Mr. Fix-It

Feb. 18th, 2008 03:04 pm
sylvar: (Default)
For a long time, our shower/tub had a problem: it would drain the water only when you held down the switch. Since our landlord bought the house to flip it and has been renting to us at a loss, she hasn't been able to afford to send a plumber out to fix what the lease didn't require her to—and she suspected she might have to replace the tub in order to fix it.

I finally got tired of it and decided to see if I could figure out what was going on. It turned out to take me less than half an hour to inspect, diagnose, fix, and test. I needed only a flathead screwdriver and a pair of needlenose pliers—and some mechanical know-how.

The switch is a metal knob about an inch long that sticks out from an octagonal plate screwed to the tub below the spigot. I unscrewed the plate and noticed a few things.

First, the knob extended about another two inches behind a D-shaped protrusion at the back of the plate, and was held against the protrusion by the force of a spring sandwiched between two washers. The washer towards the back was held in place by a U-shaped pin. This provided a certain amount of pressure against the D-shaped protrusion so that the knob could point up at a 45-degree angle or down at a 45-degree angle, but the spring would generally force it into one of these two positions.

Second, behind the U-shaped pin was another one going through a hole at the knob's back end and also through two holes on either side, providing a joint at which the knob could lift or lower another pin (and doubtless more pins below that). The weight of the water valve would not ordinarily be enough to affect the position of the knob.

In this case, however, the weight of the drain-and-rods assembly was clearly pulling down with more force than the spring could counter. As a result, even when I had pushed the knob down, lifting up on the assembly to open the drain, the internal weight would let the knob rotate around the D-shaped protrusion and drop back into a closed position.

Well, how do you add force to a stiff spring so that it can resist compression? I did it by stretching the spring out by maybe 1cm, then pinning everything back in place. I'm no mechanical engineer, so I don't know whether the spring will gradually lose its ability to resist compression again, but when I got everything assembled again, it was clear that the knob will now stay in either position without requiring lots of torque to flip it up or down.

And it's also clear to me that the knob-and-pin assembly is designed to be fairly modular: if the spring were to fail entirely, I think one would be able to replace the upper mechanism without touching the lower mechanism.

Yay me! Yay modular design! Yay hacking!
sylvar: (B5: Sheridan: Big Damn Hero)
There's a company whose purpose it is to send trucks around town with rotating advertising panels and an FM transmitter, creating more pollution for the purpose of making it impossible to escape commercial messages.

I ended up near one of these trucks on my morning commute, and decided to preempt their programming.  Their FM transmitter was puny (couldn't get a clear signal from about 20 feet away).  I happened to have an iPod FM transmitter available, so I fired it up, tuned it to broadcast on 99.9 FM, and played

I really regret that I was going to the office today.  I wish I could have followed it for a while longer.  I wish I had songs lined up in a playlist that were even more offensive.  I wish I had a brand-new car, so far I got this hatchback...

Of course, I'd just have been creating more pollution that way.  Maybe what I need is a weatherproof version of the LED throwie, only with an FM transmitter and a chip with a brief offensive message on it...

Come to think of it, a cross-FM-spectrum, low-power transmitter with a repeating message would be a great variant on Road Rage Cards.  It could say to anything within 10 meters, thus serving as both a warning and (if the target is listening to the radio) an annoyance.

A Bluetooth poon will be left as an exercise for the reader.

November 2010

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324 252627
282930    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 9th, 2025 10:31 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios