Solar - Terrestrial Data

Friday, December 31, 2010

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas to everybody in Blogland! We installed our Christmas tree some days ago, and all the gifts are there waiting.
-26 degrees C this morning and a crisp and clear day.



Tuesday, December 07, 2010

My mom would have turned 90 today


My mom was born this day in 1920. She died June 21, 2009.
The society changed rapidly during her lifetime, she was born when there was no radio, no TV, the first telephones had been installed in the village, everybody walked or used horse carriage, some bicycles there were  but that was all. The boats were propelled by sails or by rowing, no electricity (the village was connected to the national grid after I was born!) the water had to be carried in, no central heating... the list of what we take for granted nowadays could be a mile long.
She saw the modern society grow into what it is today, with its' pros and cons, she saw the WW2, she saw the man walk on the moon. She saw it all...


Monday, November 29, 2010

Let me...

...introduce you to Woodrose, a new local band that has been practicing together this autumn and made their first performance in the beginning of November at a private party in a small venue not far from here.


This live version of "You Oughta Know" is one of the best I've found on the YouTube.
Er.. I may be slightly biased because my son, Lukas, is in the band, together with my prototype amplifier and 4x12 speaker cabinet... :)
He is on rhytm guitar and also alternating on vocals:

The winter is embracing Europe, we got some more snow yesterday and it was -21 C when I left for work this morning.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

I am not hibernating...

...though I haven't updated my blog since September. I have just been straight out busy!
I started a greenhouse project in September as I told in my latest updates, There was a lot of old windows stored at my moms' house and I brought them here instead of scrapping them. I built a frame on a solid foundation made of 10 cm of concrete with frost insulation below and it is now standing there covered with plastic tarps, waiting for the spring to come when I will install the renovated and painted windows. Pictures of the progress below:











Then Ingela decided to throw out the old table from the living room and ordered a new one from me according to her own specifications:




For the moment I'm upgrading Ingelas computer because all this heavy blogging and picture editing is taking its toll on the old one. The new one will include an energy saving Xeon L3426 4-core Hyperthreading CPU, an energy saving graphics adapter Radeon HD5450 from ATI, 2x 500 GB silent WD Caviar Green in fail-safe RAID1 configuration, silent fans (the CPU has no fan at all...) and a silent PSU. On top of this 64-bit Windows 7 Ultimate with a virtual XP to take care of old software that would not work in a 64-bit Windows 7 environment.    
In the meantime we have got an outbreak of winter here, the temperature has plunged to -8 C in the beginning of last week and at the end of this week it will go there again. 10 cm of snow on the ground.



Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Update:

Yes, I'm alive and well but seriously occupied for the moment. I've been excavating a part of our garden and built a foundation for a greenhouse to be completed next spring. The major ingredients in this project is a lot of old windows that were scrapped and stored in the woodshed when the house where I grew up was renovated 1967.
Take a look at Ingelas' blog of today 9.28
http://alegniinoffice.blogspot.com/2010/09/vad-hander-i-potatislandet.html

Hans

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

We got married 20 years ago today!

As you see, we are still very happy!
:)


Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Friday, August 06, 2010

Back in the salt mines...

...since last Monday. A few days at work and you feel like you need another vacation immediately!
I will round off my vacation pics here with me on top of my shed, finishing the new roof:


In Björköby there is a local museum located in an old house where you can have a look at old traditional furniture, tools and clothes etc. and in the old barn there is a motor, vehicles and machines museum showing all kinds of old boat engines, motorcycles, mopeds etc. and suddenly there, in the midst of the old boat engines, there is a manual petrol (gas) pump that once was used at the local shop. That pump, once used for two-stroke petrol, gave me some nice flashbacks of my teenage years:

 

There were two of those pumps - one for 4% mixture and one for 5%. The shop closed at 1 PM on Saturdays and one of the ladies behind the counter was a grumpy "old girl" and did not like young moped and motor cycle riders much... She had a habit of rolling in those pumps back into the storage at about 15 minutes to 1 PM and lock the doors. Of course we then showed up at 10 minutes to 1 to fill up our mopeds and motorbikes for the weekend... :D

And of course some mandatory pictures of sunsets and the rising moon:






Have a nice weekend everybody, we are going to our summer house because the weather forecast is OK and there will be faint winds so I can do a little fishing.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Our baby boy is 18 today!



Our very own entertainer and in-house loon Ian is 18 today! Congratulations and I hope you will continue to share your positive energy forever!

Dad

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

A piece of my radio history


This "undressed" Luxor make, model "Harmony" emerged from deep inside a junkbox today when we emptied the last part of my old home. The last part to be cleaned and emptied was my old HAM-shack, a small room in the southwest corner of the new wing that was built in 1967.
That radio was the first radio in the house and bought in 1953. AM only, no FM.

 

This is not the radio that introduced R&B and R&R in my life but it made it even more possible to sort out signals out of noise after a lot of tweaking and modifying. My first own radio was a Philips receiver from the late thirties, but I was too young to start some excessive tweaking on that radio. This one, on the other hand, was put to severe surgery and tweaking during the autumn 1965 and onward. It even served as my first real HAM-radio receiver after I got my beginners license in 1969 because the shortwave band also included the "shipping band" and the 80 m. amateur band.




Digging deeper into the junk box I found the dial that used to sit on top of the frame. If you take an extra look you will find some blue markings on the MW-part, they were there in order to enable fast look-up of the loudest offshore stations (aka Pirate-Radio stations) on the MW-band: from left: Radio 390, Radio London aka BigL, Radio Caroline North and Radio Veronica.
It looked at me and said "Plug in the earphones!" before I threw it down into the container for metal and electronic scrap at the city dump at 2:30 PM today....

Friday, July 02, 2010

Farewell old home...


I sold the place where I was born yesterday. 
In the picture above, taken in the beginning of July 1961, you can see me standing in front of the house looking at the airplane cruising back and forth over the village that day.
Hand-colored aerial b&w photos of your house and surroundings was a kind of status thing back then.
This picture has been hanging on the wall in the kitchen since then.
This is how I want to remember it. At summertime I moved into the attic into a small room that is hidden behind the porch in this picture. In the mid sixties I had strung a longwire antenna from my window in the attic to the end of the barn in order to get the best possible reception of Radio London aka "Big L", Radio Caroline and all the other offshore stations. Later on I connected a homebrew AM-transmitter to that antenna and started my own Pirate Radio. :)

The house was build by my paternal grandparents in 1912 and in the picture it is more or less in the same shape as it was back then. The tin roof was installed after WW2.
The house was later renovated and expanded, the porch was torn down and replaced with an extension of the same height and width as the rest of the house, containing a bathroom, sauna and a big hall. The house was then painted yellow.
After my mom died last year it has been empty and waiting for a new owner to take care of it and restore it to todays' standards. We have moved out and sold the most of the furniture, some pieces to remember the place by has been moved to our house and to our summer house. There is still a lot of junk to be moved to the dump and the new owner is moving in this very moment.

Yesterday I handed over the keys to the new owner and also a piece of my heart...
Bye, bye house and may your days be forever happy!

Hans


Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Five days in London, day 2

Hi there, It's been a while since I installed some stuff from our trip to London in April here, I have been occupied with a lot of other stuff and things to do in the meantime.
Most of the photos are shot with a tiny little Olympus FE-240, 7 MPix camera at "Everything Automatic."
Some of the pics I took with this camera are relly good after some tweaking in Photoscape

Anyway, day two started with a trip to St John's Wood where we walked down to Abbey Road to do the walk of the Beatles on their Abbey Road cover.
We were not alone there doing the same thing...







When we where finnished walking across Abbey Roead we took off to Buckingham Palace:










Exhausted by the Pomps And Circumstances we decided to take off to Notting Hill:










We rounded off the day by meeting Ingelas sister Anne and her husband Matt at Piccadilly Cicus and then going for a little scenic tour by bus.














To be continued...

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Nikonists (or maybe Nikonians...?) ahoy!

I bumped into a cheap Nikon lens, the now discontinued 28-80 mm AF 3.3 - 5.6 G, on the eBay the other day and as I'm in need of a simple allround zoom for my D70 I threw in a bid.
I became the owner of the lens above for EUR 41,50 and when it arrived it was unused in the original box!

I mounted it on my D70 yesterday evening and though it was a little rainy I went out in the backyard and fired some shots:











The pictures are shot in mediocre light late in the evening at ISO 640, White Balance at auto, aperture preference, aperture set at  f6.3, tweaked only in camera, using my preferred settings regarding sharpness, color and contrast, no noise reduction applied.
The colors I got with this combination of lens and camera are as close to what i got 30 years ago shooting Fujichrome 100 slide film with my Nikkormat Ft2 and Nikkor 50mm 2.0

I must say I'm a little amazed what a second hand 6 Mpix D70 combined with a EUR 41,5 (USD 50 ) lens can do. Sorry D40, D60 and D3000 users, this lens does not work in AF mode, only manual focus on those cameras, but everybody else, go and get it if you find one!
Well it is as plastic as plastic can be and weighs nothing but it is sharp, good colors and fast AF.
I call it a bargain, the best I ever had... :)

Hans


Monday, June 07, 2010

The High School Graduate


Our son, Lukas, graduated from High School last Saturday. Congratulations Luke and may the force be with you!
Photo shot by Ingela.
 
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