Monthly Archives: March 2021

Trailer For Sale – Sold

I mentioned another project that needed attention in my last post. Our 10-gallon Suburban water heater isn’t working right. This unit operates on 120-volts AC or propane. When we’re on a 50-amp electrical service, we keep the water heater on electric power.

Apparently, the electric heating element is going bad. It won’t heat the water adequately – we only get lukewarm water – I doubt if it’s much over 100 degrees. We have to turn on the propane gas burner to get hot enough water to shower or wash dishes.

I found a tune-up kit for the Suburban SW10DE water heater that included the heating element online at PDX RV. It also had a replacement thermostat set at 130 degrees. The kit was only $33, but shipping was $15!

I found a heating element wrench at Ace Hardware for $10. This is a thin wall, stamped sheet socket, 1-1/2 inches in diameter. The heating element has a thin 1-1/2 inch hex on top of the threaded portion of the element.

Heating element socket

With the proper tool and parts in hand, I got to work. I made a “curtain” out of a plastic grocery bag to keep any sediment that might come out of the tank off of the coach. The heating element had a plastic cover over it and it was behind the gas tube, so I had to remove the gas tube and cover for access.

Heating element exposed

I had turned the circuit breaker for the water heater off, then I removed the two wires from the element. I used the socket tool, but I found the element threads were stuck in place. I worked on it for about 45 minutes before I decided I needed to try something different. I found a 1-1/2″ standard socket at the auto parts store. I figured I could use my 1/2-inch drive electric impact driver to break the element loose.

The thin hex on the element didn’t allow the socket to fully engage the hex and the impact driver just rounded the tops of the hex corners. Next I soaked it in penetrating oil and let it stand overnight. I found a bar about two feet long that I could use as a breaker bar on the heating element tool for leverage.

I huffed and puffed and gave a mighty pull on the cheater bar and promptly bent the heating element tool without budging the element. The threads remained frozen in place. At that point, I threw in the towel and put it all back together. I’ll have to hire an RV service that either has a better tool or a better idea to get the old element out. I hate to give up, but sometimes you have to admit defeat.

Donna has been busy getting the park model home ready for us to move in. Last Saturday Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort had a community patio sale. Many of the homes here in the park put out items for sale. Donna had a lot of stuff she wanted to get out of the house before we move in. She sold quite a few items. The things that didn’t sell we took to Goodwill.

Donna’s patio sale

She’s been working on replacing window coverings with help from our friends, Roxy and Dick Zarowny. They also did some paint touch up. Roxy repainted a cabinet, changing the white finish to gray.

The RV park is slowly emptying out as snowbirds return home. Our friends Chuck and Sue Lines left last week to head back to Illinois. We have about a dozen empty sites in front of our coach and only three RVs in sight.

I ordered set of coarse (400 grit) and medium (1000 grit) diamond sharpening stones and had another go at Roxy’s LC Germain kitchen knives. These stones were aggressive and worked better on this steel than the fine synthetic Japanese water stones I used before. They left a toothy finish that I refined a bit on a medium Spyderco Sharpmaker stick. The result was an acceptable level of sharpness that remained on the toothy side. A toothy edge is good for cutting most proteins or things like thick-skinned tomatoes. A more refined edge is needed to make clean cuts of fish. I think her knives will work better now.

By Wednesday, I had almost everything out of the trailer and needed to advertise it for sale. I was a little worried as I had to have it out of here on the 30th of March – only six days away. Donna wrote up an ad and posted it on Facebook Marketplace Wednesday evening. She had immediate responses! I had searched online to find comparable trailers to set a price and had a hard time finding anything. The closest I could find were either beat-up and selling for cheap or they were really high-end models – I only found a few examples and nothing really matched our trailer.

I told Donna what I expected to get for the trailer and soon found out I under-priced it. We had people lining up to buy it and a bidding war broke out. I sold it for $700 over my asking price and the guy came Thursday morning from Casa Grande to buy it. He paid cash and left with a smile on his face. I thought the lack of trailers this size online indicated a lack of interest – most of the trailers were around the 12-foot length. It turns out there’s low supply and much demand for larger trailers. I probably could have sold for a higher price, but I’m satisfied with how things turned out.

We’ll be moving into our new place over the weekend. On Tuesday, I’ll take the motorhome to a new storage facility that opened on Main Street near the Loop 202. I’ll have it under a covered space there. I think we’ll hang around here until mid-May unless it gets too hot earlier. We don’t have a real plan for the summer yet – we just know we want to leave before the temperatures are in triple digits.

The weather for the past week had been fickle. We’ve had warm, sunny days with the high temperature ranging from the mid-70s to mid-80s broken up by a few cooler days with wind and rain showers in the 60s. It’s cool today with a predicted high of 62 degrees, but we’ll warm up to the 80s over the weekend and may hit the 90s by the end of the week.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and  I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

It’s Not If, It’s When

We’ve been busy here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort. The painter we hired, Gary, started working on prepping the interior of our new-to-us park model home last Friday. He sprayed the interior, including the ceiling in the all of the interior except for the Arizona room addition. He finished spraying on Tuesday and on Wednesday did some touch-up and clean-up.

Saturday morning we played in the annual pickleball tournament. Donna and I teamed up in the 3.0-3.5 group and had a good time. Went 3-3 but all of the games were close. I really don’t mind losing a game if we’re competitive and put up at least eight or nine points.

Wednesday was St. Patrick’s Day and we had corned beef in two slow cookers. I had trimmed the corned beef early in the morning and Donna got them started by 8:30am. I sliced cabbage and potatoes later. Donna had Irish soda bread in the oven in the afternoon. At 4pm, we transferred everything to our new place.

Our friends Chuck and Sue Lines and Dick and Roxy Zarowny joined us on the rear deck for a St. Patrick’s Day dinner. It was pleasant outside, mostly blue skies and the temperature was in the low 70s with very light wind. I was surprised to find the golf course empty. We enjoyed the company and had lots of conversation to go with our meal. Sue brought glazed carrots and Roxy contributed key lime pie for dessert.

We broke up the dinner party early – around 7:30pm. Chuck and Sue had an early morning on Thursday as they were pulling out with their fifth-wheel trailer to head back to Illinois. I was enjoying myself and relaxing so much, I failed to take any photos!

Donna has been busy taking stuff out of the coach basement storage areas – some things we haven’t used in a long time, but we wanted to keep. Now we won’t have to carry everything we own around with us – some things will remain here at the house.

While she was cleaning out one of the bins, she noticed a wet area. There was a very slow drip coming from the inlet to the electric water pump for the fresh water tank. I crawled under to have a look. Getting into the compartment, I banged my head on the door latch. I had to twist a bit to see the source of the leak. It was the filter – really just a metal mesh strainer with a plastic housing – on the pump inlet.

The small cut on my head was bleeding – even small head wounds can bled profusely. Twisting and turning my head while I was stretched out in the compartment caused the blood to run across my forehead and down my nose. I got out and walked to the door of the coach. Donna and Roxy were outside talking. When they looked at me they thought I had been wrestling in a WWE event – blood was running all over my face. It was a minor cut really and I was able to stop the bleeding quickly with a wet paper towel compress.

I put an oil drain pan under the drip – it holds a couple of gallons – and went online to find a new strainer. I ordered one from Amazon that would arrive the next day. While I was checking the leak out, I thought about the spare water pump I had. About six years ago we were in San Diego when I saw another Alpine Coach. The owner was busy repairing a water leak. I asked him what was up. He told me his water pump was leaking and had to be replaced.

He said it was a common issue with the RV Aquajet pump used in Alpine Coaches. He advised me to order a Shurflo 4008 RV Revolution replacement pump to have on hand. His words were, “It’s not if, but when your Aquajet starts leaking.”

Amazon delivered the replacement strainer on Wednesday as promised. I got back into the compartment to compare the part and see what it was going to take to install it. I was shocked to see we no longer had a slow drip – it went from a drop every 10 seconds or so to a steady drip, drip, drip and it was coming from the bottom of the water pump. The Aquajet pump failed. Now I was glad I had carried a replacement to have on hand for the last six years!

Aquajet pump leaking – line already disconnected from output side

I drained our fresh water tank and removed the old pump. The Aquajet and the new Shurflo are different designs with different dimensions. Luckily, the new strainer I got from Amazon was a direct fit on the Shurflo.

New pump and old pump – different dimensions on the mounting brackets

The mounting brackets were different, but I could see they would fit on either pump with just two screws. Rather than drill new mounting holes in the coach, I swapped the mounting bracket so I could use the existing holes and original bracket on the Shurflo.

When I got the pump mounted, I had another problem. Due to the different dimensions of the pumps, the water line from the fresh water tank to the inlet strainer was now an inch short. I needed 39 inches of water line and it was only 38 inches. I pulled the old line and rummaged around in the trailer. I found a 44-inch length of 1/2″ pex tubing. Perfect. I cut it to size and was back in business.

Shurflo installed and ready to go

After assembling it all, I turned the water supply back on and checked for leaks and found none. I filled the fresh water tank about a quarter full and ran the pump. No leaks, good flow and pressure. The new pump is much quieter than the old Aquajet – it’s nearly silent. Job done!

I have another project that’s taking valuable time from our move effort. The electric heating element on our Suburban 10-gallon water heater in the coach is going out. It doesn’t bring the hot water up past lukewarm. We have to run it on propane to get hot water. That project will be fodder for another post.

I’m continuing to work on my kitchen skills. On Monday, I made miso soup. So what, you say. Well, I didn’t make it from a package – I made it from scratch. That meant I had to make dashi first. Dashi is a Japanese broth that’s the base for a lot of Japanese recipes, including miso soup. I made awase-style dashi which is flavored by boiling dried kelp, then adding bonito flakes as it cools. After straining it, you have dashi.

The miso soup had yellow miso, tofu cubes, dried king black (shiitake) mushrooms and chopped scallions. It was good, but I needed to do a better job of reconstituting the dried mushrooms. I served it as an appetizer while Donna made a proper dinner plate.

She made pan seared scallops with lemon-caper sauce and steamed asparagus on the side.

Pan seared scallops with lemon-caper sauce

This was a delicious meal – every bit as tasty as the fancy recipe looks.

The weather has been a little crazy over the last week. We had rain showers Friday and again on Saturday afternoon and the thermometer struggled to top 60 degrees both days. By Monday, we had low 70s but dipped down to 60 again on Tuesday. As already mentioned, St. Patrick’s Day was fine with mid 70s and we hit 83 degrees yesterday. Today’s forecast calls for 80s again before dropping back into the 70s for the coming week.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and  I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Pre-Move Activities

Things are progressing slowly with the new-to-us park model home here at Viewpoint Golf and RV Resort. So far, the process has been a matter of removal rather than move-in. Donna has been sorting through the things she plans to sell in the park-wide garage sale scheduled for Saturday, March 20th. Whatever doesn’t sell will be donated.

Donna also took down all of the window hangings – curtains, rods and whatnot. They were all dated and in need of replacement. I hauled it to the community dump here at the park. There was also a small knick-knack shelf that ran around the perimeter of the living room that she didn’t want. She hired a guy from the park to rip it out and dispose of it along with a cabinet above the bed.

We’ve had some great help from our friends and neighbors, Dick and Roxy Zarowny. Roxy has been helping Donna with some paint prep and color ideas. Dick took down a few light fixtures we’ll be replacing and he also filled in trim where the living room shelf was. Another neighbor, Sue Lines, has also been consulted about paint colors. We can’t thank them enough for their time and help.

I’ve moved a few items into the small shed/shop. I’ll need to get cracking on moving everything out of the trailer so we can sell it. That’ll be this weekend’s project. Yesterday, I went over to the house to spackle some holes left from curtain hardware and other wall hangings.

Spackle job around garden window

We had a change of plan on painting the interior. We got a quote from a painter here at the park and decided to hire the job out. In years past, I always tackled these jobs to avoid the expense of hiring someone, but I’m at a point in my life where I’d rather hire someone and be done with it. They will start masking everything and apply coverings tomorrow and should complete the job by the middle of next week – they won’t work on the weekend. Once that’s complete, we can start moving in.

I’ve mentioned a bit of an evolution in my kitchen duties – I’m learning kitchen knife skills and applying them to different recipes. Meanwhile, Donna has been utilizing the Weber grill more. One of my specialties is Japanese fried rice. I’ve been making it in a large skillet, but it wasn’t ideal. The skillet isn’t quite large enough and stirring while the rice fries results some of the ingredients escaping from the pan.

I decided I needed a wok. I looked around online and settled on a Yosukata carbon steel wok from Amazon. It has a flat spot on the bottom making it stable on the induction cooktop and carbon steel is ferrous and works great with induction. The name “carbon steel” is a misnomer. All steel contains iron and carbon.

After ordering this pan, I’ve been inundated with ads and click-bait for carbon steel kitchenware. Against my better judgement, I clicked on one that led to blog post about cookware – it was just a shill for certain products. The author was either horribly mis-informed or didn’t do any research at all. He started by saying carbon steel is great in the kitchen because it is a blend of “normal steel” and stainless steel. This is preposterous. First of all, what is “normal steel?”

As I said, all steel contains iron and carbon. From there, different alloying elements can be added. Most metallurgists agree that the addition of chromium in amounts exceeding 11% of the total weight constitute a stainless steel alloy. So-called carbon steel can be anything from very pure iron and carbon like that found in Hitachi Shirogami steel or can have additions like manganese, tungsten, vanadium and a host of other ingredients – but it wouldn’t be called carbon steel if it had more than 11% chromium – it would be called stainless. This is why I say the statement in the kitchen blog is preposterous.

Anyway, the wok is carbon steel and when properly seasoned – like cast iron – it’s nearly non-stick in use. The pan is made from thin material that heats up and cools down quickly and is much lighter than cast iron. It’s sizable – nearly 14 inches in diameter and four inches deep. Just right for fried rice.

Carbon steel wok and fried rice

Speaking of steel, Roxy mentioned to Donna that her old set of kitchen knives she keeps in their motorhome were in need of sharpening. So Donna asked me if I could sharpen them for her. It was a set of LC Germain knives. These knives were made in Japan in the 1970s and ’80s. They are stamped from a sheet of stainless steel and achieve their sharpness through the use of very thin blade material. To make the thin blades wear-resistant, they were heat-treated in a way that forms large, very hard carbides. I think the manufacturer wanted these knives to hold up in home kitchens where the user wouldn’t sharpen them or would maybe send them out to be sharpened by someone with a grinder once a year or so.

I don’t have a grinder and my Japanese knives are carbon steel with very fine grain structure, making them easy to sharpen. Therefore, my Japanese water stones are finer grades. These LC Germain knives should have been sharpened with a coarse stone to reset the edge, then refined on harder stones. I couldn’t find my Lansky coarse stone, so I had to use the Spyderco Sharpmaker which I only have medium and fine grit stones for. It took a lot of elbow grease to reach a useable edge on the knives. Hopefully, I’ll find the Lansky sharpener when I empty the trailer and can have another go at the LC Germain knives.

We drove out to Buckeye on Sunday to visit with my middle daughter, Jamie. Jamie is starting a home baking business specializing in cookies – it’s called OMG Cookies. Donna ordered two dozen cookies from her that she wanted for gifts to her tennis girlfriends here at Viewpoint. I gifted Jamie with the Yaxell Enso Japanese ko-bunka knife that got me started on the Japanese knife kick. We visited for a while, then made the drive back – it’s about 75 miles each way. In the air-conditioned Nissan Frontier, the trip was breeze.

The Frontier airbag saga continued. I was up early and off to the Nissan dealer in west Mesa to have the airbag module replaced and programmed on Monday. I waited there for four hours – good thing I brought a book to read. It didn’t solve the problem. They said the wiring harness needed to be replaced and said Sullivan Motors would be calling me to make arrangements.

Chris at Sullivan called me on Tuesday and said he was working on a solution. Then he called on Wednesday and asked if I could bring the truck to their shop at 8am on Thursday (today). He said the wiring harness was on backorder, but he thought they could repair it. I was skeptical , but I got up early and went there this morning. He had a different guy look at it this time. I sat and read for a while, then took a walk. When I got back, the truck was parked outside the shop. The guy located the break in the harness and repaired it! Hopefully, that’s the last time I’ll have to deal with it.

Time for some food talk. The fried rice in the wok photo went with a wild Alaskan salmon filet that Donna grilled perfectly.

Wild Alaskan salmon with mayo-based seasoning and grilled shishito peppers

I’ll add a couple more dinner plates from the last week. Donna made balsamic chicken and peppers served with home fries.

Balsamic chicken with peppers and home fries

She also made a meal with leftover tri-tip from the weekend. She had me slice the tri-tip into thin slices along with mushrooms, onion and garlic. Then she cooked chickpea rotini pasta and made a version of classic beef stroganoff.

Tri-tip steak beef stroganoff

It was a delicious meal.

We’re looking forward to visit from my oldest daughter, Alana and her fiancé, Kevin this afternoon. We’ve had warm weather over the weekend and start of this week – it was in the 80s. Yesterday it cooled down and only reached 70 and today should be slightly cooler. It should be comfortable to sit outside in the sun while we catch up with them.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and  I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!

Not As Planned

Another week has gone by and I haven’t written a post. Things didn’t always go as planned this last week. I mentioned in my last post that I had to take our Nissan Frontier back to Sullivan Motors for a repair to the airbag system. I got up at 6am on Friday for coffee and breakfast before heading out at 7:15am.

They were going to change the clockspring for the airbag and said it would take all day. I didn’t understand this – I’ve never done this job on a Nissan, but I changed out six clocksprings in a day on Volkswagens. We had a quality engineer that wanted airbag clocksprings with various time/mileage for study. He sent me six new parts. I went to an auction yard in Avondale, Arizona where I found used Volkswagens and removed and replaced the clocksprings which I tagged with VIN and mileage and shipped them to the engineer. But, I digress.

I saw them take the truck into the shop right at 8am. Donna came about half an hour later to pick me up in Midget-San. We came home and I hit the pickleball courts. I took a phone call at 10am – it was Sullivan Motors. They guy told me he had bad news. The clockspring didn’t fix the problem so they ordered a control module. It’s an expensive part, but it’s on them as the airbag repair was part of the sales agreement. I’ll have to bring the truck to the Nissan dealer when they get the part – it requires programming by the dealer.

I told Donna I was a little worried about having the truck diagnosed by a parts replacer. Donna asked me what I meant by that. A parts replacer is a mechanic that lacks diagnostic skills – they read a fault code and jump to a conclusion without going through proper test procedures and just order the part they think will fix the problem. In my years with Volkswagen Technical Service, I ran into many examples of this. We’ll see if replacing the airbag control module was the right call.

Another plan that went awry was the title transfer for our new-to-us park model home. The seller wanted us to meet him at a third-party vehicle licensing place at 1pm on Monday. Donna and I arrived at the place right at 1pm. We saw a sign on the door that said service was by appointment only. Then we were told they used to do mobile home title transfers, but no longer do. They gave us the address and phone number of a place that does. I called the other outfit and the next appointment available was Wednesday morning at 10:30am. I made an appointment.

Then I called the Arizona Department of Transportation to see if they would be able to get us in. Their number went to a voice mail system that said call volumes are high, call back later – click! Typical service from a government agency.

Speaking of government agencies, I received the license plates from South Dakota for the Nissan Frontier. I looked at the registration reciept and saw they charged $460 excise tax. This was not right, because I paid Arizona sales tax when I bought the truck. South Dakota credits the sales tax for out-of-state vehicle purchases and only charges excise tax if the South Dakota tax is higher than the out-of-state tax – they charge the difference. I paid more than the South Dakota excise tax already, so the tax should have cancelled out.

I called the county treasurer office in Sioux Falls and they told me they had to get the documentation from the department of motor vehicles. This made no sense to me, I sent the documentation to the county treasurer as instructed, they should have records. They said they would call me back. The next afternoon I called them since no one called me back. I was told that the DMV records are being transferred to a new system and it would be weeks before they could retrieve them! I still had the documentation, so I sent it to the county again via email. I’m still waiting for a response.

Yesterday, we went to the third-party licensing place for our 10:30am appointment. What a disorganized zoo that was. It was 10:50am before we started the process and it took much longer than I expected. It was after 11:30am by the time we had everything signed and we were good to go. The park model home is officially ours.

Donna’s been sorting things out at the house – the sale included most of the stuff inside including furniture, appliances even kitchen utensils and linens. Donna will figure out what has to go before she starts moving our stuff in and getting it all organized. She also wants to paint before we move ourselves into the new house. That could take a few weeks.

Yesterday, while Donna was over at the house in the afternoon, I was puttering around in the trailer. It was breezy outside and wind gusts were picking up. Suddenly, great gusts of wind started rocking the trailer. I went out to check the canopy on the ham shack and it was whipping madly in the wind. I started removing the canvas but before I could take it all down the wind delivered a fatal blow. The ham shack canopy was destroyed.

Ham shack disaster

Luckily I wasn’t sitting at the table with my ham gear at the time! The wind carried dirt and desert sand. To the north I could see a haboob – a dust/sand storm that obscured Usery Mountain.

You can just make out Usery Mountain as the haboob begins to clear – how did that tent survive?

I’ll be setting up a new ham shack in the small shop area of our new home.

I’ll close this post with a shot of a dinner Donna made last week. It’s a Greek pork stew made with pork tenderloin, potatoes, kalamata olives, baby kale and white beans.

Greek pork stew

The weather has been great, other than the wind storm. Sunday was cool – in the mid-60s. Monday was warmer and by Wednesday we had mid-80s! Today is a little cooler but the forecast calls for low 80s through the weekend.

*Just so you know, if you use this link to shop on Amazon and decide to purchase anything, you pay the same price as usual and  I’ll earn a few pennies for the referral. It’ll go into the beer fund. Thanks!