Changes One Myford

As you can see from the above, my recently finished change-wheel stud is now in situ, and works like a treat, unlike my MacBook Air, which is currently masquerading as a very stylish doorstop, having apparently lunched its SSD [Solid State Drive, i.e. it's heart & soul] whilst updating the Linux Mint OS I'd had installed in place of macOS - the last update of which had previously bricked the thing - the drive is intermittently either bootable or completely invisible, which is a tad random, but I will get to the bottom of it, one way or the other. One thing that strikes me, is that the oily ironwork of my old man's lathe is a far more open form of tech than the closeted inner workings of the [albeit beautifully-designed] MacBook.

I have one or two things left on the change-wheel set to sort, in order to achieve the slow, powered saddle feed-rate I want, but it involves little more than simple calculation and small lumps of steel engineered into keys to drive pairs of wheels in the gear-train: the laptop on the other hand requires a slightly more abstruse set of skills. I've seldom failed to resurrect an errant and dying computer in the past, but the Air's hermetic nature will make the task of its rescue a bit more painful than most. If I fail, I'll put it into a frame and hang it on the wall as a piece of art. Keep you posted...


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