On our recent Kgalagadi trip the water bottle burst because the water level ran low. And the little red light that’s supposed to tell me that the water level was low never came on.
So I took the instrument cluster apart to find the problem
Here’s the gauge on the bench. Apparently if the light stays on it’s the capacitor and you can replace that without taking things apart. In my case however…
I had to drill out the two rivits holding the face plate on.
Lots of electronics to multiplex the analogue temperature and the low water signal from the relay on one wire. The PCB hangs off the two pins, gauge on the right (also goes to the heating element that moves the needle) and earth at the top. The blue wire from the left carries power (regulated 10V).
Now it all started a few years ago when my brother and I started fixing up the 1996 red VW Microbus which we’ve had since 2000. It had two major issues, firstly with the fuel delivery (we ended up having the fuel tank overhauled* and replaced the fuel pump) and secondly with the battery draining (turned out to be the P.A. system my father had fitted, I tossed it). Then I replaced the distributor hall sender, fitted new rear brakes and shocks, had the aircon re-gassed, fitted new side mirrors, replaced the auxiliary coolant pump which some fool had removed along with the relay for it, messed around with the immobiliser a bit, got a quote for removing the rust and respraying… just the normal maintenance type things which had been neglected for a while.
Tanya and I wanted to go the Kgalagadi (remember the Kgalagadi? This is a story about the Kgalagadi) because we’ve been to Kruger a number of times and Kgalagadi has meerkat. And lions and leopards and cheetahs, hopefully. I figured the Kombi is a good choice for this because sitting high up gives you a longer view over the veld.
Of course, a 2200 km round trip in a 20 year old bus with 200000 km on the clock is not particularly sane. But then, who wants to be known for their sanity?
So off we went, 05:30-ish on the 23rd of September, Arlo Guthrie on the hifi (coincidence — I dumped a lot of albums on a stick and it plays ’em alphabetically).
Oh, that aircon I had re-gassed? Stopped working pretty much as we left home. Feh.
The road from Cape Town to the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is insane. Miles and miles of straight nothing between Calvinia and Keimoes, interrupted only by the tiny towns of Brandvlei and Kenhardt. And then the road from Upington to Twee Rivieren, more on that later…
Tanya took the opportunity to get in the back and scrap.
We stayed over in Upington at A Chateau de Lux which we can really recommend. Much attention to details, sweets on the pillows and chocolates and biscuits and bath salts ready in the bath… te lekker. Can’t comment on breakfast ’cause we were in too much of a hurry to be off. 250 km from Upington to Twee Rivieren. Got there, booked in, friendly people, pitched camp, let some air out the tires and off into the Kgalagadi we went.
Yes, there was a chain across the road. OK, OK, I’ll stop with the Alice’s Restaurant Red VW Microbus references now.
Now at this stage, there was only one of two things we could do (oops. Sorry). Take the road to the left, towards Mata-Mata, or take the road to the right, towards Nossob. We chose the Nossob road.
Got as far as Kij-Kij (only about 40km from Twee Rivieren, but that’s about two hours’ drive. Distances in the Kgalagadi are insane) where we found a lion under a tree. Next to a sign saying “You are not allowed to leave your vehicle at this view point”. Yup. Gotcha. Wasn’t planning on doing that, no.
From Kij-Kij we took the dune road to Auchterlonie. It’s boring. Nothing moves. The two river beds are much more interesting. Stopped at Auchterlonie for a body break, and turned back towards Twee Rivieren. Now this was Sunday, and Sunday was forecas t to be the hottest day of our week in the Kgalagadi, and yes, it was hot. Got up to 48-ish inside the cab. So we’re fahrvergnügening over the dunes and *bang*. Hmmm, that’s not good. Check the rear-view mirror, that looks like water on the road behind us. Scheisse. I figured it’s a radiator hose that popped, tell the first car passing us to tell the staff back at Twee Rivieren to come fetch us. Nope, sez the omie, he’ll tow us. With a Fortuner. The humanity.
Back at camp I investigated and no, it wasn’t a radiator hose, it was the coolant bottle.
Never seen that before.
So we started a braai.
And worked on Plan B, being, get to Upington, hire a car, get a new water bottle, fix kombi. With complications, because the next day was a public holiday. I got up early, toodled on down to the gate, asked about organising a lift with some staff maybe going to Upington. Nope, nothing like that, you’ll have to hitch a ride. So I stopped the first car out the gate, being Ditmar and his wife whose name I didn’t catch from Cape Town, they gave me a lift to the airport. Much appreciated. Got a car, flogged it† back to Twee Rivieren, and off we went for more sightseeing.
Took the Mata-Mata road this time, found the meerkats Tanya was looking for. They like being high up, so they can see further.
A car stopped and told us there was a cheetah with kill under a tree, so off we went to find it.
The cheetah had brought down a springbok ram and was nomming down under a tree on the other side of the river bed. Good thing Tanya has a long lens.
We’d also heard there was a leopard in a tree further up the road, so we left the cheetah, tried to find the leopard. Found some people who claimed they could see the leopard lying behind something, we saw squat (of course, if we had the kombi it might have been easier) so went back to the cheetah who was just leaving her meal to the jackals and moving off, fortunately towards the road.
We think this is Hanri, a six year old female, but I am new to this, feel free to correct me.
This owl has a nest and a large chick opposite the road from the Monro water hole. We stopped there a number of times.
Plan B still required that I go to Upington again (to get a new water bottle on a day that the shops are actually open), but we started Tuesday by going out early to see what we could find.
Found two jackals close to where we’d seen the cheetah, they were fast asleep. We stuck around until they got up but they didn’t feel like doing much — I suspect they finished off the cheetah’s springbok pretty much on their own, and were still stuffed to the gills (we ended up seeing lots of jackals).
Got back to camp around 10 (after which not much moves until late afternoon anyway) and then I mercilessly flogged the Polo the 250km to Upington, found a new water bottle at Goldwagen, got a lead on a towing company (Plan C), and mercilessly flogged the Polo the 250km back to Twee Rivieren (and of course we eventually had to get the Polo back to Upington again. It came with 1000 free kilometers. So much for that. We ended up putting around 1800km on it). Got back close to five, and of course out we went again.
We were watching jackals come and go at Kij-Kij when I looked the other way (always look the other way) and spotted two bat eared foxes quite far away. Cute little buggers.
Back on the way to Twee Rivieren we stopped to look at some meerkat, I looked around and spotted a little cape fox sleeping close by. The meerkat also spotted the fox…
… and proceeded to chase him off.
Little bastards.
So back to Plan B. I fitted the new water bottle, added water, and… water poured out of the side of the cylinder head flange. I suspect this is where I lost the water in the first place, leading to the destruction of the bottle.
Time for Plan C? I got a beer and thought about it.
Coincidence #1. I’d packed the toolkit I normally have in the Golf at the last moment, mostly for the shifter. But it includes four small sockets, and the largest socket fitted the bolts on the flange. So I could remove the flange.
Coincidence #2. Our old mattress had leaked and I tried a new O ring on the valve. Didn’t work, and I tossed the mattress, but I still had spare O rings in the kombi. And they turned out to be the exact diameter.
Coincidence #3. I’d also packed a tube of gasket maker.
Which means I could apply a temporary fix. Which I did — not that I trusted the fix enough to take the kombi back into the Kgalagadi, we ended up using the Polo for the rest of the week — but (spoiler alert) it did end up getting us home with no further issues.
Secretary bird.
We spotted two cape foxes with cubs, but they were extremely far away. 500m or more. This picture is at the limit of Tanya’s 600mm lens.
This owl had a nest just outside the camp gate. We stopped there often.
We saw many more animals. Gemsbok, springbok, red hartbeest, giraffe — those are pretty much guaranteed. Lots of Kori bustards (they’re scarce in Kruger). Ground squirrels everywhere. Slender and yellow mongoose. But… no cats. Well, OK, we did see two lions silhouetted against a ridge far off, but they don’t count in our books.
So right at the end of our last day in the Kgalagadi we decided to go out one last time. Looked at the sightings board, saw that some people has seen lion(s?) around Rooiputs. So that’s where we went. Didn’t see much, except there was a guy parked next to the road, we asked him what he had. Turns out there was a lion under a tree, but the only reason he knew it was that “it had been there all day”. Couldn’t see much of it, would not have spotted it on our own.
Whaddayamean can’t see it? He’s right there! (The tree’s about 100m from the road).
So we waited for him to wake up.
We will rule over all this land! And we will call it… this land!
We had supper at the restaurant the last evening. Can you believe that T-shirt is over 20 years old? Thanks Unca Joel :-)
The next morning the kombi didn’t want to start. I spent an hour fiddling with the wiring, I think it was a bad connection to the MAP sensor since that’s the last thing I touched. For the rest the drive back was uneventful. Stopped at Goldwagen again, bought a new Topran 107613755 (Goldwagen part number A1300) as well as the two O-rings for the temperature sensors (Goldwagen part number 1821). After that I was not concerned, because if my temporary fix failed, I could fix it properly. Of course my temporary fix held. Got home not that long after nine the evening.
But today I’m interested in the IBM PC version of Zork. Like the Apple ][ version, the disk could not be copied by the standard tool (in this case diskcopy) but Copy II PC worked just fine. Interestingly, the disk allowed you to make one copy of the game for backup purposes.
The weak point of copy protected disks is that the standard BIOS must be able to read the first bit of the disk. This code is then executed to read the “uncopyable” part of the disk. Anyone can read the first sector, disassemble it, and work out how to read the rest of the disk. Granted, this process is sometimes extremely difficult. Not so in the case of Zork.
On the IBM PC, the BIOS reads track 0 sector 1 into segment 0, offset 7C00 and jumps to it.
0000:7C00 FA CLI Disable interrupts
The first thing after disabling the interrupts (which is pretty standard) is to change the pointer (at 0000:0078) to the disk controller parameter block to point at the first location after this actual code, 0000:7C79.
0000:7C01 2BC0 SUB AX,AX AX=0
0000:7C03 8ED8 MOV DS,AX DS=AX=0
0000:7C05 BB7800 MOV BX,0078 DISK_POINTER, points to parameter block
0000:7C08 B97900 MOV CX,0079
0000:7C0B BAC007 MOV DX,07C0
0000:7C0E 8B37 MOV SI,[BX] Save current pointer at 0000:0078 in SI
0000:7C10 8B7F02 MOV DI,[BX+02] Save current pointer at 0000:007A in DI
0000:7C13 890F MOV [BX],CX 0000:0078 = 0079
0000:7C15 895702 MOV [BX+02],DX 0000:007A = 07C0
0000:7C18 8CC8 MOV AX,CS
0000:7C1A 8ED8 MOV DS,AX Set DS = CS
; Set stack to 0000:7C00 Fairly standard
0000:7C1C BA0000 MOV DX,0000
0000:7C1F 8ED2 MOV SS,DX
0000:7C21 BB007C MOV BX,7C00
0000:7C24 8BE3 MOV SP,BX
0000:7C26 FB STI Enable interrupts
0000:7C27 B86000 MOV AX,0060
0000:7C2A 8ED8 MOV DS,AX Set DS and ES to 0x0060
0000:7C2C 8EC0 MOV ES,AX
; Reset disk drive (AH=0)
0000:7C2E 2BC0 SUB AX,AX AX=0
0000:7C30 2BD2 SUB DX,DX DX=0
0000:7C32 CD13 INT 13
0000:7C34 BA0300 MOV DX,0003 DX=3
0000:7C37 2BDB SUB BX,BX BX=0
0000:7C39 B501 MOV CH,01 CH=1
0000:7C3B 52 PUSH DX Save DX
0000:7C3C B101 MOV CL,01 CL=1
0000:7C3E 51 PUSH CX Save CX (= 0101)
0000:7C3F 2BD2 SUB DX,DX DX=0
0000:7C41 B80402 MOV AX,0204 AH=2, AL=4
0000:7C44 CD13 INT 13
INT 13 with AH=2 reads AL (=4) sectors from cylinder CH (=1), sector CL (=1) of head/drive DX (0/0) into ES:BX (0060:0000). This read uses the new parameter block further down, which differs from the standard parameter block in that it specifies 1024 byte sectors, four sectors per track.
0000:7C46 721C JB 7C64 If INT13 returns error, print "ILL" and halt
0000:7C48 59 POP CX Restore CX (I don't think INT13 corrupts CX, so I don't know why)
0000:7C49 FEC5 INC CH Next cylinder
0000:7C4B 81C30010 ADD BX,1000 Move data pointer 4 kb ahead
0000:7C4F 5A POP DX Track (cylinder) counter, started at 3...
0000:7C50 4A DEC DX ...2...1...
0000:7C51 75E8 JNZ 7C3B Loop back unless 0
So we have now read three tracks of four sectors of 1024 bytes each into 0060:0000, 0060:1000 and 0060:2000.
; Restore disk controller parameter block pointer
0000:7C53 2BC0 SUB AX,AX AX=0
0000:7C55 8ED8 MOV DS,AX DX=0
0000:7C57 BB7800 MOV BX,0078 BX=0078
0000:7C5A 8937 MOV [BX],SI
0000:7C5C 897F02 MOV [BX+02],DI
0000:7C5F 06 PUSH ES
0000:7C60 2BC0 SUB AX,AX
0000:7C62 50 PUSH AX
0000:7C63 CB RETF POP IP = 0, POP CS = ES
RETF pulls an instruction pointer and code segment from the stack, and execution moves there (0060:0000).
This is the modified parameter block, 03 = 1024 bytes/sector (normally 2 = 512 bytes/sector) , 04 = 4 sectors per track (normally 8).
Of course MSDOS diskcopy barfs at 1024 byte sectors and there’s your copy protection.
ZORKTOOLS will rewrite the 4×1024 byte sectors to 8×512 byte sectors and patch the bootloader to match.
If you’re re-doing the rear brakes on your T3 Type 2, this picture over at TheSamba will help a lot.
Note the orientation of the springs, the top springs are under the hooks. Note the long end of the adjuster fork on the right goes towards the backing plate, short end to the front. Note the bevelled edge of the left-hand adjuster fork goes to the back. Some people say the long hook on the bottom spring should go on the left so as not to foul the handbrake cable.
Yes, you can put it back the way you found it but don’t discount the existence of a DPO.
From a bunch of stuff some other ham wanted to throw away, this ex-SWR meter.
I have no idea why the Dreaded Previous Owner stripped it down to this state. The meter movement is fine, 950-ish mV over a 4k7 resistor gives FSD, so it’s a 200uA unit.
The detector components are still in place, and it looks very similar to the Micronta 21-520A except that there’s only one meter. There’s also a little bobbin on the side for an antenna, presumably to make it into a Field-Strength Meter, but that’s a gimmick and won’t happen.
The junkbox yielded two switches of the right type and size (one selects Power / SWR, and in SWR mode the other selects Forward / Reverse). There will also be a pot to set FSD in Forward mode after which the Reverse mode should give the SWR. Give or take. Don’t expect a lot from meters like this.
Fast forward a bit and we have
Don’t ask me what used to live in those two extra holes. This setup works for me, for the price of a few junkbox parts and some time.
Orms was advertising Canon 100D bodies for R3 795*. I wasted no time to get one (should have snagged three). They also had a number of second-hand EF 70-300mm 4-5.6 IS lenses, priced from R3 800 to R5 000. All rated “80%”. I took the R3 800 one.
And then I chanced upon an EF 50mm f1.8 “nifty fifty” on Gumtree for R1 200. I had to get it mailed down from Pretoria, which cost me an extra R100, but that’s how it is. It allows me to do things like this.
Available light, 1/80 at f 4.0, ISO 4000. Lightroomed to bring the eyes out a bit, here’s a strip at original resolution and no processing.
Toothless the black cat, however, is still impossible to photograph.
I suspect this was a typo, because the next week they had these same bodies on special for over R5 000.
This is the switch and tuner schematic for an MFJ-949E Versa Tuner II. Great little unit, with a built-in dummy load. It has a switch that selects the dummy load, then the three antenna connectors in pass-through mode, then the three antenna connectors through the matching network, and then the dummy load again… through the matching network.
Which means that if you want to tune into the dummy load, you have to use the setting all the way to the left, or you have to adjust the tuner to match the dummy load to the rig, using the switch setting on the right.
Now why would you need to match a 50 ohm dummy load to your rig? Insane. The dummy load switch setting on the right should connect straight to the dummy load, not via the tuner.
This comes from a piece of medical equipment made by the other S&W, Simonsen & Weel, Denmark, circa 1979.
Each module has 8 x AM2808PC 1024-bit dynamic shift registers, driven by a DS0025CN two-phase clock driver. That’s one kilobyte of storage per module, and you have to keep on clocking the data around the ring otherwise the capacitors making up the memory discharge and forget.