Shahar Goldin

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since Aug 02, 2024
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Live in Seattle, doing some land transformation on Whidbey Island
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Recent posts by Shahar Goldin

I would watch a few Torque Test Channel videos about specific tools you need.

The only real downside I know of (and this may not be valid anymore) to Milwaukee tools is that last time I checked they were the only brand that didn’t have battery adapters. When I met the partner I live with they were already on Milwaukee and I was on Bosch and I couldn’t find any battery adapters- they’re available in both directions for Bosch, dewalt, makita, and I think some of the less popular brands too, but Milwaukee was distinct.

I’m not sure how the lawn care stuff is, I’m on EGO for that.
1 week ago
it's only really dangerous if someone gets it into their umbrella
2 months ago
I just heard part 2 of the AI podcast and was thinking about the AI companies that just have warehouses full of Indians pretending to be AI chatbots

And then the almighty algorithm showed me this https://youtube.com/shorts/xyHOWXhRNMs?si=vRkYqSATcdKniH9H
2 months ago

Jay Angler wrote:This smoke is really bad for lungs and over-all health.

Please start a new trend and get the really good breathing masks for industrial use and wear one if you're out in it! The kind that look like gas masks.

An N95 mask will get some of it, and since I can get those small enough to fit me, I will use one, but I am aware there are things in smoke an N95 won't stop.



You’re thinking of a p100 mask. After listening to this radiolab episode from last summer, I’m pretty much on the same page.
https://overcast.fm/+ABGanSSFaNU
8 months ago
If you have a meat thermometer, I would highly recommend cooking them to rare (145ºF) and then searing with the braise in your oven or on a grill or on a skillet. I'd recommend lots of thyme. Some people like mint, which is also great.

If you're feeling silly/for special occasions, get 2-3 of these and bend them into a crown shape. Then it's called a crown roast.
8 months ago
Seattle Pottery Supply will sell me a firebrick for 15 dollars. Several people on Craigslist/FB market want to sell me hundreds of "firebricks" for ~$2 a piece. The big box hardware store wants to sell me a pallet of 138 firebricks for 400 dollars. The stuff inside of electric kilns seems to be a completely different material (very low density). These all seem to be different products. Some of them are made of refractory cement? I think? and are probably good enough for a low temperature fireplace. I have dreams of a 2400ºF wood fired kiln, and reading here it doesn't sound like that's a very high number for what the bricks in a RMH need to withstand. How do you know that the stuff the lady on craigslist that she said she pulled out of a chimney is good enough for what you need?
8 months ago
I just stumbled on this and it happens to be relevant and I love it
11 months ago