DIY Builds
Photo: Mizuno K
But it's important to point out that, no matter what kind of two-wheel motorized contraption you're riding, what kind of smartphone you're holding, however amazing your day is going: do not mount your phone to your motorcycle. At least not without a specialized, vibration-dampening mount.
If you're insulating a shed for use as a home office or cosy garden building, then it's worth installing a breather membrane between the shed walls...
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Spray foam insulation for metal buildings is an excellent way to control the climate in your business. Spray foam has effective insulation...
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Apple says two interesting, opposing things about the iPhone 13. One, an advertisement, says it’s the perfect phone for a dashing Spanish moto-scooter courier, guiding them to deliveries and meet-ups from a handlebar mount. Things get hectic, but no worry: “Relax, it’s iPhone 13,” the overlaid copy reads. It’s a compelling ad. Apple’s other statement is that you should absolutely not strap the iPhone 13 to your motorcycle handlebars. It “might impact iPhone cameras,” and result in “reduced image quality for photos and videos,” Apple’s support document reads. “It is not recommended to attach your iPhone to motorcycles with high-power or high-volume engines due to the amplitude of the vibration in certain frequency ranges that they generate.” There is some light-gray text at the bottom of the video, while the kinetic mounting and map-zooming is happening: “Always use a dampener with your iPhone when riding as shown. Use only with low-powered bikes and avoid prolonged use.” It’s quite easy to miss; you’re only likely to catch it after reading this paragraph. An iPhone 13 ad showing off exactly the thing Apple tells you not to do with an iPhone 13 (printed in not-quite-obvious text at the bottom). A gigantic corporation having two divisions with contradictory messaging is nothing new. But it’s important to point out that, no matter what kind of two-wheel motorized contraption you’re riding, what kind of smartphone you’re holding, however amazing your day is going: do not mount your phone to your motorcycle. At least not without a specialized, vibration-dampening mount. In case you’re wondering if Apple is being over-protective: they are not. They probably don’t go far enough in warning you against a motorcycle-mounted smartphone, be it Apple or Android or almost any modern kind. Ask two people whose motorcycles have killed three different smartphone cameras.
OSB has twice the horizontal shear strength of plywood. It's a better option than plywood for subflooring in attics and sheds. Also, OSB panels can...
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3m Building a Porch Without Planning Permission You will not require planning permission for a porch if the porch does not exceed 3m when measured...
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Relax, it’s iPhone 13 (and it’s full of tiny, sensitive moving camera parts). And then, just over a month after that notice, a young man rode the heck out of a scooter with a mounted iPhone 13 in the device’s introduction ad. That scooter might only have a 50-150cc engine, but this impossibly hip person is riding all day and night, and visibly not using a vibration-dampening mount.
Most tents, when not using stakes, are made to withstand winds up to 20 miles per hour. If stakes are used, then this capability increases to 40...
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Tires and tubes should be stored in a dark, cool, ventilated area. Heat, UV light, Ozone, and time degrade the rubber compound. The tires keep...
Read More »Disassembled Pixel 2 cameras: the moto-dead unit (left) and intact (right). Nothing seems immediately different, other than typical gunk/grime from use. Once inside, we noticed something particularly fragile: four wires, suspending the lens module over the image sensor. One of the four inside our disassembled Pixel 2 camera unit was snapped. These angel-hair wires allow the lens to ever so slightly “float” inside the shell, adjusted and corrected by electromagnets to keep focus and prevent hand-shaken blur. Inside the broken camera shell, there was a “distinctly audible tinny rattle.” Our guess was that if one of those wires broke—and heavy engine vibrations seem likely to snap them—the lens could lose its ability to shift and glide. And a lens loosened by one broke wire could hit one corner of the metal shell, possibly explaining the rattle we heard. The Pixel 2 camera lens and its housing, mounted on thin wires over the sensor and a circuit board. At the same time, we couldn’t be sure that we hadn’t broken one of the wires ourselves during our disassembly. But given Apple’s own statement describing the dangers of motorcycle vibrations, and our peek inside, we think the simplest explanation is the most likely: tiny moving parts don’t like to be moved by outside forces. “[W]e think of modern electronics as lacking moving parts, ever since we transitioned to flash drives,” Chen wote. “But the camera components are these tiny moving parts.”
nylon For most docking and anchor lines, standard nylon is a good choice. It has great strength, "gives" under load to absorb energy, and is...
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Acrylic paint “Acrylic paint lasts the longest and is also known for resisting all sorts of damage caused by weather and other natural variables....
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A tiny home may be the cheapest house to build. Generally, a tiny home is a living structure under 600 square feet, with the average size for a...
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thick plywood works well for wall and roof sheathing, but use at least five-eighths in. plywood for your shed floor. Ordinary exterior-grade...
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