My good friend and colleague Andy came over to stay for a while, which meant I had ‘entertaining a guest’ as an excuse to do some of the fun stuff I’ve wanted to do for ages.
So we finished making the welding bench! I’d made the top and gotten part way through cutting the legs to length, so we finished cutting them and welded them in place, then welded extra flat strips around the bottom to make it reasonably rigid. It’s all just tack welds, and it’ll almost certainly need some diagonal struts added, but it stands upright and is surprisingly sturdy; I’m going to experiment with it a bit to see just how many more struts it needs. I’d also like to drill holes so I can mount my vice on it, too.
Then we cleared a space and moved my electronics workbench down into the workshop! This is great news, as it clears up space in the office (albeit revealing the piles of junk that were lurking beneath the bench), means all my tools are in one place (which is most convenient, as things were always in the wrong places), and creates more storage space in the little garage, meaning less stuff on the floor.
I’ve since reincarnated my power distribution rail, which I had when we lived in Ealing, but haven’t used since; the idea being that it’d be good to do my electronics experiments on the end of a dedicated [[Wikipedia:Residual-current device|RCD]] so I don’t trip the one in the house. It also splits the output into four circuits, each with a six amp circuit breaker (the smallest I could obtain easily).
I still need to get rid of a lot of waste cardboard that’s sitting around, and we’re still looking after Seth’s motorbike, and there’s still junk to be sorted – many things need to be elsewhere; the little garage isn’t a place to store things we only use a few times a year, as we have the Big Yellow for that!
Although the lighting’s not really good enough when I’m explaining the power rail, here’s a quick video tour:
For my next trick, I’ll stop procrastinating by building infrastructure, and get on with actually making myself a digital watch with an embedded ARM processor and colour dot-matrix LCD. Watch this space.
(this post originally appeared on our personal blog on Tue 5th May 2009)