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Sunday Go-to-Meetin'
This
morning, nothing tried to get into my tent, no frightening smells assaulted
my nose. This could actually turn out to be a good day...
As usual, some breakfast, tea, dental hygiene
and back to work on the Pusher, the final "push" to get it
running again.
Over the
course of the last three days, I'd begin to become the event celebrity.
Folks would come by every few hours to see what progress had been
accomplished on the engine, exchange a few pleasantries, and move along
to the next lecture or seminar. As the engine began to have a finished appearance,
excitement began to grow, and several people wanted to know when the
"big event" would take place, the starting of the engine. I
told each of them that I didn't really need or want a big crowd around
when I tried starting it, mostly because if it didn't work, they weren't
going to enjoy my reaction.
The wife of one of the exhibitor whom I am
familiar with asked if I needed anything from the store, and so I was
able to get a replacement tube for the tire on my bicycle. Now I have
two brand-new tubes, let's hope that's enough for the rest of the
weekend!
The last of the parts were in place, I had
reconnected all of the removed wiring and hoses, and put the battery on
solar charge using a small panel that Darren had bought at the silent
auction. It was time to fire it up. Before this could be done, the
injector lines needed to be bled, which is a pretty straight forward
procedure. This time, however, the injection pump would not draw any
fuel up out of the tank. This was most puzzling, and I brushed it off to
the fuel lines draining back into the tank from being disconnected for
the last three days. The owner of one of the cars running on straight
vegetable oil had purchased a small, battery-operated pump, and brought
it over so we could prime the injection pump with Biodiesel pumped from
a styrofoam drinking cup. Once the pump had a prime, it pulled fuel from
the tank, the injectors bled and it was time to try actually starting
the engine.
Oh, except one small oversight. I didn't
have any antifreeze for the cooling system. Rode my now newly
retubed bike back to the NAPA store, hoping to find them open. They were,
and I bought a gallon of antifreeze, stopping by the grocery store on
the way back for two gallons of distilled water. Filled the coolant
reservoir with a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and the distilled H20.
Now the moment of truth. There was no marching
band, no jugglers, no midgets doing summersaults, no elephants balancing
on giant balls, no fanfare. The engine just started and ran like it had
just been shut off a few minutes beforehand. Oh, no champagne, either...
By this time, it was 3 PM or so. After cleaning
up my tools, I began taking the rest of my outdoor workshop apart. There
was a considerable amount of stuff to find places for, debris and
clutter to dispose of, nasty used motor oil to pour back into the
containers the new oil came out of, and someone had left two containers
of reacted Biodiesel from Josh Tickell's demonstration on my table. What
am I going to do with that?
The rest of the Solwest event was beginning to
pack up, Darren came by for his pop-up tent, and Joe Schwartz stopped by
to take some digital photos for an upcoming Home Power magazine article.
Now it was time to take a test drive to see if
everything still worked as it should. I approached Richard Perez to see
if he wanted to accompany me, but he
was busy knocking down the Home Power booth and organizing the truck for
the trip back to Agate Flat. I pretty much just walked up the the
nearest person I could find and asked if she wanted to go for a drive.
"Sure, why not" was the reply, so we set off to the south, me
and a prefect stranger who was intrigued enough by the offer to travel a
short distance with someone she never met before.
The operation of the Pusher was normal by all
accounts, and when I checked the engine in Canyon City a few miles up
the road, everything looked fine.
Arriving back at SolWest, I ran into Michael
Welch of HP, and asked if he wanted to accompany me on a longer, high
speed run in the car. He did, and we set off to the west, accelerating
to 60 MPH once outside the John Day city limits. Again, the Pusher ran
fine and no cooling system problems were noted. We turned around at the
entrance to the landfill, and jetted back into town.
Once back, I ran into Victor, who was just getting ready to leave. The
car he was traveling in had had some aerodynamic enhancements added in
the form of a wedge-shaped nose piece that cut wind resistance
considerably. He claimed that fuel mileage was much higher with this
addition. Yet another example of home-brew innovation, although the resemblance
to Darth Vader is kind of spooky.
Victor's companion had entered in the
Electrathon race. That's the race car on the trailer.
Things at the fairgrounds were winding down
pretty fast. One exhibit that I had been hearing a lot about was the
solar telescope, which allowed one to look directly at the sun through a
very sophisticated and expensive filter device. I managed to get over to
the 'scope before it was taken down and was treated to an astounding
view of the sun, with huge arcs of plasma shooting a great distance from
the body of the star. Sunspots were clearly visible, and if viewed for a
length of time, both the spots and the flares could be seen to be in
motion. The filter that made this direct observation of the sun possible
was powered (naturally) by photovoltaic panels, producing electricity
from the very same sunlight that I was observing.
Back at the
tent, I spent some time stowing excess gear, putting away tools and
generally packing up as much stuff that wouldn't be needed into the car
as I could. This evening, I've been invited to join the HP crew for a
small dinner party at their motel room, with tortillas and tacos cooked
up by Daniel.
I was planning on plugging the car in to charge
at the outlets in the center of the fairgrounds, so I drove the EV over
to the motel, paring at the base of the stairs going up to the room.
Inside, all of the familiar faces were in attendance, some helping to
prepare the meal be chopping onions, grating cheese or handing out
brews. A fine meal was soon served up buffet-style, and once again the
balcony outside the room was transformed into a party deck.
After a suitable number of tall tales were
told, and old times remembered, folks began to depart, some for their
motel rooms or tents, and others to seek out some night life. Windy
Dankoff was my passenger on the way back to the Orchard campground,
where he joined the celebrants around an orange highway cone with a
flashlight under it in Margaritaville (their own version of a
safe-n-sane campfire in this time of extreme fire danger), playing his
flute with several other musicians.
Sooner than not, I stole away to make my bed
and get some sleep after plugging the car in to charge at an outlet in
the center of the fairgrounds.
Monday: Fire Watch
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