Thursday, December 24, 2020

A Little Christmas Bonus

 

Last Monday night, Mrs. BFTP and I finished putting up the last of the Christmas lights on the house.  I stepped outside to snap a quick picture of the whole affair.

I didn't notice until after I went back inside and pulled up the pic that the image included a little extra bit of coolness.

That bright object appearing in the background sky is the Jupiter/Saturn conjunction. 

I had forgotten all about the event, so after viewing this pic, I grabbed my little 60mm refractor telescope and 25mm Kellner eyepiece and had a good look-see of the planetary pair.  It was quite a treat seeing the two planets in the same telescopic field along with Titan and the Galilean moons of Jupiter...


Merry Christmas From The BlastFromThePast Blog!

 ...and a happy, prosperous, healthy 2021.

Stay safe !

Saturday, December 12, 2020

The BlastFromThePast Shop Has Been Invaded...

...by Christmas!!

Yep, it's that time of year again when the normal model rocketry activities are swept aside in favor of breaking out the the many large totes full of Christmas light strings from storage that need to be sorted, tested, inventoried, inspected, repaired, staged, and installed.

Over the past 40-odd years, I have accumulated a LOT of lights!  Many strings date back to 1980, and still work, but not without some small amount of repairs and TLC to be done annually.  

The lion's share of the strings are incandescent, but I have been in the gradual process of switching over to LED in the past few years.  Less current draw and IMO easier to maintain.

We are definitely not the Griswolds in terms of light displays, nor do I have a penchant for the dazzling (garrish?) computer driven / music synced affairs often seen on the 'extreme lighting' shows, but I still put up a hefty amount of lights.  Somewhere in the 8,000 - 10,000 individual mini-bulb range.  I've never counted. 

And I've not tripped any of the 15 amp breakers.    Yet.

All I know is that I typically spend at least three weekends on the install, and quite a bit more time in the basement la-BOR-atory repairing mal-functioning strings and modifying others for special custom applications.  The scope of this work tends to take over the entire workshop. 

Perhaps I should start another blog sub-page on the subject of outdoor Christmas lighting.  I certainly have enough material to effectively do so.

Anyway, model rocket projects will be resumed once the Great Mini Bulb Frenzy is over.

Cheers!