
Or in, they see it when I'm just standing around?

Pics or it didn't happen.
Yes, quite possibly this is the cause. Minute differences in counterweight balance can affect resonance and pitch. I read that somewhere.
I suppose you've already tried a rod (cumbersome when playing) and a flexible cable (ineffective). I think you should move on to a servomechanism attached to the counterweight and under the control of a microprocessor and transmitter (Bluetooth is very popular as the technology now) that controls the servo.AtomicClock wrote: βWed Apr 02, 2025 11:49 am I always thought a counterweight should move in and out, adjusting its moment arm to account for the slide's position. Haven't quite figured out the engineering, though.
I have that generic CW on my King 2b+. It does the job, and I prefer the blank canvas. If I wasn't planning to sell the horn I'd probably by some Rusoleum and paint the metal to look cooler.
I have the capability of making my own decorative inserts for the sides of that counterweight, but I'm just not into it.
Believe it or not, I was just butchering some Arban's in a local park, and two 8 year-old girls told me they liked my songs. Arban! Not even real music!harrisonreed wrote: βWed Apr 02, 2025 1:23 pm This is a trick April Fools question. The answer is that you actually need fans in the first place for them to be able to see your counterweight when you play![]()
That's probably a good thing. It's almost as likely to self-immolate as be sabotaged. I just hope he's not inside when it decides to flame up.
He's had it for quite a while. In fact, this area is surprisingly rife with the little Teslas -- at least it's surprising until you reflect on the fact that NC (for various reasons, mostly related to weather, taxes, cost of living, and access to good/exceptional medical facilities) is a Mecca for the elderly -- and full of elder-living communities and assisted living communities. And a significant number of those people seem to buy Teslas -- in large part because for them it turns out to be fairly economical (only short trips, fairly available charging stations). The little white ones (Tesla cars, I mean) are all over the place in the parking lots of those communities.
Beer is always a good investment. But betting on any random Tesla bursting into flame is a truly irrational move.
A judiciously placed LED used to tastefully highlight the logo might produce just the right degree of panache.AtomicClock wrote: βSat Apr 05, 2025 10:33 am I think I've convinced myself that on a closed wrap horn, a logo peeking through to the outside doesn't do anybody any good.
I imagine it would be much better than that. My Tesla goes 0-60 in less than 3 seconds and its range is 363 miles on one charge. Electric Harleys would blow those away.
I think he's confusing the Tesla range with the Chevy Bolt, an all electric vehicle with a rather short range on a charge.
I was referring to the electric motorcycles marketed by Harley under the LIvewire brand, and their advertised characteristics on the web: https://www.livewire.com/.BGuttman wrote: βSat Apr 05, 2025 3:09 pm I think he's confusing the Tesla range with the Chevy Bolt, an all electric vehicle with a rather short range on a charge.
Modern all-electric vehicles get much better range due to improved battery technology. Still, my old Volvo S-80 with its 25 gallon (95 liter) tank would go nearly 500 miles on one tank.
My 2013 F150 4-door long bed EcoBoost (Pre-aluminum model) gets me 750 or so miles out of a tank of gas. Said tank is 36 gallons. But I normally fill it every about once a month after 100 or 200 miles. Just something unpleasant about watching the pump go over $100, and I normally donβt like to let any tank get too low. Itβs basically the supply truck for the farm, or bringing big remodeling stuff home. (Drywall, lumber,,doors, etc) Iβll just drive it once in awhile to keep things working.
Ditto on my 2016 Chevy Silverado (2WD long bed). It's got a 26 gal. tank. But it's the big 4.3L V6 "flex fuel" engine (amazing engine). Range is up to approx 600 miles on the highway with 18-24 mpg. My wife likes to build landscaping things for her plants out of stone, and has discovered that the guys at a local rock and gravel supply place are happy to dump a half ton of stuff in the bed at a fraction of the cost of buying bags of crap at Lowes. So now she just drives it over there and loads up.
Depends on how front-heavy the horn is.AtomicClock wrote: βSat Apr 05, 2025 7:27 pm I know it's a counterweight thread, but this is ridiculous.
Ya know, a lot of us Tesla owners still say "gas pedal" rather than "accelerator" just because we're used to it. I do. I say "step on the gas" when I know there's no gas. I kinda like the irony of it.AtomicClock wrote: βSun Apr 06, 2025 8:43 am Narrator is talking about "letting off the gas". Must be one of those internal combustion Teslas.
And probably "hang up the phone" too.tbdana wrote: βSun Apr 06, 2025 9:19 amYa know, a lot of us Tesla owners still say "gas pedal" rather than "accelerator" just because we're used to it. I do. I say "step on the gas" when I know there's no gas. I kinda like the irony of it.AtomicClock wrote: βSun Apr 06, 2025 8:43 am Narrator is talking about "letting off the gas". Must be one of those internal combustion Teslas.
Well, when it's used it actually is a gas. The carburetor or the fuel injector converts the petrol into a gas so it will burn. You can actually extinguish a lit match by plunging it into liquid gasoline (but don't try this at home).AtomicClock wrote: βSun Apr 06, 2025 9:27 am I'm still struggling with "gas", when it's really a liquid.
Actually, they do have transmissions -- strictly speaking. They're not "direct drive" and have a "single gear transmission" (earlier versions had a 2-speed transmission) which, together with varying motor speed, accomplishes change in speed. So it is kind of an"automatic transmission".