Radio installation

I’ve spent the past couple of days working on getting the dual-band VHF/UHF ham radio (a Kenwood TM-G707A) installed in the new F-150. As of today it’s mostly done. All that’s left to do now is to mount the control head on the dash, and finish the antenna mount. I took it apart last night and re-painted it, since the original black paint had mostly flaked off of part of it.

The new truck is more installation-friendly than the Sport Trac, that’s for sure. Dashboard panels pop out with a simple tug, door sill plates pop up without breaking parts, and of course there is a lot more room for working under the dash. There’s a convenient pocket in the dash for the microphone, and plenty of room behind the rear seats for the transceiver. Much to my surprise, I found out the rear seats will flip down with no hassle to gain access to the area behind them.

F150forum.com has been a huge help in getting this done, from the tip about the rear seat latches to wiring ideas to someone mentioning ProClip mounts. When I’m finally finished with this project I’ll have a very nice looking and functional installation. On the off chance I ever decide to upgrade to a different radio, I’ll be able to keep most of the stuff in place and re-use the mounts. Given how little I use the mobile rig, though, I give that a pretty low probability.

First road trip in the new truck

Lisa and I took the new F150 to Des Moines and back this past weekend.  It’s every bit as smooth and quiet as we had hoped; I would say it probably comes close to most luxury cars.  Gas mileage was not spectacular, but I’ll reserve judgment on that issue.  We’re still in the break-in phase; in fact, there was under 100 miles on the odometer when we left.  Temperatures hovered at or below freezing for most of the weekend, and we had a stiff cross wind both ways.  I also have not put a bed cover on yet, and I know that will make a difference.

The EcoBoost engine pulls smooth and strong from idle to highway speeds; you really have no indication you have a V6 under the hood.  Horsepower and torque are higher than the new 5 liter V8.  In fact, it outperforms last year’s 5.4 liter by a good margin (320 HP/390 ft-lb for the 5.4, 365 HP/420 ft-lb for the little 3.5 EcoBoost).  This engine is amazing.  No turbo lag or whine, just quiet power from an engine that pulls like a mule.

I’m looking at what to do to get the ham rig installed.  There really isn’t a hidden spot in the cavernous F150 cab for the transceiver; I may be able to wedge it in under the seat, but I’m not sure yet.  I think there’s plenty of room under the dash, but I’m not inclined to drill anywhere.  I’ll have to do some looking.  The antenna might be a challenge as well; I believe that’s a fiberglass hood.

 

A new look for the old blog

It occurred to me that the weblog was looking somewhat dated.  The Blueberry theme was OK when I started it, but I liked the one I picked for the HamGadgets news blog a lot better.

One of the things I like is that it’s totally customizable…  I can move, add and delete things at will, change the colors, the background, everything.  I like it.  Oh, and I’ll be posting pictures of the new truck in a couple of days.  It’s awesome.  😀

Night and day

If you read my last post you got a run down of the archetypical car dealer experience.  Last night we went through what can best be described as being close to the other end of the scale.

Now, granted, we’d dealt with this dealership and salesman before.  He knows we’re not really ones to enjoy the endless back-and-forth negotiation.  They had the truck I wanted (OK, possibly because I’d asked them to order one for me).  We took a drive, then sat down to work out the deal.  I already knew what the other dealer’s last-dich, closing time on the last day of the shortest month of the year offer was.  I figured that would be a good number to shoot for — maybe adjusted for the fact that this truck had a sticker price about $1400 higher.

So we sat down with the dealer’s invoice, showing what their holdback was, the employee price, all of it.  We agreed that it was only fair that they make a little profit on the deal.  They took a look at our trade-in, and came back with a number that was within $1100 of the other dealer’s.  Not too bad for the first attempt; if you go by total discount off sticker price, they actually beat the other guys by $400 or so.  Then they agreed to let us take both vehicles home so I could get all of my stuff out of my old truck — the ham radio, etc.  They’ll pick it up later this week or early next.  Again, not too bad.  I don’t think we could have asked for much more.

This is why we keep going back to Woodhouse Ford.


Sometimes you just shoot yourself in the foot.

Lisa and I spent several hours at a car dealer this evening, in a huge waste of everyone’s time.   I hadn’t planned for it to be a waste of time.   If they had what I was looking for and we could come to an agreement on price, I was ready to buy.   Unfortunately (or maybe not, for me), the car dealer games cost them a sale.

The first price they came up with — after leaving us cooling our heels for a bit too long — was, of course, ridiculous.   Less than blue book trade value for my current truck against retail for the new one.   Now my ’03 Sport Trac is a pretty desirable model in great shape with low mileage, good tires and a nice aftermarket in-dash nav system and backup camera.   It’s going to sell quickly and without a lot of time or money spent cleaning it up.  We politely declined, and it was time for Round 2.   I told the guy we were several thousand dollars apart, and gave him a number I thought was more fair…   from which Lisa then suggested we trim another couple thousand.   Half an hour or so later, we get the answer; it’s still a couple thousand higher than Lisa’s figure.

By this time I’d had enough time to think about what we were doing about that I had pretty much talked myself out of buying that truck — at any price. It lacked a few options I really wanted, and had a few I specifically did not want.   By the time we finally decided we were done and asked for the keys to my truck (which had disappeared, of course)   the sales manager made a last ditch effort to get us to take it for a thousand under even Lisa’s number, which I thought was pretty low anyway.   Sorry, too late.

If we’d been able to dispense with the idiotic games, if we hadn’t been left waiting on negotiations for so bloody long, we might have considered taking a truck home with us.   The guy could have come up with an offer a thousand or even two higher than their last offer, right off the bat, and we might have done the deal.   Maybe.   I would have regretted it later, but they’d have made a sale, and it still was a very nice truck.   Problem was, they felt the need to play the kind of stupid games that have given car dealers a bad name.   And we’ve seen it all before and recognize all of it for the nonsense it is:

  • “I’m going to lowball you and see if you’re stupid enough to fall for it.”   No, we’re not stupid – and this is not an impulse purchase.
  • “I have to run this past my manager.”   Yeah, right.   If you can’t make a deal, then kindly get out of my way and get me someone who can.
  • “This truck is going out on a dealer trade so we’re not supposed to sell it to you…   but we will, but you have to buy it tonight or it will be gone in the morning.”   Sorry, not buying that story.   You’re either lying to me, or reneging on another deal.   Either one is a very unattractive trait in a dealer.
  • “Oh, Ford financing is expensive, we’ll hook you up with a great loan rate, probably under 6%.”   Um.   ‘Scuse me?   Ford was at that time offering 0% financing for 60 months, PLUS $1000 cash allowance, PLUS a five-year extended powertrain warranty.   What, you didn’t know about that?   You’re supposed to be a Ford salesman and you are unaware of that?   Wait, this is another test to see if we’re stupid, right?

We walked in around 4 PM and didn’t get out of there until well after 7.   By that time I was tired and hungry, Lisa was about ready to fall over, and they had managed to convince me not to buy the very nice truck we’d driven.   And quite frankly, the whole experience pushed them down a couple of notches on my list of places I would buy from.

I’m going to give the next guy a 2-minute rundown of the stuff I am no longer willing to put up with, under any circumstances, and see if he still wants to deal.   No running off to the manager — if I’m in a chair more than 5 minutes without a warm body with a number on the other side of the desk, I’m out the door.   Make a deal or find me someone who can.   I don’t pay sticker price, I don’t take lowball trade offers, and please don’t piss on my foot and tell me it’s raining.

 

What’s the appeal of falafel?

Lisa and I were shopping a week or so ago, and were intrigued by a package of falafel we found.  We’d both heard of falafel, but had never tried it.  It sounded pretty good — so we bought some.

I have to say, this stuff is horrid.  We’ve tried it in various forms — plain, dipped in ranch, with salsa, cut up in a fish taco, and last night I gave it a shot with some feta cheese — then with feta and ranch.  Nothing doing.  The only way to make this stuff palatable seems to be to mask it’s flavor (reminiscent of wet cardboard and pencil shavings) with salsa, and lots of it.  Honestly, I’ll try anything a few times to try to get it right, but the remaining half of these little hockey pucks are probably going to become plant food.

I don’t know how hummus can be so good, and falafel so nasty. If you know of a way to make these things palatable, please let me know!

Resurrection

OK, so I haven’t posted in a while.  Who cares?  It’s not like anyone but me reads it anyway.  In fact, *I* don’t read it either.

Lisa and I went out for a ride on our shiny new bikes from The Bike Way today.  One lap around the eastern half of Zorinsky — the part with the dam.  Not bad, for not having been on a bike for any distance in a couple of decades.  I’m sure I’ll be feeling this tomorrow, and not in a good way…  but it was fun and I’m glad we got the bikes.

Snow, marvelous snow…

Wow.  What beautiful snow we have.  It’s one of those where every tree branch carried a thick, white frosting, makes the entire neighborhood look absolutely beautiful.  Of course now I have to go out, fix the snow blower and clear it all off of the driveway and sidewalks!

That’s OK.  Sunday afternoon when we land in San Juan it will all be forgotten.  🙂

Pics of the new office/shack

Finally got the new office / ham shack pretty much finished, cleaned up and took a few pics..

Ham station at right, work setup center/left with dual monitors.
A little closer view of the work and station setups. To the left of the MasterKeyer is my new Nixie tube clock. Geek city. 🙂

More to come later on.

There’s always one troublemaker.

We had a drywall guy come by about a week or so ago and do some patching and cosmetic work.  We had a couple spots of old water damage, some corners needed attention, the new skylight needed finishing off and the patch job I did when we remodeled the downstairs bathroom was less than perfect.  I managed to get most of the spots painted OK, though I don’t think there was a spot other than my office where I picked the right paint color on the first try.  The damn bathroom, though, has been a real pain in the ass.  For whatever reason we don’t have any left over paint, and so far I think we’ve tried four different shades of tan/khaki.  All of them are close, but none are right on the money.  I’m hoping the latest is good to go, but quite frankly I’m not expecting it to be.  I won’t be the least bit surprised if I end up re-painting the entire room by the time I’m finished.