ASSORTED THOUGHTS Hi internet, I've been a little quiet here lately compared to the regular flow of phlog posts over the last few months. Actually I've generally been feeling fairly contented, all this month and even earlier. Not for any good reason, I haven't even stopped finding things to try and fix on the Jag (I've been at that all this long weekend in fact), and I'm still quite sexually frustrated, although the unique event of meeting some real life girls at the school reunion didn't send me quite as obsessed as I feared. Increasingly I'm thinking that my next project might be attempting to implement my big website idea. I don't know exactly what I want from it, just a stab at making lots of money really, so I can keep on living like I do, or so I can retire young to my own private island, or somewhere in between. Or maybe I'm just bored, in my own way. Wow I must be in a weird mood, I seem to have condensed everything I had to say into one paragraph. By my normal standards I should have a 800x600 screen-full of text by now. Well I'm sure I can pad it out some more, can't let you get away that lightly reading one of my posts... I've almost finished Ghost Towns of Australia. Researching what's happened to them since is quite interesting, although sometimes they're described so elgantly in the book that it's nicer just to think of them as they were then in the 50/60s. I feel I'm quite the sort to end up one of the last residents in some of them, staking their claim at the furthest fringe of society. Perhaps I'd be happier at that than as a tech millionare, but really I want to be both, maybe just to add another contradiction to my personality, as if I haven't collected enough of them already. Yep, I want to be the Howard Hughs of the outback. Speaking of aircraft innovation, HackADay had an article about airships that made me think I really should finish writing up my airship idea for the ideas section that I left unfinished right at the start. But I also started making it way too long and detailed. Well here's the short version: Lift problem - hydrogen goes Hindenburg, Helium is too scarce - solution: Build a big 3D printer capable of printing an extremely strong, light, air-tight material in an intricate honey-comb sort of structure, and put it in a huge vacuum chamber. If the material is strong enough and light enough, the printed structures would actually float when exposed to the air - someone proved it was at least theoretically possible. Then just print the structural parts of the airship with that. Control problem - Wind blows them all over the place - solution: for inter-continental travel have them lower submersible out-riggers into the ocean, below the waves where the water is calmer. These are slim structures but contain motors and fins like a submarine (I know they've got a proper term for the latter things on subs, but I can't think of it). They connect to the airship by cables and spread out in a triangular configuration using hydrofoils to impart latteral and downward force. The result is a stabiliser anchored in the sea which follows under the airship to help it resist the force of wind and tow it along from the water. Even though this adds resistance to the airship's propulsion due to resistance of the outriggers against the water, it's vastly less resistance than that of a ship floating on the sea, thus allowing for comparatively faster travel. Plus where the weather is appropriate these stabilisers can be hoisted up and it can travel independently higher in the air and over ground. Of course that's all a bit fantastical, but not beyond possibility if the world powers actually got serious enough about pollution as to restrict travel by conventional aircraft. That's not very likely though. Oh another book I've begun reading is "Mechanics for Mugs". Like most things, I got the Jag and immediately jumped into the step-by-step instructions of the Haynes service manual and similar things, without bothering to aquire a complete theoretical understanding of the subject. Also as usual it also pretty much worked out OK, but now that I'm approaching some level of proficiency I'm actually getting interested in all the information that I skipped originally. This little book which I bought for $2, a full $1.50 under it's original price in the mid 1980s, is an appropriate bottom-up description. Actually since it's a revised edition of a book from the 70s, it doesn't really go up even as far as the technology of my late 80s Jaguar, but it is somewhat easier to appreciate modern systems like electronic fuel injection and ignition on top of a proper description of the mechanical systems that preceeded them. Also I just find the complexity of it all quite facinating, not that the electrical complexity of the later replacement mechanisms isn't actually even more advanced and mysterious (and also requires it's own maintenance attention on the Jag). OK, that's long enough of a ramble to meet my standards, I'm even boring myself to sleep, so I'll leave you inter-dwellers and go collapse into bed drained by a hard day's bolt bashing and wheel wrangling. - The Free Thinker