{ Arena Red }
22 Feb 2009 #
Korg M1R Internal Battery Replacement

Korg M1R Battery Replacement

Gee, my last post was another DIY article. I can almost copy and paste this. :) But the subject is entirely different.

I've just posted a new article in the Articles section, describing how to replace the internal battery on a Korg M1R synthesizer module. When the battery dies, the synth is dead and you lose all the internal program memory. Your only recourse is to open it up, replace the battery, and then locate and restore the factory programs or your custom programs. Fortunately, it's pretty easy.

5 May 2008 #
Boxster Parking Brake Sensor Switch Replacement

Boxster Parking Brake Sensor Switch Replacement

I've just posted a new article in the Boxster Projects section, describing how to replace a faulty parking brake sensor switch. When this switch goes bad, the car doesn't know that you've engaged the parking brake. The PARK light on the dash won't light up, and more importantly, the car won't let you operate the convertible top.

It's a $5 part. Replacement involves a number of screws and removing the center console to access the switch. Having done it once, I could probably do it again in 30 minutes, but it will take longer the first time.

24 Feb 2008 #
Stan Ridgway & band in concert

Stan Ridgway at The Little Fox

I caught a terrific show by Stan Ridgway and his band this weekend at The Little Fox theater in Redwood City.

Ridgway was in fine form, and unlike the last time he was town and doing a mostly solo show, this time he brought the full (well, sort of) band. Pietra Wexstun was on keyboards as usual, with Rick King on guitars; these three record as the Drywall. In addition, Joe Berardi wielded a visually unassuming but sonically intense array of percussion around his simple drum kit.

They played a mix of material from Stan's solo career and from Wall of Voodoo. I was really impressed by how much power Berardi's percussion added to the sound. Some of the Wall of Voodoo songs packed a big punch with Berardi's extra emphasis, and throughout he added overlayed bongos, wood blocks, pots and pans, maracas, shakers, and a vibra-slap, over his traditional kit and the mechanized rhythm machine track at the core of the original WOV songs. It adds up to an irresistable groove, and I found the songs even more powerful than the originals.

Listen to something like Call of the West, The Passenger, or The Factory, and imagine the drum machine ticking away in the background, with a real drummer adding a powerful kick of bass, or a snare backbeat, or tom tom fills, all in just the right key spots, all of which are lacking in the original recordings' soundscapes, and you get the idea. It absolutely rocked.

Set List:

  • Tomorrow
  • The Big Heat
  • The Factory
  • Peg and Pete and Me
  • The Passenger
  • Don't Box Me In
  • Lost Weekend
  • Calling Out to Carol
  • Lonely Town
  • ?
  • Afghan / Forklift
  • Stranded
  • My Beloved Movie Star
  • Act of Faith
  • Camouflage
  • ?
  • Mexican Radio
  • Call of the West
  • Ring of Fire
  • Call Box (1-2-3)
  • Drive, She Said
  • White Rabbit
  • A Mission in Life

"A Mission in Life" is a great closer. The narrator is a bartender closing up shop for the night, talking with the bar staff. The music finally rises into an almost anthemic crescendo, and the words of the chorus start out heartfelt and uplifting; but end up sad and ironic.

You got a mission in life
To hold out your hand
To help the other guy out
Help your fellow man

That's why I own this bar
They're thirsty outside
I give 'em oceans to drink
And they drown in the tide

12 Nov 2007 #
Late-Season Race Update, part 1

Late-Season Race Update, part 1

Round 5

Thunderhill in Reverse

After the interesting experience of racing with a broken rear sway bar, I finally tried making a sway bar adjustment. In stock form the Boxster understeers a bit. Adding negative camber in front, and running a smaller front-to-rear tire width delta, help to make the car more neutral.

If you want to make a neutral car a little less understeery (more oversteer), you have two ways to go with the sway bars. It's counterintuitive if you think that stiffer always means better handling. Relatively speaking, the stiff end of the car will be less compliant in corners and thus will slide across the road rather than squat and allow the outer corner to grip. Again, this all relative; if the car isn't pretty stiff to begin with, body roll will outweigh everything. So, one way to go is to stiffen the rear; this makes the rear stiffer but therefore less compliant, allowing it to lose grip sooner. The other way is to soften the front; this makes the front softer and therefore more compliant, meaning that it grips better (assuming it's not too soft).

For Thunderhill, I adjusted the rear sway bar to +1 stiffer. Previously I had always run it at the softer setting. (The front bar has 5 holes which I call -2 to +2 in stiffness, and the rear bar has two holes, which I call softer and stiffer.) My first thought was to soften the front, but my friend Erik suggested that before I lose any stiffness in the suspension I should try stiffening the rear. So I moved the rear bar from the softer setting to the stiffer setting.

Thunderhill in reverse is always a challenge to get used to, because I only run it about once a year. This is second time we've run reverse with the Turn 5 bypass. If you stay close to the left edge of the track at the bypass, you will catch air! I avoided the edge by almost a car width; it makes for a nice photo, but is probably not the best line.


Ed catches air.
photo by Dito Milan, gotbluemilk.com

With an abundance of caution considering that I didn't know how much oversteer to expect out of the sway bar adjustment, I did a 2:15 warming up in the first practice session, and then settled down to the 2:13's in the second practice session. I could definitely feel the difference in handling, and to be honest, I was not totally comfortable with it. I've had the car handling in such a stable form for so long, it was just a little unnerving to have the rear end step out a bit on occasion. It just takes time to get used to it, but in the end it should make car capable of going just a bit faster—if the car is in highly competent hands! There is the risk that in the hands of a chicken the car will be slower, as the driver uses too much caution and tries to avoid all signs of oversteer.

My qualifying session was balked by horrible traffic, and I only got a single clean lap in, at 2:14. But most other drivers probably had the same issues, so it all tends to even out. Qualifying put me 13th on grid, behind JC (Ferrari F430) and Nick (Evo VIII), and ahead of and next to Rick (M3), with Ken (TransAm) and Kevin (Boxster S) in the next row.

After an uneventful start, the field started to spread out. At some point, Cris (911) went into the dirt and lost a few places as several of us passed him. For the bulk of the race, Rick (M3) was close behind me. Our cars have an almost identical power-to-weight ratio, so we tend to run very similar lap times. Rick told me later that towards the end of the race, he could tell I was getting impatient as my tires started to lose their effectiveness; Turn 2 in reverse tends to induce a lot of understeer, and he noticed that I was having a hard time hitting the apex, but wasn't letting up. Which is true, because Rick was close enough that I didn't want to give him a chance of getting a run on me out of Turn 1.

One thing I no longer noticed during the race was the presence of oversteer. I think I'm getting used to it. Two events remain.

6 Nov 2007 #
Ongoing Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Notes

Ongoing Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Notes

I've been running Mac OS X 10.5 ("Leopard") for a week or so now, and have been collecting notes.

Overall it has been a painless upgrade. Leopard has some very nice new stuff, and seems solid and reliable. There are a few UI quirks and questionable choices, but they are few and are outweighed by a larger number of improvements. Not to mention the stuff under the hood that is now available to developers, which will come to light as applications are updated to take advantage of it.

Here are my notes, which I'll update as I find new things.

Next 5 Entries:

Jul 1 Mid-Season Race Update, part 1

Jun 11 Ice Water in Hell

May 7 Regarding Coding Tips

Mar 24 CFRA Round 2: Laguna Seca, Sunday March 11

Mar 8 Mini-Review: Garmin Training Center for Mac

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