Cake, good to hear from you, my father in-law is very much into space and star gazing. Was the Saab apprenticeship doing the mechanical work etc.
I have allways enjoyed working on cars to a certain point, my H reg Honda was a dream to work on as most things worked on vacuum off the manifold so made it quite easy to fault find although truth be told it gave very little cause for concern over the time I had it. Working on newer cars is not so easy due to the abundance of electrical blurb that gets in the way of logic.
I found on the wife's vw bora when we had that the air bag light came on intermittently it was cheaper to buy a small ( ecu reader) which plugs in to the cars brain to start looking for, and correcting faults that way. we were paying £40 a time to have it done at the garage and the £90 scanner from ebay paid for itself very soon.
I just get so annoyed at the prices that the garages charge for such menial tasks, and when they try on the usual waffle about how they have struggled to do the job.
I can see why you might find space and all things cosmic interesting, I often find myself staring up into the sky and wondering what its all about. I find a lot of the DISCOVERY programmes on sky TV very interesting.
Politics I think you have hit the nail on the head, and can only echo your thoughts on the subject. Only time will tell on the road that we are about to go down with MR, C.
The garage / workshop as you say does mean a allot to me, from a very early age I allways had a shed in the garden to put all my worldly goods in and as I got older the shed's got bigger. My interests for taking things apart and making things got bigger and just after getting married in 2000 the birth of my new workshop began. After digging all the footings out and clearing the ground roughly 11 cubic meters of soil all with one spade, the concrete went down and the workshop went up. The cupboards and display cabinets grew slowly with the tool collection, the flooring came from America which incidentally is the same flooring as used by Ferrari for their workshop, and things have just got better each year.
I have just built my son (
A small workshop next to mine, but the interest is not there yet, he tends to throw his toys in there and thats it.
Do you use binoculars at all, or a spotting scope. I had a pair of those sunagor 50-150x 70 megazoom binoculars but found that the collimation problems were horrific. The headaches that I use to get from eye strain were being caused by the very poor collimation which I could never get rid off,even after setting the alignment up as soon as the magnification was adjusted the error came back. So they went back and after much research the answer was to buy a very good fixed magnification or pay lots of money.