Archive for January, 2006

Woodworks - first project

Thursday, January 26th, 2006

Project 1: Shelf

I finished my first carpentry project here just now. The result is rewarding though not too exciting. I just needed to practise my skills of cutting, joining and sanding a small piece of wood. The shelf I made is 24″x8″x5″ and is entirely made out of one 2′x2′ sheet of 1/4″ thick block wood. The circular saw cut it like butter. I joined the pieces by small right angle brackets. It was difficult to get small screws so I had to sand out the extended part of the screws by a dremel tool. The rounded top part was the suggestion of my apt mate Piyush who supported this whole idea of making own furnitures. This shelf is going to be hung beside our main door to keep mails, keys and miscellaneous stuff.

I will be quite ambitious about the next projects. I desperately need a couple of shelves/drawers in my room. Havent yet decided how to go about it. In the meantime I will be making small corner shelves for various uses.

It’s tool time !

Sunday, January 22nd, 2006

Now that my student (dorm) life is over, I have the freedom and means to settle down. And that means having my own room, own furnitures and a zillion choices to make on how to lead a life that is simple, frugal, and as much creative as possible.

While hunting for furnitures online at craigslist with Piyush, my apt mate, I just had this idea of doing my own woodwork. It might cost a little bit to setup, but the reward of being creative and learning in the process matters a lot to me, basically this creative motivation has been the driving force of my life. I can attribute most of this to my father who bought me a real carpentry set at the age of 6. The first attempt to work with that was using the saw and cutting my finger badly. I still vividly remember that day.

Home Depot being right behind my house is like living at the foothills of paradise. Regardless of how many times I visit a Home Depot I can’t really decide which aisle to spend my time at. Today at the tools section I had a hard time choosing a cordless drill/driver, a tool in my dreams for a long while. I chose a professional 18v kit of RYOBI. It has many other compliant tools like circular saw, reciprocating saw, sander, impact gun etc which take the same battery. Also picked up a 90-pc drill accessory set. An ubiquitious tape. Carpenter’s pencil. Sharpener.

When I went to check out the section for wood pieces it was another wave of confusion. I was looking for simple wooden pieces like those used to make small racks and shelves. Instead I found varieties of woods to choose them from - birch, poplar and even redwood ! Poplar being the cheapest is the one for me now. Need to measure up the house and design some basic stuff. And quick.

Tool time has finally arrived.

UPDATE (23-Jan): John pointed out that Home Depot offers a RYOBI 3-pc combo kit that includes the circular saw worth $60. I paid $100 for my 2-pc kit and this 3-pc kit cost $120. definitely worth the upgrade and I did that today. Can’t be happier. The saw cuts wood like a steel knife goes through butter. After I get done with the simple shelf I am making, I will go for more serious projects like a low custom dining table and a computer desk.

Lunch with Jeff

Saturday, January 21st, 2006

I met up with another concours rider buddy today. I knew Jeff online for some time in the concours owners group forum. Didn’t really notice how close he lives. A mail from him suggesting a lunch meet at the nearby Elephant bar and restaurant got me excited. Earlier in the day I passed the written driver license test so I was already in a very happy mood. Now the thought of having finally found a local biker to ride with gave me a lot of relief.

Jeff was accompanied by his beautiful wife Nancy who rode with him for the first time on the concours. Hopefully she liked the ride and I would be glad if she comes with him when my Priti joins me in some weekend rides in the future.

We had a delicious salad with honey mustard chicken over relaxed chats about India and its cuisines. Nancy likes tanduri dishes so I promised her I would cook some authentic Indian chicken curry for them.

The real surprise came when we were about to leave. I forgot Jeff once mentioned in the forum that he rode police bikes. When he showed me his police ID I was like “WOW”. I could never really think of meeting a biker AND an American police officer as a friend. It also turned out that Nancy worked at a hospital specialising in speech and language. She instantly understood my exact hearing problem when I mentioned how my audiogram reads. Another “WOW” for me indeed.

Jeff and I are possibly riding to Ukiah, CA next weekend. A leisurely 150 miles, to meet Dan Bergmen ! A cogger and a great guy with his own engineering company. He engineered a bunch of useful accessories for the concours and I am excited to have a wrenching session with him.

Now if only the weather remains sane…

Got California license

Friday, January 20th, 2006

The experience at the San Jose DMV office today was satisfying. I thought I would have to come again tomorrow for new plates because the online appoinment rules mention only one item per person at a time, but the guy at the counter considered both items together (license and plate).

I had studied the CA motorcycle handbook yesterday night only partially, before hitting the sack. I had no idea I had to take a written test for general driving in addition to a motorcycle written test. When I saw the 36-question general paper plus the 25-question motorcycle paper my heartbeats went to a steady staccato. I almost knew I would fail on some question which requires remembering some figure. As sure as I was, I failed on both. 9 mistakes on general (3 allowed), 6 on motorcycle (4 allowed). My heart kept sinking at the thought of coming back 12 miles some other day, when the guy gave me another set of papers to try. This time I passed, and with the exact number of mistakes allowed. I was overjoyed.

The happiness from the new interim license and shiny new plate quickly diminished to see the $480 registration fee. At least less than a car, I thought, trying to remain cheerful for the day.

Had NYC-style hot dog from the only one stall on footpath before heading to office. A morning well spent.

UPDATE (21-Jan): Went to DMV again to take the written test for 4-wheeler driving permit. Due to the crowd they let me answer only 18 out of 36 questions and I passed with just one mistake. Wooo hooo. Now just the road test to clear and I can finally rent cars from any airport and drive my parents around when they land up.

HRs - the amazing people

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

I must say that interactions with HR people are one of the most important impressions about a company from an employee perspective. I have been continually impressed by the efficiency of the HR people I met at my company, but today was an example of what I call a tombstone of efficiency, the best one can expect out of a professional, courteous person.

I had to make a phone call to USCIS to inform them of my address change. It was a must to do in addition to the already sent AR-11 form, and it seemed to be a big PITA to me with my hearing problem. I desperately needed someone to help.

When I asked Freida about it, she agreed right away. It took a whole 30 minutes to finish the damn thing, with the voice menu system doing its blah blah for an eternity before some human being finally attended the call. Freida answered her questions on my behalf with professional accuracy and it made me feel right at home. I could not thank her enough.

Note to myself: If you find HR people to be good, the company is worth sticking to. Amen.

Sudden fever !!!

Sunday, January 15th, 2006

I had quite a few plans for this long weekend. No, not a trip, but some errands to get done. On the way to Walmart, I stopped by the local Kawasaki stealer (synonym for motorcycle dealers). By sheer luck, I got the tool I was waiting for a long time - the crescent wrench for steering head tightness adjustment. After ogling at the shiny machines at the showroom and sitting on a Suzuki VStrom 650 I set out for walmart. Within that 5 mile trip I could feel that something was happening very fast, and which I am too familiar with yet hate the most. The all-familiar pre-fever shudders were all upon me when I hurried to finish my shopping. I needed listerine, bread, and a fishing string. Nothing to do with fishing, but those strings are super strong and will help me remove the bulging Kawasaki logos from the tank. I just have a feeling that my bike is better without them, and tanks bags will be happier.

The ride back home was only 7 miles, but seemed like 100. I was shivering all over and desperately wanting to hit the bed for a day-long rest. I slept till 4:30 till I was hungry like a lion, ate some bread with philadelphia cream cheese, and cooked a peas-potato curry for dinner.

Piyush, my apt mate came from Stony Brook around 8:30 and I could finally connect to the internet by sharing his wireless connection. I still need to get a comcast cable modem connection, and soon.

Time to sleep. Fever on a long weekend at a place like california, with a bike and endless twisties around, SUCKS !

I miss my wife so much now…

S2S - The Epic Ride - pictures

Friday, January 13th, 2006

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Finished processing the rest of the pictures today at office on my own laptop.

Pics: S2S The Epic Ride - 05-06

S2S - The Epic Ride - journal

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Day 0 (22 Dec 05)
Finally the Stony Brook era is over :) Starting the epic ride tomorrow !

Day 1 (23 Dec 05)
Have done 330 miles today ! Left Stony Brook at 8am and rode till 3pm (300 miles) to reach Ligeo’s place Falls Church, Virginia. He is a friend from my Enfield days in Bangalore. A nice chat with him later left for my final destination of that day. Rode for another 20 odd miles to reach Derwood, Maryland where I met Suparno, a school friend since age 9, at his uncle’s house. Had a good Bengali chat with the family. We talked a lot about good old days of Santiniketan.

The weather was not too bad. It was cold enough in the morning to appreciate my gerbing electric jacket liner. The temperature soared to 60F in the afternoon at Virginia, and that was quite hot for a late december afternoon. Planning to do 400 miles tomorrow to reach florence, SC.

Day 2 (24 Dec 05)
Did 530 miles in total today and crossed Florence, SC. The weather being great and a lot of miles to do tomorrow made me push a little further towards Savannah, GA. Stopped at a small town Walterboro, SC to refuel and liked the ambience of the place. Checked in at an inn for for $45 and there was too many things in the room: TV, fridge, microwave and what not…

It was a great ride. Though I-95 was boring sometimes. Many a time I stopped by the road just to bite some chocolate to ward off the sleepiness. Took less pictures than I planned simply because it was way too much pain to stop, open trunk, get the SLR out and try to peek through the viewfinder with helmet on !!! It was nice to be crossing North Carolina and entering South Carolina and passing those welcome signboards I see in so many trip reports by motorcyclists.

Day 3 (25 Dec 05)
Total 490 miles today. Reached Tampa, FL. I came this far south from Jacksonville, FL to meet one of my school seniors, Bodhayanda and his Wife Kulkuldi, from my hometown Santiniketan. Staying with them tonight. Kulkuldi is treating me with endless bengali delicacies. Starting with tanduri chicken, I could taste chital fish after a really long time. And then hilsa in mustard followed by the usual chicken curry. Will stay here tomorrow also to do some work on my masters project report as demanded by my advisor. I think my coast to coast trip will be unique in the world for this augmentation of school work in the middle of the trip !!!

Rode on some of the coastal highways of Florida, notably the A1A. Also, had a ferry ride with the bike. The Fernandino beach was a hell of a place by the Atlantic. The magic of sun, sand and the palm trees. Not to mention the tanned beautiful American women :). Rode through Daytona Beach and then Universal Studios at Orlando, passed Disneyland and saw that the Kennedy Space Center was also not too far :D But no time to see these ! Maybe some other time… in a trip from Alaska to Keywest… who knows !

Day 4 (26 Dec 05)
No riding today. Have to work on my masters project report as my advisor demands. Imagine doing that in the middle of a lifetime trip !!! The later part of the day was a little bit interesting. I have written about it in my blog: http://joydutta.com/blog/index.php/2005/12/26/an-eventful-day-at-tampa

Day 5 (27 Dec 05)
440 miles done today. Reached Panama city. Rode through 100 miles of coastal highway. Met Mark, a fellow COGger (www.concours.org) before reaching Panama city and he rode with me to reach today’s destination. Staying in a family room in a hotel in Panama city.

Day 6 (28 Dec 05)
Total 650 miles today :) Crossed Pensacola FL, Mobile AL, Jackson MS, Monroe MS and finally reached Shreveport LA. It was raining a little on the way to Pensacola. Also saw Katrina’s damage on the way ! Was planning to stay at Monroe but then changed mind and staying in an inn in Shreveport. Tomorrow will ride for about 150 miles and meet Carvey. Then will ride with him to meet another friend John.

Day 7 (29 Dec 05)
Rode 260 miles today from Shreveport to Texas [pic]. After doing 140 miles met Carvey, an online friend, and went to his home in Arlington. From there, went to meet another online friend, John. His home is near Dallas, about 20 miles from Arlington. Staying here tonight. Rode around the city a little bit. Carvey and I had dinner at John’s place. It was my first dinner with an american family [pic]. John and Maria (his wife) have three very sweet kids [pic].

Day 8 (30 Dec 05)
Today staying at Pecos, Texas about 430 miles from Dallas. Carvey rode with me for about 200 miles [pic]. Then we stopped for food and after food went in opposite directions: Carvey back to his home and me on my onward journey which ended at Pecos today.

Day 9 (31 Dec 05)
2005 ended in a great way ! Did my longest one-day-ride today. From Pecos, Texas to Scottsdale in Arizona. 670 miles. Total 3800 miles done and around 650 miles more to go. Staying at my uncle’s house in Scottsdale. Planning to stay here tomorrow also.

Day 10 (1 Jan 06)
First day of the new year ! Having a great time in my uncle’s house: sumptutous bengali food, endless gossip… went to Saguaro lake the family. Saw this lake first time in summer ‘04 when my parents were here.

Saw in the news that the weather in California is very bad ! Heavy rains have caused mudslides on the highways ! Anyway, I am leaving tomorrow for my onward journey. May be will have to change my plan slightly. Will try to reach Sunnyvale tomorrow itself instead of stopping at Los Angeles.

Day 11 (2 Jan 06)
Total 550 miles today. Though the original plan was to reach Sunnyvale today itself, but because of bad weather couldn’t do it. Still 200 miles away from the final destination. Staying in a motel in a small place called Buttonwillow. Had to stop becuase of the traffic ! It was raining on and off but even after 450 miles the weather was very much rideable. But soon I5 started crawling because of the jam and the wind was horrible. But still thought of riding and finishing off the ride. 200 miles were still to be done ! But soon found out that its just impossible to do it with I5 crawling at a horrible speed. The wind was so horrible that one truck turned over ! It took me more than 2 hrs to do a couple of miles ! With this speed, it wasn’t a very good idea to continue the journey. So, decided to stop. Found this small place with an Indian restaurant :) Stopped there with the happy thought of having some good indian food but it was closed :( However, checked into an inn nearby. Tomorrow will be the last day of my mega trip :)

The whole journey till now was without any problem. But the last leg of the journey presented itself with a bundle of problems ! Of all the places I crossed in this journey, California was the last place to expect bad weather in. Also, the whole journey was without any accident, not even a minor one. And that too had to happen in California ! I fell down on the slippery road for my own stupidity ! The car in front of me stopped suddenly and I gave front brake, instead of the rear one (though I had read about this and today I realized it takes more than only knowing the stuffs, what it needs is reflex and experience). However, since my speed was very slow (20 mph), nothing major happened to me and my bike except that the crash guard on the right side of the bike got bent. Everything else was alright and I rode few miles after that before I had to make the stop for the day.

Day 12 (3 Jan 06)
Finally its over ! Since it was only around 200 miles to be done, started a little late. Slept peacefully for a little longer. Did 130 miles almost nonstop before giving a short halt. After that it was only at my Yahoo office where I stopped ! Thought of giving a surprise to my colleagues.

Summary : Total 12 days from Stony Brook to Sunnyvale and total distance covered is about 4700 miles (exact figures and statistics will be given later) !

S2S - The Epic Ride - preparation

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

20 Dec 05
Installed illuminated switches for the two accessory cig plug outlets. Used a relay to connect them to the accessory wire triggered by the tail light (ignition-on).

13 Dec 05
Got my Gerbing heated jacket liner. Expensive but well worth it. Should be a lifesaver someday in some cold ride. Installed the GIVI topcase luggage rack too. Handy for tying up the light stuff.

12 Dec 05
Installed Kimpex grip heaters. At $24, one of the best investments. My hands were toasty warm on a 5 mile ride at close to 30 F, even when the heat was on for the first 2 minutes ! I wrapped the elements over the existing murph grips and secured by electrician tapes. Then I put the wrap-on Noj neoprene soft grips over them, another great $15 investment.

10 Dec 05
Changed oil to Mobil 1 MX4T 10w-40 synthetic motorcycle oil. Gear shifts and smoother now. Also next change is due at 6k miles, instead of 3k with non-synth (dino) oils.

9 Dec 05
Successfully practiced tire plugging with the Stop and Go tire plug kit on the old rear tire. Doing it on the road will be totally different exercise though.

7 Dec 05
Put a home-made rectangular lexan sheet in place of the triangular one. Wind noise is next to zero now. Cost: $2

5 Dec 05
Got tires changed to Avon Azaros. Bike loves to lean on corners.

29 Nov 05
Installed RAM mount for my Garmin eTrex VistaC GPS.

28 Nov 05
Replaced DOT4 fluids in all the hydrolics. Bled front and rear brakes using speedbleeders. Front brake feels less spongy now.

23 Nov 05
Added a home-made triangular lexan sheet to the top of the windshield to remove wind buffet noise. It is partially successful.

18 Nov 05
Installed the Murph tip-over bars. Back breaking labor for 3 hours.

17 Nov 05
Cut off top 3″ from the stock windshield. The laminar lip made a lot of annoying turbulence behind my head.

15 Nov 05
Got the bike ! Installed the fork braces immediately.

S2S - The Epic Ride - planning

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

Ride plan:
I really wish I could explore some of the beautiful inner roads instead of taking the superslabs (interstates) all the way. But doing that in the middle of winter is not a sensible idea thanks to a couple of experienced COG members.

The route:
I-95: New York, NY - Philadelphia, PA - Wilmington, DE - Baltimore, MD - Washington, DC - Richmond, VA - Florence, SC - Jacksonville, FL - Daytona Beach, FL
I-4: Daytona Beach, FL - Tampa, FL
I-75: Tampa, FL - Ocala, FL - Lake City, FL
I-10: Lake City, FL - Tallahassee, FL
US-98: Tallahassee, FL - Port St. Joe, FL - Panama City, FL - Pensacola, FL
I-10: Pensacola, FL - Mobile, AL
US-45, US-84: Mobile, AL - Meridian, MS
I-20: Meridian, MS - Jackson, MS - Shreveport, LA - Dallas, TX - Abilene, TX - Odessa, TX - Pecos, TX
I-10: Pecos, TX - Van Horn, TX - El Paso, TX - Deming, NM - Tucson, AZ - Scottsdale, AZ - Los Angeles, CA
I-5: Los Angeles, CA - Buttonwillow, CA
CA-152: I-5 - Gilroy, CA
US-101: Gilroy, CA - Sunnyvale, CA

Planned halts to meet friends:
1. Ligeo, a friend from Bangalore - Falls Church, VA
2. Suparno, school friend since age 9 - Derwood, MD
2. Bodhayan and Kulkul, school seniors - Tampa, FL
3. Mark, online COG friend - Port St. Joe, FL
4. John, online friend - Little Elm, TX (close to Dallas)
5. Carvey, online COG friend - Arlington, TX (close to Dallas)
6. Parimal Uncle, my father’s friend - Scottsdale, AZ (close to Phoenix)