on the latch end.  It was a logging road built around the early 1900’s to haul logs to steam powered high lead logging equipment.  The home site was an old landing site for ferrying logs in the air to the railhead 2 miles downhill.   A motorcycle could go around on the foot path or be dragged under the gate but the biggest deterrent from that was myself and my 2 german shepherds.  

    The community warranted a secure awareness and that was proven many times of the 20+ years i lived there withe a neighbor (a college professor) who murdered his wife and chopped off her head and left it a mile away.  Byanother neighbor whose wife chased him around the home and property blowing holes in everything with a shotgun, the other neighbors shooting at a person who was on his property trying to steal pot, which was illegal to grow at the time.  Security was essential in such a seemingly bucolic setting, and when first seen it lulled you into a very tranquil complacency until it hit the fan

    This was the landing site.

     

    19F98B35-DD05-4054-99EE-1B7ECBD3DCEB.jpeg

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