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Ox

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Posts posted by Ox

  1. 11 hours ago, matt17 said:

    I had my little guy out for his first ice fishing trip today (just under 6 months old). Still 24+” of good ice where we were today. Supposed to be warm but maybe we will have May ice fishing.  

    Well, as long as this ^%$$! north wind continues ......

  2. 23 minutes ago, skidooboy said:

    from a friend in Georgia:

     

    Someone had posted it and she thought it was worth sharing. I agree. Ski

     

    “I am seeing so much anxiety about resuming business, and so much anger about continued regulations. People are feeling the need to catapult to one side or the other, then fight the opposition.


    Here’s my perspective, from a mainstream medical model. I think a lot of folks have fallen into the idea that social distancing was meant to stop the viral spread. It wasn’t-it was meant to SLOW it while we put medical infrastructure in place. It has worked. We have, in most parts of Georgia, not been overwhelmed like we likely would have been without protective measures. In the meantime, our testing procedures have gotten better. We’ve increased our ventilator count. We’ve gotten a little better handle on PPE supply chains, and many have helped by making masks and gowns. Phoebe in Albany has a second COVID-19 ICU opened, and Atlanta has a field hospital ready to go. It’s not perfect, but it’s much better than it was seven weeks ago.

     


    A vaccine is a long way off. At some point, people have to be systematically exposed to begin the building of (hopeful) herd immunity. We will likely begin to experience a real increase in cases after reopening. Ideally, that exposure is controlled and calculated, in phases, to allow our medical community to respond adequately, and reduce the number of severe or fatal cases. That’s where we are.
    Whether you feel like Georgia is opening too soon, or not soon enough, we were never going to social distance this thing into nonexistence.

     

    You now need to proceed as your health, wallet, and conscience allow.


    If you are medically vulnerable, you do not need to be a part of what is about to happen. Stay home if you can. If you’re not, or if your financial vulnerability trumps your health concerns, you need to proceed in ways that continue to protect yourself, and the elderly and medically vulnerable around you.


    All of us need to calm down. Quit telling people who are financially struggling that they don’t care about human lives. Quit telling people who are truly at risk of dying from this virus that they are cowering in fear. Remember that until you’ve walked in someone else’s shoes, you should probably be careful in your judgement's and subsequent harsh words.


    We don’t HAVE to choose an either/or proposition and fight, we could choose other ways to be. Examples include but are not limited to:
    “I think this may be too soon, so I will continue to shelter myself, and pray/make masks/ check on those who can’t.”
    “I really need to go back to work, so I will do so, but I will be careful and try to protect myself, my family, and those around me with healthy strategies.”
    See how those positions allow each of us to do what we need to, and also respect those who are choosing differently?

     

    One thing that allows us to do this is humility. I can acknowledge that I am not an epidemiologist/economist/whatever, that I am making decisions based on my understanding of complex subjects and my own personal health and financial situation, that I am not all knowing, always right, and an expert in all fields, and that each person around me is doing their best too. We can make different choices and still be a supportive community. We can learn and evolve in our understanding of these issues.”

     

     

     

  3. Social distancing does not mean that you can only sit your fatt assets on the couch and binge watch Gomer Pyle.

     

    It means that you aint swappin' spit with the next person. 

     

    Working outside?

    Heck - dooing aboot anything outside for that matter....

     

    A few people werking in/under/on/outside of a new house is a problem?

     

    A dump truck that is from your area (dump trucks don't tend to git too far from home eh?) making a delivery to your area.

    It's not two or three guys digging a grave by hand for Petey's sakes!

     

    You want sumpthin' to actually worry aboot - how aboot that Gordons Food truck that came from Mississauga this morning?

    THAT may be sumpthing worth concerning yourself with, but not like you're gunna eat without it...

     

    Some folks just lose the spirit of the act, and git too concerned with the exactness.

     

    "Stay at home and in your house" makes a whole lot more sense to someone living in a 5 story appartment building in the city, than it does to some joker who has 5 acres of woodland up aggin a lake.

    Crickie - if he wants to fish or hunt for mushrooms - who gives a Schidt? 

    Is he in your face? If so - then I guess that means that YOU aint in YOUR house eh?

    Is he in ANYONES face?

     

    You better jump all over Rev for cutt'n wood then! 

     

    Also note - that that construction crew has likely been working together daily since before this whole thing started.

    At which point should they stay away from each other?

     

    Staying especially distant from someone not in your daily circle and especially not local is more the point.

     

     

    Let's see....

     

    Most of the week I have been in the shop all day, but today I dropped forktruck tanks off at the LP place, and continued up and snuck over the Michigan line to make a delivery and a pick-up. Came back and picked up my tanks. Back to the shop and unloaded, picked up the Mrs. and headed accrost the Indiana line to pick up a skid. Stopped at Dairy Queen, and came home by way of my G-ma's who we need to check on aboot every day.

     

    You guys that are all held up on the couch aint gunna be safe until the rest of us git it, and you aint gunna eat for long if the rest of the world doesn't keep moving - so for Petey's sakes - let us get on with it and quit worryin' aboot what the rest of the world is dooin'.

    • Like 8
  4. The front of the truck appears to be quite a ways from the retaining wall, but you are thinking that there is a break (void) in the wall - where the trail or walkway or whatnot goes?

     

    Maybe the retaining wall is what is holding the whole works up?

     

    Can't see "wall" from this view.

     

    Here is a clearer pic:

     

    crane.jpg

  5. The pic above does elude to that possibility, but this pic shows it better:

     

    image.jpg

     

     

     

    There is a 3' retaining wall along the edge, and the truck seems to be plenty far back from that to have had the riggers out - which sorta makes one wander if the rear riggers on that side actually broke?

     

    Doo the front riggers not extend any further than that - yuh wonder?

    The front one on the other side couldn't be very far out either.

     

    Unless they have somehow already retracted them before the pic was taken - in effort to stabilize the unit that may have been teetering on the brink of .. ???

  6. 6 minutes ago, Big Pussy said:

    That would not work now since riders right hands are not up to the task of pulling out the shift lever and pushing it back in.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Same goes for transfer case shifters.... :angry:

  7. Well I recommend that for any reverse gearcase.

    Maybe the Doo holds up better, but ...

     

     

    It's been 20 yrs since I was in my '96 Grand Touring case, but it seems like Doo had a cpl 1/2" pins that dropped into holes, and not have to line up two sets of splines?

  8. 2 minutes ago, Motorhead said:

    Both of his lost reverse on one and drive on the other. Have not had the chance to look hard into one but neither of your solutions seem to resemble this problem. I had to try and move the srx out of my trailer and it seemed to be a shifting issue because of the noise. As it was warranty I did not look. The gears stripped on the spline if that makes any sense . Something about the shifting fork not moving them over enough. 

    Oh yeah ... this is the 4 stroke Kitty?

     

    Yeah, my chum told me that the M11's had that trouble, and that the later ones were s'posed to be more better.

     

    Something aboot guys having to back them all the way back to the truck as they couldn't git it into fwd anymore?

     

    Then one day when we were riding together, I heard the problem myself:

     

    He also has 2st Doo's and is very familiar with RER, but the mechanical gearcase is different, and most don't give it the care that it needs.

    I'm not talking PM, I mean care as in baby-ing it into the shifted gear.

     

    When you shift a mechanical reverse snowmachine, you need to burp the gas a wee bit to let the gear splines line up and drop where it's to be. 

    This is no different than how snowmachines were before RER, just that reverse is WAY more popular now than back then.

     

    Remember - burp the throttle a bit. Maybe even a cpl times before you give'r, to let that gear slide in where it's to go.

     

     

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  9. Quote

    The biggest problem is the two flat head screws holding the axle for the chain tensioner wheel come loose and the the axle spins and the screws fall out. 

     

    A while back I must have not put enough 271 on the lower gear [bolt] on my older Doo, and as it came loose, eventually the head bottomed out agginst the outter case half, and then broached the most beautiful hex through the case that y'ever did see...

     

  10. I seen something aboot that earlier, but I don't know who that is.

     

    I don't recognize the name from Snowest.

     

    Was he a competition hill-climber?

     

    I take it that he was in BC at the time?

    Pic that I seen from Idaho a week ago didn't show much signs of snow anywhere around.

  11. I would hope that it is walkie talkie type technology, and NOT be relying on cell service!

    A fair amount of sledding is done outside the confines of the cities.  :eek:

     

     

    Is there such thing as poltalk.com?

  12. 31 minutes ago, Nunz said:

    it was really cool to try, the friends feature worked really well in January when we rode them in Minnesota.

     

    Just guessing at what this "Friends" thing is, but I would think that pretty handy - mostly for those groups that don't ever look back and don't mind getting spread out from here to Tuesday.

     

    This was eye opening to me how some groups would ride the other day after we ended up taking the trail back out of Halfway, and we didn't hit speeds above 45 klicks for the most part as real long mountain sleds don't navigate the trails like the shorty's doo, so we got passed many times, and from the time that the guy running Point would pass, 'till the guy running Clean-Up finally came along - they may have been 5 miles apart!

     

    This happened more than once.

     

    I / we have NEVER ridden like that!

    If you don't see the guy behind you in a straight-away, you need to slow down or even stop until either you see him - or you decide he's not there, and you go back and fetch him.

     

    I guess with this gizmo - you know he's back there, that he is moving, and OK?

     

    I still don't like it, but ....

     

    .

  13. I guess I don't recall for sure which of the trade journals it was, but it seemed that they were singin' quite the praises for the new Pol's.

    I'm guessin' that it was the RMK or SKS, or whatnot if I spent much time reading it (and it seemed to be over several models) but none-the-less, from that issue, and possibly some other mags as well, it seems that there is a glimmer of light in the tunnel for Polaris for the first time in quite a while.

     

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