Fortunately it didn't take me very long. Also, this won't be going onto a car, although it will be just as important to have something that is reliable.
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Fortunately it didn't take me very long. Also, this won't be going onto a car, although it will be just as important to have something that is reliable.
So nothing like painting a bookcase at 10:30 at night, yep the fumes are give me a nice lumber tonight. Low VOC my ass gimme that good ol fashioned paint smell that last for weeks.
Sorry, I wasn't trying to be mysterious so much as I'm positive people are getting tired of hearing that I have chickens, especially after I bumped my thread.
So, if you want to automate your chicken door, this Add-A-Motor seems to be the go-to suggested product at $90 on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Add-Motor-Sur...70_&dpSrc=srch
Then there are fancier models that have built in timers and such, like so: https://www.amazon.com/ChickenGuard-...r+opener&psc=1
But, since I've been reading so much, I've seen that people are grabbing power antennas for cheap and just using those, as seen in this video (skip to 2:40): Intro music is the same from Chef John's Food Wishes videos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwh00JaCztk
My plan is to set mine up pretty much like this where I'll cannibalize a solar LED garden light with a photo cell, and have that control the opening and closing of the door. That way I won't have to adjust a timer throughout the year.
I was also painting at midnight last night. I was using that cheap paint from Habitat for Humanity. Man that stuff goes on like water and slops everywhere. In addition it smells weird. I went to put my pants on from last night and they really stunk, but it took me a long time to figure out what the hell the smell was. In addition to painting, I went through the added labor of sanding down pressure treated wood for non-stop for an hour and a half. In the end, I just started painting everything and couldn't really tell much difference between the sanded and non-sanded stuff.
It's already done by now, but are there health risks or something?
I was sanding because I was trying to clean up other lumber that wasn't pressure treated, and was planning on painting everything. Most of what I sanded were fence pickets and I found that the pressure treating seemed not to penetrate very far below the surface and I was getting raw wood almost right away. I made a bunch of quick passes and it took the paint very well. Especially compared to some scrap pressure treated 4x4 that I had laying around. I threw a quick coat of paint on that and it hardly even took the paint.
Older matl is treated with CCA - chromated copper aresenate, exposure to arsenic should be avoided.
Newer matl(after Dec 31 2003) is treated with organic compounds. Not as effective but less potential exposure issues.
Ahh, thank you.