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OldIronFan

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Posts posted by OldIronFan

  1. 15 minutes ago, MacGyver said:

    I know a bunch of teachers - most of whom would jump in front of a bullet without a single hesitation to protect their kids.  I don’t know a single one who wants to carry in their classroom.

    Plenty of them are pro-gun and carry elsewhere in their lives.  They express a host of reservations - everything from that’s not the job they signed up for - to risks associated breaking up fights - to their name being made public and suddenly being all over social media and PTA text threads.

    I don’t know of any that have really thought about it and come to the conclusion that it’s worth it.

    Every last one of them said some version of, “they don’t trust us with books or curriculum - they’re not going to trust us with guns.”

    Yup, that is nearly the exact feedback I got from my teaching family and friends. High risk, low reward. Like you said most would throw their own body between an attacker and a child but none see being armed as the right answer to stopping an active shooter or protecting kids in classrooms.  

    • Like 1
  2. Two teachers in the family, two more close friends or neighbors that are teachers. 3 of the 4 hold TN carry permits and do carry when not at work or on school grounds. None of the 4 have any desire to carry in school.

    2 of the 4 specifically said they would not carry even if this bill did not have the restrictions or stipulations about gaining permission. Neither had any desire to take on that responsibility and quite frankly that risk. One specifically said they had no desire to get sued by a parent if things went sideways in their school at some point.

    The one without an existing permit is not anti gun but has never owned one and has zero interest in learning to shoot much less obtaining a permit. She is married to someone who does own, carry, shoot and hunt but she has no interest in knowing anything more about firearms. 

    My conversation with the two family members indicated that they had yet to hear a fellow teacher express any interest in obtaining the required permissions. General consensus of the educators in their circle of peers thought it was a pretty stupid idea and useless bill. 

    • Like 1
  3. 1 minute ago, NoBanStan said:

    That was just my experience while being in a line of people waiting to do the same. Overall i just thought they felt bulky, like the chassis felt overly bloated.

    Oh it certainly looks a bit blocky/chunky, I agree. I guess you don't want delicate but it could probably be slimmed down some and remain durable. 

  4. 1 hour ago, NoBanStan said:

    I got to fondle this new Sig lineup at the NRA con last year. They're impressive looking but I will say that all of them felt very bulky and heavy.

    Just over 11 lbs (5.1kg) with suppressor and 1 loaded mag. 8.4lbs for the base rifle. Not crazy by any stretch. Maybe a pound over what I would have envisioned considering the 13" barrel.

  5. 20 minutes ago, NoBanStan said:

    I was referring to the test lab where they hook you up with all the medical equipment. Everyone struggles with that. Once you get the CPAP/APAP home, it takes a couple of days/weeks to acclimate, but then the benefits become obvious.

    Ahh, gotcha. Yeah the sleep study is a pain. Not just from the new hoses and leads but in my case they woke me up at least twice to change or add something. I started out with only the monitors, once they got readings in that state they put the CPAP on me and went again. Then they switched the CPAP setup in the wee hours of the morning again. 

  6. 2 hours ago, NoBanStan said:

    So the trick is that nobody sleeps well with the hoses. They also know this.

    I got lucky because I was tested during the pandemic, so they just made me use the at home test.

    My wife sleeps like a log with a CPAP now. She adapted quickly. It actually annoys me more than her these days since I tend to extend an arm out from my pillow and get my hand/arm tangled up in her air tube. 
    She lost weight and generally improved her overall health.
    She has more energy, wakes up early and rested these days.
    It also improved her sinus and asthma issues. Breathing filtered humidified air ~7 hours a night has greatly cut back on her breathing issues. She nearly died 30 years ago from pneumonia and suffered permanent lung damage as a result. The CPAP while not reversing any of that has lessened symptoms and side effects to a low annoyance, low maintenance level. 

    • Like 1
    • Love 1
  7. We are thinking of leaving the country for retirement, definitely leaving TN. I do love TN, I have been here 40 years and my wife was born here but once work and family ties/obligations are done we will be looking for a significant change. 

  8. I have the MRAD/MK 22 deployment tool kit with the Fix-it-Sticks. Love it and use it on pretty much every firearm I own from scope mounting to chassis/action screws. No issues and I have checked their products against the calibrated torque meter at work we use for all calibration of torque wrenches and limiters in the shop. They have all been very close to nominal. 

    Just be aware that heat from heavy use or just extreme ambient heat can affect the torque limit. Don't try and torque 100 bolts in a row in short order and don't store them in your car in the heat of summer right before use. They are viscous fluid / friction based devices.

    32425.jpg

    • Thanks 1
  9. The land around me that is being developed, at an alarmingly fast rate, has not been farmed for at least a decade, if ever. 
    Most of that land was either owned by a farmer who has been gone for at least a decade or two and the land was left in Family Land Trust but not actively farmed or was owned by a large land trust for the purpose of speculation/wealth. 
    The only farms that still exist in a ~40 mile radius of me are 30~100 acre hobby farms with less than 100 head of livestock, a few hay fields, or a few 10~20 acre fields of row crop.  
    At least here in my area of Mid TN the ground is too rocky or the hills to extreme to row crop for food production, efficiently or economically at least. 

    The ~30 acre field behind me had soybeans 7 or 8 years ago. That was the last time it was planted. The last planting was left unharvested and the field was returned to weed/brush growth. The cost of the diesel to harvest the beans was greater than the yield from the field would have paid. I think he has partially bush hogged it twice in the last 7 years. Not a huge loss in my opinion, soybeans are horrible and the more fields of those we loose the better off we are. 
    Along those lines our, now sold, family farm was up in Robertson County and in the middle of lots of small to medium sized  tobacoo farms. With already low and further decreasing demand for tobacco products much of that land is being repurposed. Some of it went to corn or hay, some of it went to developers, some of it went to livestock but there is a lot of it that is just not actively farmed for any purpose anymore. 

    I don't think the blame is solely on home development even though it hurts to see pretty woods and fields turned into subdivisions. 

    • Like 3
  10. Back when I had a decent salsa garden (tomatoes, tomatillos, onions, garlic, multiple peppers) I made upwards of 100 pints of salsa every year. Some went to family but we tended to go through at least a jar a week in our house alone. 
    Since I had the water bath canning setup I threw cucumbers into the mix and made ~20 or so jars of pickles annually.
    I ended up getting pretty good with jams and jellies as well. Friends and family always wanted my jars of pepper jelly and Blackberry jam for Christmas every year instead of gift cards or a bottle of wine.

    I never got setup to pressure can so I never did try low acid veggies or meats. 

    Now I do not have a garden and the new house is not conducive to starting one. No fences and hordes of deer, rabbit, armadillo, opossum, and skunks make it nearly impossible to keep plants alive that are not right up against the house. 

    If they ever develop the land behind me and I have to put up a fence I might try again. I adopted the square foot gardening raised bed method for my last garden and had some great success with it. Efficient and easy maintenance as well. 

    • Like 3
  11. A world record Walleye came out of Old Hickory Lake in 1960. In the 1950's, 1960's and 1970's it was a regular practice of northern anglers to come down to Tennessee to walleye fish in the winter to get some "warm weather" fishing in while their home lakes were frozen over. It was nothing for them to pull dozens of walleye out a day. 
    Now there are few if any walleye left in Tennessee. There is a small population in the Caney but it is not significant by any stretch. 
    Licenses and limits are in place for just those sorts of conservation issues. 
    Snag fishing for paddlefish is another prime example, without a limited season and limits there would be no native populations left. 
    Most anglers now target crappie, bass, or catfish not because they are a preferred species but but because they have breeding rates that allowed them to proliferate through extreme overfishing. There is simply not that much else left to target. Even if you are a trout fisherman in Tennessee you are not fishing natural/native populations but rather controlled hatchery spawned populations. Hatcheries paid for by the a portion of your fishing license as others have mentioned. 

  12. On 2/3/2024 at 8:03 PM, monkeylizard said:

    Paper ticket stubs from concerts and sports to show you were there.

    Or the thought of going to a retail location to stand in line to buy those paper tickets including going hours early if it was a high demand show. 

    To explain it to the young folk. "Apple just launched the latest iPhone and each apple store only gets 100 each of them." 

    • Haha 1
    • Thanks 1
  13. Ammo manufacturing can come with some big issues. Requirements on how much powder you can store, where you store it, how much you can have in a single location, Distance requirements from your storage location to nearby structures and roadways.

    If you are getting into more commercial level volumes there are a bunch of other things to consider like static discharge prevention. Things that are not a huge concern for a home reloader become a much bigger concern when you start dealing with pallets of powder kegs and primers. 

  14. 2 hours ago, DHF said:

    brake-and-clutch-pedal.jpg

    3 Pedals is so rare now. Last time I took my wife's car to a place we needed to valet park I had to do it myself. The no one on the valet staff knew how to drive a manual. 

     

    58 minutes ago, Erich said:

    Some may have this with remote acreage, but the idea of not just turning on the faucet would be foreign too many 

    image.thumb.jpeg.a06fa25a68e9ba843ec5a54ed7cc763f.jpeg


    Or a well in general even with an electric pump. My grandparents place still had 2 active wells, one with the above hand pump and one with an electric pump out in a small pump house. 

  15. 21 hours ago, NoBanStan said:

    Dang! that's pretty clean looking. I want one to tinker with but I would look like Herman Munster sitting in it (or maybe Lurch)

    I am 6'3" and bounce around between 250 to 275lbs depending on how much I have been working out. 

    I did not fit well with the factory 93 LE seats that were in the car when I got it. I now have modified seats it it that fit me much better. 

     

  16. On 1/19/2024 at 3:56 PM, Scotty said:

    Tried to get my PCP to prescribe me some basic antibiotics and z-pax, let’s just say he’s not like minded. I’m planning a trip out of country and he said he’d write me a few scripts just in case, I’ll grab a few in the local pharmacy in the country I’m in. I cut myself pretty decently with a dull knife out of network. Wasn’t going to pay out of network prices for a dozen stitches and rode it out until I got in network but wanted antibiotics to be safe. Telehealth agreed nothing could be done 72 hours post cut but wouldn’t write the script so I still had to go and see the PCP for a $150 copay to get a 30 second look over and a script of bactrum. I spend all my off time outdoors, I wouldn’t hate having doxy on hand for when I miss a tick and get a bullseye. That’s what I’m more worried about is medicine, the rest just takes some budgeting and time. 

    No necessarily cheap or covered by insurance but there are sources for emergency meds/antibiotics without an immediate need. https://jasemedical.com/ Is one such source. They cater to preppers, adventure travelers, international travelers, ect. 
     

    • Like 1
  17. 18 minutes ago, gregintenn said:

    We try to pick out one vehicle for to drive while the roads are salted. That way I don’t have three to clean up afterwards.

     

    You are right about the change in vehicles. When I was a kid, every farmer I knew somehow got by with a half ton, 2WD pickup. Today it appears you need a diesel 4x4 just to drive past a farm.

     

    We had one neighbor who rented out his bull. That thing would get in and out of the truck bed by himself. I guess he liked his job. Lol!

    My 2wd F150 is a low mile former farm truck. The 82 year old farmer I bought it from bought it new in 06 and managed to put 62,000 miles on it going to the COOP every Saturday for supplies and meds for his Hobby Herd or dump runs. He was a wealthy retired attorney who happened to have a 60~70 head heard of beef cattle. He got rid of his cows at 78 or 79 years old. Finally sold the Farm at about 82 or 83 and moved to "town". I bought the truck from him in 2021 with 62k miles. I do know he had never owned a 4wd truck in 50 years of owning and operating that farm, always 2wd F150 short cab long bed trucks. The couple of times he did get one stuck he just pulled it out with the tractor and went on about his work, no big deal I guess when you have a couple tractors around. 

    • Like 2
  18. 8 minutes ago, monkeylizard said:

    Hello, fellow Mazda-nerd! Mazda Tribute, CX-5, and a Miata in my current lineup. I've had a 323, two 626s, and a Mazda3 hatch. The Miata is a garage queen, but I can't say I wasn't tempted to put the hardtop on and cut some donuts in the cul-de-sac last week   🙂

    IMG-0317.jpg

    This is my 3rd MX-5. It is a supercharged 97. Had another 97 (bounced it off a rock wall) and a 95 that I raced for several years before selling it. Raced a 1st gen RX-7 for a few years as well. Honestly I think the Mazdaspeed 3 would be my favorite if they had just carried the awd system from the speed 6 to it. My MX-5 needs a power steering repair before spring and my Speed 3 needs an injector seal so I have been driving the 5. Once I get the Speed 3 going again the 5 will be sold off, too many cars and not enough garage. 

     

    • Like 1
  19. It really is interesting to see the change in norms. 

    When I was young a factory 4x4 truck was a rarity. A vast majority of of trucks sold were 2wd. 
    Now in the current full size truck marketplace the vast majority are 4wd. If you want a 2wd truck you are either buying a fleet/work truck or a small midsize truck like a Frontier, Ranger, or Canyon. 

    AWD was virtually unheard of. Now it is also common place in sedans, crossovers, and small SUV's. I started driving at a point were cars were transitioning from mostly RWD to mostly FWD. 

    I currently have a 2wd full size truck (F150), a FWD hatchback (Mazdaspeed 3), a RWD sports car (MX-5), a FWD Van (Mazda 5), and an AWD crossover (Forrester) in the fleet. 

    I stole the wife's Forester last week to get to work. Snow mode and AWD made life easy. Today I took the FWD van since the roads are all but clear. I will probably drive the truck the rest of the week since it has not had any exercise in a couple weeks. 

  20. There are numerous ranging reticles available on quality mid to high end optics. Most folks handle it in that manner. No electronics, no extra parts.

    Once learn the reticle and the math it is fairly quick and easy to range. The tricky part is having  multiple rifles and getting the same reticle and/or scope for all of them. If you are primarily a one gun shooter, no problem. If you have a safe full of long guns putting optics on all of them or learning multiple reticles gets to be a more involved or expensive process. 

    Most hunters I know run a separate range finder or binoculars with a range finder so they can scout and range without bringing their weapon up. Also allows them to use that item for multiple game, seasons, and weapons. That way if they are taking the bow, muzzle loader, rifle, or shotgun out they have one range finder to handle it all. 
    Most target shooters I know don't bother with a range finder as they are typically dealing with known marked ranges or at least have a pretty good estimation. 
     

    • Like 1

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