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![]() It's due to the Dexamethasone of course. ('Dexy' to the trade.) Dexy is one of those horrifically potent steroids that flat EATS cancerous tumors. Along with everything else, alas. Which is why I've managed to shed a few pounds, going from a chubbily pleasant 254 to a cadaverous 171. I've no way of knowing how much of that 83 pounds consisted of tumorous tissue. And there at the start, following LAST New Years, I promised myself it was time to shed a few pounds and did, which got me into the 230-ish range, at which point I was diagnosed with multiple myeloma and began the more serious business of chemotherapy, which whisked away the pounds, along with patches of hair (it's coming in CURLY, of all things!) and tumorous tissue. But I now possess what every woman wants: To hear a physician say: 'It's time for you to put ON a few pounds.' And I thought of all the women I've known without being able to recall a single one of them who was not wishing just the opposite: to LOSE a few pounds, often with EXACTLY the same life and death fervor I've felt with regard to the cancerous tissue which has done such a swell job of digesting my spine that it actually BROKE... from nothing more than a sneeze or some other incidental stress. A compression fracture, so damaging that it would be unwise for me to attempt to lift the amount of weight I've now lost. Put that all together -- the fervent ladies wish to lose as I have lost, then to fracture what I have broken, and you must admit there IS a certain element of humor... that struck me as the physician delivered the good news, and I began to laugh. And still haven't stopped. Not completely. But it certainly scared the hell out of the doctor. "Time for you to put ON a few pounds, Chief." "Aye-aye, sir!" And I began to laugh. Because it struck me that, whatever else this cancer has done, it has given me what every woman longs for, as if it were a topic of polite conversation, suitable for those awkward moments when strangers are forced to spend a whisp of time together and a polite smile simply isn't enough, as in the elevator between 1 and 12, or the check-out line at the local supermarket. First, the friendly smile, then the casual: "I've got what you want," perhaps with another smile, depending on the lady's physique. Then back to listening to the elevator music or casually examining the contents of her shopping cart, my eye peeled for ice cream and Danish. It gives you a nice boost, knowing you have what they want. Makes you want to flex your stick-like arms or show your turkey's neck to best advantage. Yup. Things are definitely looking up. Which is why I'm still laughing now & then. -Bob Hoover |
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wrote in message
... snippage of silver lining observations And I began to laugh. Because it struck me that, whatever else this cancer has done, it has given me what every woman longs for, as if it were a topic of polite conversation, suitable for those awkward moments when strangers are forced to spend a whisp of time together and a polite smile simply isn't enough, as in the elevator between 1 and 12, or the check-out line at the local supermarket. First, the friendly smile, then the casual: "I've got what you want," perhaps with another smile, depending on the lady's physique. Then back to listening to the elevator music or casually examining the contents of her shopping cart, my eye peeled for ice cream and Danish. It gives you a nice boost, knowing you have what they want. Makes you want to flex your stick-like arms or show your turkey's neck to best advantage. Yup. Things are definitely looking up. Which is why I'm still laughing now & then. -Bob Hoover My wife is finishing up her last round of chemo and steroids, and gloats as she climbs into jeans smaller than she wore in high school. I went through the routine three times over the last eleven years. Got to the point that a belt was totally useless; suspenders (braces, for subjects of the Queen), overalls, or coveralls kept me decent. Anything was better than the hospital gowns. Now we both eat ice cream whenever we like, put whipping cream in our coffee and butter in everything else. Dale |
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Dear Dale,
Congratulations! My hat is off to you an Mrs. Dale. You will be happy to know there are a number of people who share your feelings.... and at least two who do not :-) Of those who did not, they felt my remarks were in poor taste. Of course, they've never had cancer. On the other hand, I have received several private messages from cancer survivors THANKING me for the article. Some even asked permission to re-publish the article in their local cancer support- group news letter. So I hope you will understand my public 'thank you' to you, and 'Permission Granted' to them, even though it may not be in keeping with the 'poor taste' crowd. But then, they never got the point to begin with :-) As for the gentleman who wanted to know just what the hell this has to do with home-built airplanes, the best answer is: virtually EVERYTHING, since we can't build airplanes and go flying in them when we are rotting in our graves. Nor when we are wringing our hands as we moan and mutter..... 'I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die...' because when you get right down to it, ALL of us are gonna die! The important thing is how we handle the time leading up to that event. -R.S.Hoover -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- On Jan 2, 9:43*pm, "Dale Scroggins" wrote: My wife is finishing up her last round of chemo and steroids, and gloats as she climbs into jeans smaller than she wore in high school. I went through the routine three times over the last eleven years. *Got to the point that a belt was totally useless; suspenders (braces, for subjects of the Queen), overalls, or coveralls kept me decent. *Anything was better than the hospital gowns. Now we both eat ice cream whenever we like, put whipping cream in our coffee and butter in everything else. Dale |
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... Dear Dale, Congratulations! My hat is off to you an Mrs. Dale. You will be happy to know there are a number of people who share your feelings.... and at least two who do not :-) Of those who did not, they felt my remarks were in poor taste. Of course, they've never had cancer. On the other hand, I have received several private messages from cancer survivors THANKING me for the article. Some even asked permission to re-publish the article in their local cancer support- group news letter. So I hope you will understand my public 'thank you' to you, and 'Permission Granted' to them, even though it may not be in keeping with the 'poor taste' crowd. But then, they never got the point to begin with :-) As for the gentleman who wanted to know just what the hell this has to do with home-built airplanes, the best answer is: virtually EVERYTHING, since we can't build airplanes and go flying in them when we are rotting in our graves. Nor when we are wringing our hands as we moan and mutter..... 'I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die...' because when you get right down to it, ALL of us are gonna die! The important thing is how we handle the time leading up to that event. -R.S.Hoover Feel free to tell the "poor taste crowd" to go to the devil. Oh, wait, that's redundant... they obviously already have... Peter |
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![]() wrote in message ... snip As for the gentleman who wanted to know just what the hell this has to do with home-built airplanes, the best answer is: virtually EVERYTHING, since we can't build airplanes and go flying in them when we are rotting in our graves. Nor when we are wringing our hands as we moan and mutter..... 'I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die...' because when you get right down to it, ALL of us are gonna die! The important thing is how we handle the time leading up to that event. -R.S.Hoover My wife had always been a white-knuckle flyer. Now that we both realize we are going to die sooner or later, and what will most likely kill us, we have shed lots of unnecessary fears. I sold my last airplane when our kids were in college, but now we're looking for another one to see the country we haven't seen yet. Could be a homebuilt, could be otherwise. I doubt I'll take time to build another. How's that for on-topic? Dale -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- On Jan 2, 9:43 pm, "Dale Scroggins" wrote: My wife is finishing up her last round of chemo and steroids, and gloats as she climbs into jeans smaller than she wore in high school. I went through the routine three times over the last eleven years. Got to the point that a belt was totally useless; suspenders (braces, for subjects of the Queen), overalls, or coveralls kept me decent. Anything was better than the hospital gowns. Now we both eat ice cream whenever we like, put whipping cream in our coffee and butter in everything else. Dale |
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On Sat, 3 Jan 2009 15:17:17 -0800 (PST), "
wrote: ALL of us are gonna die! The important thing is how we handle the time leading up to that event. -R.S.Hoover you're doing a bloody fine job of it. I post to these exchanges in the deliberate style of a pre-senile dementia patient. it is so that you can enjoy rebutting the message. I figure that the mental exercise is exactly the distraction you need. btw why do you see building an engine as impossible? ...as opposed to assembling one? I am an erstwhile model engineer at times and I have done castings from scratch. I've even made my own furnace and greensand. making a casting is no harder than making the pattern and core prints and they're done in wood. the rest is just ramming up greensand, cutting ingates and runners, then pouring in molten metal. its a dark art but it isnt impossible. controlling hydrogen embrittlement in alooominum castings isnt difficult. (no need to raise to this bait. it isnt in presenile dementia mode) Stealth Pilot |
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On Jan 5, 5:33*am, Stealth Pilot
wrote: (no need to raise to this bait. it isnt in presenile dementia mode) --------------------------------------------------------- 'sllright. Any msg from Down Under is assumed to be slightly fey (notice the ASSUMPTION again) But as a point of interest... Casting aruminumm VW heads DOES require incantations and Black Art babbelations to get one suitable for machining. But it would be well worth your while, if you intend to fly behind a converted VW. Why? Because the original heads are severely limited with regard to fin surface-area, restricting their maximum SUSTAINABLE output. The heads are NOT L & R but one size fits all, or L/R. Thg reason for LIMITING the fin area is that the heads must fit under the stock shrouding as used in vehicle engines. If you do not have that limitation... if your cooling is due to RAM AIR and you are building the plenum chamber yourself, you do not have that limitation and my increase the fin area by a significant amount, allowing the engine to produce a MUCH higher level of output under Standard Day conditions. Casting your own heads not only permits a higher level of output, it allows you to ANGLE the roof of the chamber slightly, allowing the use of larger than stock valves without having their center edges encroach upon the spark plug, which is located slightly above the valve's center-line. By casting your own heads you may also modify the exhaust's OUTLET PORT in the manner used by Porsche. Doing so will alleviate a host of problems associated with the exhaust valves, the most common of which is being forced to use valves having stems of small diameter, precluding the use of large-diameter, sodium-filled stems. Of course, you need to be a pretty good pattern-maker to begin with, and have access to a pot of alloy of suitable temperature that has NOT been in contact with steel or iron (ie, a silicon carbide pot, or a steel pot lined with a ceramic coating. Some years ago I EXPERIMENTED with VW head castings. To ensure the proper alloy I simply used old, damaged heads as my donor metal. But for the other details, as best I can recall I spent a lot of time crying; dumping unsuccessful heads back into the pot, and wishing I'd gone farther in seminary instead of deciding to Join the Navy and See the World. -R.S.Hoover |
#8
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As for the SECOND point you've raised (although not the 2nd in
sequence), in which you said.... ------------------------------------------------------------------ On Jan 5, 5:33*am, Stealth Pilot wrote: btw why do you see building an engine as impossible? ...as opposed to assembling one? ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- One of the most difficult aspects of wrenching is convincing the Average Joe that being able to ASSEMBLE an engine, as in, "Insert Tab A Into Slot B..." is a very good first step in learning how to push-up a tombstone, when that engine is powering an airplane. The fact that a part FITS has very little to do with proper assembly. (Simply select a batch of parts that are on the LONG side of spec and everything will go together like a German toy.) It will even Start. It even RUNS. But with those kind of specs the poor thing is already about half way to being worn out. Seriously. Some specs on the VW engine are pretty wide. As in PRETTY W I D E. Side clearance on the rods... where the big-end fits the crankshaft... are . 010mm to .040mm... with a wear limit all the way out to .070mm fer crysakes! The tricky bit here, as in several other critical 'fits' on the VW engine, is that big-end side-clearance is also a factor in your OIL PRESSURE, and for that reason what you want to shoot for is the SMALLEST allowable clearance, or .010mm ( ie, about four thou ). Symmetry also plays a role here, and shell-type bearings such as used on the big-end of VW rods are never symmetrical... they do not form a perfect circle. YOU must see to that, by 'releaving' the torqued tension in the big-end. How? By hitting it with a hammer! (Okay, okay, so we just tap it... and not with just any hammer, but with a soft-faced hammer having a weight of a quarter-pound or less. And how do you tell that you've releaved the bearing? You hold it out horizontally then let it DROP.. under its own weight. It should take about THREE SECONDS to fall to a purely vertical position. Sounds kinda iffy, eh? Well, it is. So just make sure that ALL FOUR of your rods have EXACTLY the SAME 'drop-time' and the engine will run sweet... assuming you haven't shot it in the foot somewhere else along the twisty path of Crankshaft mantling. The problem here, and the reason I spend a lot of time screaming at the newbies, is they have exactly ONE ENGINE'S-WORTH OF PARTS from which to assemble an engine. And Reality simply don't work that way. Oh, he'll end up with an engine. And the thing will even run. But it won't run as good as it should; it won't be as efficient as it could be. (I've had to sort through as many as EIGHT SETS OF RODS to find four that satisfied ALL of the specs. And there's quite a few. Interestingly, a lot of those specs are BEST checked by touch ( or by FEEL, if you will). I can SHOW those things to a Newbie but since he's only got ONE SET of parts to play with, it will be a waste of time and effort. Odds are, he'll just slap the thing together and hope for the best. The answer to your questions is really very simple and has to do with what the assembler must do when they're one engines-worth of parts does NOT fit or does NOT run. Because you can spend some of the best years of your life shipping junk parts back & forth until your patience wears out along with your warranty. -Bob |
#9
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On Sat, 3 Jan 2009 15:17:17 -0800 (PST), "
wrote: Dear Dale, Congratulations! My hat is off to you an Mrs. Dale. You will be happy to know there are a number of people who share your feelings.... and at least two who do not :-) Of those who did not, they felt my remarks were in poor taste. Of course, they've never had cancer. Keep up the good work Bob. Some people just got no sense of humor. Having something eating at your precious bodily parts, or watching things you use every day start shutting down before your eyes can give a person a whole new outlook. On the other hand, I have received several private messages from cancer survivors THANKING me for the article. Some even asked permission to re-publish the article in their local cancer support- group news letter. So I hope you will understand my public 'thank you' to you, and 'Permission Granted' to them, even though it may not be in keeping with the 'poor taste' crowd. But then, they never got the point to begin with :-) As for the gentleman who wanted to know just what the hell this has to do with home-built airplanes, the best answer is: virtually EVERYTHING, since we can't build airplanes and go flying in them when we are rotting in our graves. Nor when we are wringing our hands as we moan and mutter..... 'I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die... I'm gonna die...' because when you get right down to it, ALL of us are gonna die! The important thing is how we handle the time leading up to that event. One of my main goals was to be able to fly again which pushed me through 3 to 4 months of PT where I'd come out soaking wet from perspiration. But I made it to over 300# on the leg press and 50 reps on lat pull downs. There is a bit of asymmetry as the lat on my right side is as large as my hand, but the one on the left is a quarter that size. Still the strength is similar. The left side just tires out sooner. I never thought I be proud of being able to tie my own shoelaces twice in my life. Roger -R.S.Hoover -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- On Jan 2, 9:43*pm, "Dale Scroggins" wrote: My wife is finishing up her last round of chemo and steroids, and gloats as she climbs into jeans smaller than she wore in high school. I went through the routine three times over the last eleven years. *Got to the point that a belt was totally useless; suspenders (braces, for subjects of the Queen), overalls, or coveralls kept me decent. *Anything was better than the hospital gowns. Now we both eat ice cream whenever we like, put whipping cream in our coffee and butter in everything else. Dale |
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