mvweebles
Guru
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2019
- Messages
- 7,780
- Location
- United States
- Vessel Name
- Weebles
- Vessel Make
- 1970 Willard 36 Trawler
Interesting thread to read through. Someone early said that some folks are just born with some mechanical aptitude. I sure didn't get it from my dad - he couldn't change a light bulb.
Like most, I took the "Necessity is Mother of Invention" path. I just couldn't afford to not fix stuff; and I always had vehicles that needed attention. I drove a 1974 VW camper van for years and cannot remember how many times I adjusted the valves before the day's drive. Same with my old BMW motorcycles.
As I've aged and gotten more flush with cash but still fix stuff myself but for different reasons: Even though I really don't enjoy the work as much as I once did, finding competent help often takes longer than just doing it myself.
Some things are simply left undone. I just responded to a post by CatalinaJack about alternator output. Electrics are definitely a weakness in my skillset. Unfortunately, it's a weakness for many mechanics too. My solution is to keep thing simple - an old diesel only needs electricity to energize the starter and crank the motor. That's my limit. My buddy has a relatively new Power Cat with twin Cummins that sometimes do weird things for some unknown reason that only his marine electrician can figure out (last one was a slightly corroded hair-fine wire in a quick-connect plug). Michael (electrician) found it in about 20-minutes after a factor Cummins' mechanic spent 2-days replacing $5k in parts and didn't find it.
Another example of knowing my limits comes in Networking, as in the various items with IP Addresses - stiff that allows you to control gizmos via an iPad or similar. Way-cool when it works. But eventually, something will break. Troubleshooting networked gear is super frustrating for me and my success rate hovers in the low-mid single digit percentages. Therefore, I have banned all WiFi-dependent infrastructure from my boat, at least as primary interface.
Long story to say that knowing your limits is one thing. Respecting them and having a Plan B is another. Some folks are fine calling in the cavalry (mechanics, electricians, etc). Me? I'd prefer to keep systems that I have a shot of fixing myself.
Peter
Like most, I took the "Necessity is Mother of Invention" path. I just couldn't afford to not fix stuff; and I always had vehicles that needed attention. I drove a 1974 VW camper van for years and cannot remember how many times I adjusted the valves before the day's drive. Same with my old BMW motorcycles.
As I've aged and gotten more flush with cash but still fix stuff myself but for different reasons: Even though I really don't enjoy the work as much as I once did, finding competent help often takes longer than just doing it myself.
Some things are simply left undone. I just responded to a post by CatalinaJack about alternator output. Electrics are definitely a weakness in my skillset. Unfortunately, it's a weakness for many mechanics too. My solution is to keep thing simple - an old diesel only needs electricity to energize the starter and crank the motor. That's my limit. My buddy has a relatively new Power Cat with twin Cummins that sometimes do weird things for some unknown reason that only his marine electrician can figure out (last one was a slightly corroded hair-fine wire in a quick-connect plug). Michael (electrician) found it in about 20-minutes after a factor Cummins' mechanic spent 2-days replacing $5k in parts and didn't find it.
Another example of knowing my limits comes in Networking, as in the various items with IP Addresses - stiff that allows you to control gizmos via an iPad or similar. Way-cool when it works. But eventually, something will break. Troubleshooting networked gear is super frustrating for me and my success rate hovers in the low-mid single digit percentages. Therefore, I have banned all WiFi-dependent infrastructure from my boat, at least as primary interface.
Long story to say that knowing your limits is one thing. Respecting them and having a Plan B is another. Some folks are fine calling in the cavalry (mechanics, electricians, etc). Me? I'd prefer to keep systems that I have a shot of fixing myself.
Peter