Monthly Archives: October 2014

Always the last to know . . .

We bumped up to almost 10 pages or 240 vehicles today, mostly due, I think, to a new workover rig that came into a pad that we didn’t know existed here. At least it’s labeled wrong on the info that our oil company gave us.

When we moved to this new gate, we were told that the pad we’re parked on was 1H and 2H, which means there are two wells here. The pad right down the road, where they’re getting ready to frack, is 3H, 4H, and 5H, i.e. 3 wells there.

But today I found out that 1H is not here, but about 1/2 mile on down the road, all by itself. And they’re moving another workover rig in there.

Thanks for telling us. We’re always the last to know, Which is sad because the guys coming in here are asking us for directions.

Of course some of these drivers are their own worst enemies. I had one truck come in this afternoon looking for a drill rig that wasn’t here. So I ask to see his directions. And they were pretty specific.

“Turn right at the intersection on US190 and go 4 miles. Then turn right on Junction Lane. The rig will be on your right.”

So I told him where he turned in is only 2 miles from the intersection. Then I ask him if he noticed what our road is named.

He said, “Simpson”.

So then I asked why he went 2 miles and turned on Simpson, when his directions said to go 4 miles and turn on Junction.

He said, “Cause I saw another truck turn in here.”

Whoever said men won’t ask for directions was only half-right. In many cases they won’t follow them either.

I think my venerable Cradlepoint CTR-500 router is slowly giving up the ghost. I mean it’s only 6 years old, so what gives. Anyway, the problem seems to be with the Wi-Fi part of it. It’s apparently gotten flakey.

I’m still using a USB 3G modem that looks like a large pack of gum. And the reason I’m still using it is that I’m grandfathered for unlimited data, and I don’t want to lose that by upgrading to a 4G one. And I’ve heard a lot of horror stories about numerous problems with the new ones.

At first I was afraid that my modem was dying and I’d be forced to upgrade, but it works fine plugged directly into my laptop. And with the modem plugged into the router, my desktop works fine directly connected with an Ethernet cable. And I know the Wi-Fi on the laptop and the desktop are OK, because they have no problems using my Galaxy 5S as a Wi-Fi hotspot.

But anytime I try to use the Wi-Fi from the router, my signal comes and goes, so I’ll now I’ll have to look into getting a new one, I guess. I’ll let you know what I find.

Or maybe I’ll just bang on it.

Finally, it looks like we’ve got some pretty cold weather coming through in the next few days.

Cold Temps

I’m really looking forward to that 39° one.

(you did get the sarcasm there, right?)

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Thought for the Day:

Been There. Done That. Never Got A T-Shirt.

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Same Old, same old . . .

Trucks come in. Trucks go out.

The frack equipment continues to move in, but so far it seems at a slower pace than our other fracks. But that may be just the calm before the storm, so to speak. We’ll see. At least we probably won’t have two fracks going on at the same time like before.

Maybe.

One of our RV friends has been having a problem with small floor heaters in their rig burning out after a few days. So she asked me for help, and although I haven’t heard back from her yet, I thought I’d pass on my ideas.

The RV is on shore power plugged into their garage, and everything else is fine. But so far 3 of these small Lasko-type floor heaters have burned out within a few days when plugged into the rig, after working fine in the house.

After thinking on it a bit, my thought is that even though she’s plugged into shore power, that outlet, or all of them, must be coming off the inverter. I guess it depends on how your transfer switch is wired up.

On our rig, if we’re on shore power, the inverter is not in use, even if turned on. The order seems to be: Generator, Shore Power, Inverter. But I’m wondering if her rig might have a different order.

I suggested she check to see if her inverter is on, and if so, turn it off. Then check to see if that outlet still has power. Now she knows she’s really on shore power. And I suspect that she won’t have anymore heater problems.

The reason I think her inverter is involved is that a lot of electronic equipment does not like the modified sine wave power put out by most RV inverters. This graphic from the Xantrex company shows the difference.

Sine Wave

The red line is what the power coming out of your wall outlet at home looks like. The blue line is what the power coming out of most RV inverters looks like. A big difference. And a difference that a lot of electronics doesn’t like. It just depends on how it’s designed.

In our case, a few years ago it happened to us. We have a heated mattress pad on our bed and it has dual electronic pushbutton controls. One day while we were traveling, and had the inverter on, one of the controllers fell off the end table and turned on when it hit the floor. This immediately killed it. Luckily I was able to order a new one. And now we unplug the mattress pad when we travel.

Most computers will work OK, and most devices that use ‘wall wart’ power supplies, or inline power supplies like laptops, will also work OK. Usually if it has a transformer in the power supply, it will work.

But it seems like any device that involves large current draw, heaters, coffee makers, etc., and has a digital readout/controller, is going to have problems with modified sine wave power. I won’t go into why this is circuit-wise, and the fact that the circuit could easily be designed not to have this problem, but it would cost an extra dollar or so. Of course if you’re making a million heaters a year, this adds up, so there is that view of things.

There are several things you can do here. First, check the literature that came with the device. In many cases it will say, “Not For Use In An RV”. Second, call the manufacturer or check their website.

Finally, if all else fails, buy something cheap. Get a heater that just has a knob that says, “OFF, HI, MED, LO”. It will work fine. Same goes for a coffee maker like that.

Or you could just replace your rig’s inverter with a $2000 Full Sine-wave model. Yeah, that’s the ticket.

That’s probably about enough on the tech stuff. Many of you are  dozing off already. Jan says you can ask me what time it is, and I’ll start with the history of the sundial and come forward from there.

She’s probably right.

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Thought for the Day:

If my words offend you, you probably don’t understand sarcasm or criticism . . . or you do.

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