dr_phil_physics: (Default)
Finally.

Back in the end of June we made a run down to North Carolina to see my mom. Took three days of driving each way, instead of two -- back when I was finishing college I could do the 18½ hour drive from Evanston to Greensboro in one fell swoop. Anyway, the trip went surprisingly well.

But on the first day of the return trip, Monday 29 June 2015, we were in southwestern Virginia near Wythesville -- along an amusing stretch where one road is North I-77/South I-81/North US-51/South US-11 and vice versa on the other direction -- and I made a quick stop at a McDonald's to use the bathroom. And in yanking off my outer shirt to get at my suspenders, somehow my new glasses from February (DW) (LJ) got yanked off my head and fell flat onto the tile floor.

Right lens cracked.

These are safety glasses with titanium safety frames, so the glass didn't shatter into a million pieces, but they were pretty cracked:


Yeah that right lens is pretty much cracked. (Click on photo for larger.)
©2015 Dr. Philip Edward Kaldon (All Rights Reserved)

Amazingly, if I _had_ to, I could've worn and driven in them. But as part of my packrat nature, there's a Velcro pocket on the outside of the little gray tweed rolling bag, which has a spare pair of glasses. They're two sets old -- I change them out when I get new glasses. The old set is my spares, the old old set is my emergency travel set. Even better, by being two sets old, the astigmatism rotation was actually not bad and this old old pair was certainly sharper and clearer than if I'd used my last pair of glasses. Success!

Well, not completely perfect. While I was delighted that the farthest distance correction actually worked, the prescription wasn't quite right. And several times I've wondered whether the headaches and eyestrain I was getting was from the work I was doing all summer -- a whole lotta Time In Chair -- or from the glasses. I needed these fixed and soon.

Before we drove off from the scene of the crime, I called the eye place (ain't cellphone contracts swell?), but as I suspected, they had to have the frames to make a new lens. What with the Fourth of July, it wasn't until Monday 6 July that I got them in. I was expecting it to take two weeks to get them. Because they were safety glass, the lens maker would examine the lens and decide whether the break was covered by warranty. Because they are PhotoGray Extra BUT only a few months old, I really only needed one lens. A few years ago when a loose screw caused a lens to pop out, they were over a year old and I had to get two lenses because otherwise the photo response wouldn't match.


New versus Old Old glasses. (Click on photo for larger.)
©2015 Dr. Philip Edward Kaldon (All Rights Reserved)

I've stopped by a couple of times to see if the new lens was in. Nope. Nope. And... nope. One time I missed them in the office -- my bad, it was a day they closed early. The next time I checked their website, only to find out they were on their summer hours and their website hadn't been update since like 2013. (!!) Once they couldn't tell me anything because the lab was in northern Michigan in a spot which had just had torrential flooding and the power was out.

Finally, Thursday there was a message that the glasses were in. Yay.

Why the delay? Well, consider the blog title in yet another way. Seems that there was a magazine article recently touting the advantages of glass lenses over plastic -- better clarity, durability -- which I knew as a Physicist and photographer. Apparently Germany and Japan uses 92% glass lenses, over Americans who wanted lightweight shatterproof plastic for years and years. So suddenly in the summer of '15 glass lenses, including safety glass, have become the latest boutique item in eyeglasses in the United States -- and there are only three makers of the glass blanks. Therefore a shortage.

Sixty days after I dropped them off, I got my glasses back again. As compensation, they did two new lenses at no charge.

So, am I wearing them now? No. Because with two virgin PhotoGray Extra lenses, I have them "cooking" on a window sill, and will alternate between light and dark to set the photo reaction. Why does this always happen on overcast days? (grin)

Dr. Phil
Posted on Dreamwidth
Crossposted on LiveJournal
dr_phil_physics: (kate-robot-chicken)
Back In The Mid-80s

When we moved to Laurium MI in the Upper Peninsula and Mrs. Dr. Phil started her job at the Michigan Tech library, we started off without a lot of money. The old mining house we rented was an odd duck, "renovated" by the landlord would be one way of putting it. But it was warm and comfortable enough.

At some point, possibly after our October 1984 formal wedding, we decided to buy a chest freezer for the basement, so we could take advantage of storing some of the leftovers, baked goods, meats and things on sale. We looked at several at the local Hancock hardware store, and settled on a 6 cu.ft. Whirlpool chest freezer -- a sort of beige colored cube. The salesman wanted us to get the larger rectangular 9 cu.ft. unit, but we liked the look of the little 6 cu.ft., plus without kids how much freezer storage did we really need? The kicker was there was a scratch on the front kickplate of the floor model, so we got it for about fifty bucks off the price.

A trip to Ace Hardware in Calumet got me some wiring, a box, outlet and a new circuit breaker and we had the unit resting on two very heavy boards I'd acquired somewhere from a shipping crate.

The freezer was moved twice -- once to Henry Street in Allendale, where it survived about a year-and-a-half in the garage, subject to heat and cold, and then in the basement in the current house for the last twenty-some years.

Which Brings Us To Sunday Morning

Mrs. Dr. Phil went downstairs to get the second dozen bagels we bought before Christmas. And found they were not frozen. Also a little fuzzy in the bag. Also that the freezer smelled BAD when opened. Yup, it died -- death date unknown.

Now some people would be really upset at losing tons of food in a dead freezer, but really, though the freezer was stuffed, we just lost the bagels. Everything else in there was old. We used to buy frozen pizzas on sale to have a cheap quick meal from time to time, but I can't remember the last time we did that -- so the couple of pizzas in there were at least five years old. And the other things were of even more depressing vintages. There was a plastic tub of chicken stock on the bottom that had a paper tape label of June 1993 or something like that on it! Enough frost had accumulated that there was a couple of inches of water in the bottom once the contents was removed.

So really, the lost food was pretty much amortized over the last twenty years, so a dozen bagels from the bagel store in Holland is pretty much small potatoes, to mix our food metaphors here.

Six cubic feet ended up as three garbage bags, too much to fit in our old Rubbermaid trash bin. But the overnight temps have been about 19°F, so leaving one of the bags outside the garage before the midweek trash hasn't been a problem.

The Ironic Wrinkle

Saturday was our 29th anniversary (judicial version). Rather than going out, Mrs. Dr. Phil made a really wonderful batch of spaghetti with eggplant and turkey Italian sausage, flavored with a very nice Spanish red wine. And capers. Since she'd shopped at the D&W in Holland, we also had a loaf of a garlic sage sourdough bread. Oh, seriously YUM.

Which meant that we had nice big slices of garlic sage sourdough bread instead of moldy bagels for our late Sunday breakfast downstairs with the Sunday paper. (grin)

When Mrs. Dr. Phil posted on Facebook that we'd lost the freezer, many of our friends immediately decided that she deserved a new freezer as an anniversary present. "so what IS the proper gift for 29 years -- white-goods, by any chance?" Turns out, according to one website, 29 years is furniture. Didn't say what kind. Well, we did use the lid of the freezer for some tasks...

Seriously, though, we don't really need a chest freezer. My folks had bought a big double door freezer back in Medina one winter when we bought a big chunk of a cow -- half or a quarter, I don't remember. And in Greensboro, we ended up with a 2nd refrigerator in the shop to handle the overflow of produce from the garden, etc. But with just Mother at home, we unplugged that last year. We don't need the reserve.

Still, the big upstairs refrigerator is as old as our house -- about twenty years -- so maybe we'll budget a new fridge this summer. Be proactive and replace it before we have a product emergency. That and the dishwasher sometime.

Ah, entropy.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (galadrial-lotr)
Time To Return To Middle Earth

Not a hard decision, since there was little on TV tonight, but we decided to put on The Two Towers [Extended Edition] in order to prepare for Friday night's Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King with the Grand Rapids Symphony (DW).

Nothing Is Ever Simple Anymore

A good plan, but thwarted by the installation of our new TV two weeks ago (DW). We'd moved all the cables, but hadn't had a chance to check out the DVD player. Of course, its a pre-HDTV analog player, so what would the image look like?

Good news is the image is acceptable. The TV has decided to give us only one video mode, so its full-width but I think the aspect ratio is a bit too wide. I hate off aspect ratios. But the image is large and sharp.

Except... no sound.

Great. Mrs. Dr. Phil rechecked the cables into the TV. I dug out the manual. Then I turned on the stereo -- we rigged an audio line from the DVD player long ago, especially as the DVD player also does audio CDs. No sound either.

Here's the problem -- is this one issue or two? The amplifier in the stereo is from 1981 and it intermittently has issues. Wouldn't play sound from the VCR, though the VCR is working with the TV. But that shouldn't affect the DVD-TV connection. Mrs. Dr. Phil reached back and felt all the connections -- all there. We put in an audio CD into the old CD player and the tray kept popping out again and wouldn't even try to read a disk.

Arrrrgh! Entropy! Damn thee to hell! A third component not working.

Eventually we tried an audio CD in the DVD player -- and suddenly it worked. I don't know if we did anything or the TV finally recognized the audio line. Everything is computerized these days, so nothing is as simple as plugging it in or turning a switch. Somewhere I have a SF story where this starship is out of control because there are no manual controls anymore. We're reaching that point today and I fear it's a lesson we'll learn over and over again.(evil grin)

We're up to meeting of the hobbits Merry and Pippin with Treebeard now. It only took us an hour to get the movie started. Thankfully, though, it hasn't cost us any money today.

Dr. Phil

Profile

dr_phil_physics: (Default)
dr_phil_physics

April 2016

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3 4567 89
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Links

Email: drphil at

dr-phil-physics.com

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Tuesday, 17 June 2025 14:18
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios