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  3. I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid.

I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid.

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  • cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    cazabon@mindly.social
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

    I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

    Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

    There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

    1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
    2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
    3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
    4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

    (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

    At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

    And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

    1/2

    #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

    afewbugs@social.coopA deelion@mastodon.socialD cazabon@mindly.socialC bbeaker@toot.communityB ncrav@mas.toN 6 Replies Last reply
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    • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

      I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

      I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

      Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

      There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

      1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
      2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
      3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
      4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

      (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

      At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

      And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

      1/2

      #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

      afewbugs@social.coopA This user is from outside of this forum
      afewbugs@social.coopA This user is from outside of this forum
      afewbugs@social.coop
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @cazabon and if you don't have an idea chances are someone's made a YouTube video of it

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

        I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

        I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

        Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

        There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

        1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
        2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
        3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
        4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

        (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

        At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

        And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

        1/2

        #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

        deelion@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        deelion@mastodon.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
        deelion@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @cazabon I am determined to start turning some broken things into differently broken things very soon.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

          I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

          I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

          Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

          There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

          1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
          2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
          3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
          4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

          (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

          At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

          And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

          1/2

          #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

          cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
          cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
          cazabon@mindly.social
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          Of course, you need to be sensible when you're first starting out. Don't mess with #dangerous things. You don't start repairing hydraulic systems or mains-voltage gear or machines that can take your arm off if you sneeze wrong.

          Start with simple stuff, and basic safety precautions.

          You can try #electrical stuff, as long as you unplug it and short any big capacitors (large cylindrical things) it has, in case they don't have a bleed resistor on them.

          Even better is to start with something that plugs in with an external low-voltage plugpack - it's much harder to kill yourself with a tower fan that runs from 24 VDC than one that runs directly off the mains.

          Maybe do a brief web search on the device if you're not sure about it, just to see if there are warnings about working on it.

          Surprising (in some sense) things to avoid working on:

          Microwave oven. This is the object in your house that is trying hardest to kill you. High frequency, high-voltage AC will kill you dead if you get it across your body.

          Old-fashioned CRT (TV/monitor) tubes. Very high voltages, and frequently hold a charge for a long time.

          Gas-powered equipment. You can't "unplug" them, and there's always a chance there's enough gas hidden in the carburetor or the removed spark plug wire bumps into the plug that it could puff to life if you turn the crankshaft. One revolution is enough to maim or kill you.

          Have fun!

          2/2

          #danger #DangerWillRobinson #DIY #fixit #DarwinAward #NaturalSelection

          magsol@quinnwitz.houseM krnlg@mastodon.socialK 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

            I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

            I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

            Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

            There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

            1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
            2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
            3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
            4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

            (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

            At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

            And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

            1/2

            #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

            bbeaker@toot.communityB This user is from outside of this forum
            bbeaker@toot.communityB This user is from outside of this forum
            bbeaker@toot.community
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @cazabon Welcome to the world of #fixing things. For me it started as "well I I've fixed a few of my own things", to "I once fixed my grandfather's clock" to "you know about clocks", to "you're the clock man".

            Learned things and done things I wouldn't have dreamed of a few years ago. Still learning which is what I like.

            cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

              Of course, you need to be sensible when you're first starting out. Don't mess with #dangerous things. You don't start repairing hydraulic systems or mains-voltage gear or machines that can take your arm off if you sneeze wrong.

              Start with simple stuff, and basic safety precautions.

              You can try #electrical stuff, as long as you unplug it and short any big capacitors (large cylindrical things) it has, in case they don't have a bleed resistor on them.

              Even better is to start with something that plugs in with an external low-voltage plugpack - it's much harder to kill yourself with a tower fan that runs from 24 VDC than one that runs directly off the mains.

              Maybe do a brief web search on the device if you're not sure about it, just to see if there are warnings about working on it.

              Surprising (in some sense) things to avoid working on:

              Microwave oven. This is the object in your house that is trying hardest to kill you. High frequency, high-voltage AC will kill you dead if you get it across your body.

              Old-fashioned CRT (TV/monitor) tubes. Very high voltages, and frequently hold a charge for a long time.

              Gas-powered equipment. You can't "unplug" them, and there's always a chance there's enough gas hidden in the carburetor or the removed spark plug wire bumps into the plug that it could puff to life if you turn the crankshaft. One revolution is enough to maim or kill you.

              Have fun!

              2/2

              #danger #DangerWillRobinson #DIY #fixit #DarwinAward #NaturalSelection

              magsol@quinnwitz.houseM This user is from outside of this forum
              magsol@quinnwitz.houseM This user is from outside of this forum
              magsol@quinnwitz.house
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @cazabon I like to work with 5V, 0.12A cooling fans. Or RJ45 cables. Highest voltage item I’ve worked directly on is a 20A GFCI outlet and I checked about a dozen times that I’d correctly shut off the associated breaker (including testing with a non-contact voltage pen) before touching it.

              cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • bbeaker@toot.communityB bbeaker@toot.community

                @cazabon Welcome to the world of #fixing things. For me it started as "well I I've fixed a few of my own things", to "I once fixed my grandfather's clock" to "you know about clocks", to "you're the clock man".

                Learned things and done things I wouldn't have dreamed of a few years ago. Still learning which is what I like.

                cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                cazabon@mindly.social
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @bbeaker

                Well, I've been doing it for close to half a century, so it's not really new to me ... 😃

                Clocks! I'm fascinated by them, still know very little. Though I did take a brief look at a mantel pendulum clock at the last cafe. Learning, learning...

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • magsol@quinnwitz.houseM magsol@quinnwitz.house

                  @cazabon I like to work with 5V, 0.12A cooling fans. Or RJ45 cables. Highest voltage item I’ve worked directly on is a 20A GFCI outlet and I checked about a dozen times that I’d correctly shut off the associated breaker (including testing with a non-contact voltage pen) before touching it.

                  cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cazabon@mindly.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @magsol

                  Being safe is good! Triple-checking is also good. There's also the habit of sticking one hand in your jeans back pocket before poking around in electrical panels or boxes, because that makes it near impossible to get a hand-to-hand shock across the heart. You keep it there until you absolutely need two hands for something, and then you re-check it for being live before doing that.

                  magsol@quinnwitz.houseM 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                    @magsol

                    Being safe is good! Triple-checking is also good. There's also the habit of sticking one hand in your jeans back pocket before poking around in electrical panels or boxes, because that makes it near impossible to get a hand-to-hand shock across the heart. You keep it there until you absolutely need two hands for something, and then you re-check it for being live before doing that.

                    magsol@quinnwitz.houseM This user is from outside of this forum
                    magsol@quinnwitz.houseM This user is from outside of this forum
                    magsol@quinnwitz.house
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @cazabon Ooh, that’s a really cool trick I hadn’t heard of before! Thanks!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                      I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

                      I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

                      Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

                      There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

                      1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
                      2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
                      3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
                      4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

                      (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

                      At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

                      And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

                      1/2

                      #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

                      ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                      ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                      ncrav@mas.to
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @cazabon *takes machine apart puts it back together, notices extra part that was not put back in, yet machine now works: should I open it again? 🫣*

                      cazabon@mindly.socialC timwardcam@c.imT hattifattener@wandering.shopH 3 Replies Last reply
                      2
                      0
                      • ncrav@mas.toN ncrav@mas.to

                        @cazabon *takes machine apart puts it back together, notices extra part that was not put back in, yet machine now works: should I open it again? 🫣*

                        cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cazabon@mindly.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @ncrav

                        This is indeed a mysterious process that I've experienced myself. I think it's related to the missing socks.

                        ncrav@mas.toN 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                          @ncrav

                          This is indeed a mysterious process that I've experienced myself. I think it's related to the missing socks.

                          ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          ncrav@mas.to
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @cazabon indeed! perhaps there's a tinkerer god that takes socks and gives out random parts 🤔

                          slash909uk@mastodon.me.ukS 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                            Of course, you need to be sensible when you're first starting out. Don't mess with #dangerous things. You don't start repairing hydraulic systems or mains-voltage gear or machines that can take your arm off if you sneeze wrong.

                            Start with simple stuff, and basic safety precautions.

                            You can try #electrical stuff, as long as you unplug it and short any big capacitors (large cylindrical things) it has, in case they don't have a bleed resistor on them.

                            Even better is to start with something that plugs in with an external low-voltage plugpack - it's much harder to kill yourself with a tower fan that runs from 24 VDC than one that runs directly off the mains.

                            Maybe do a brief web search on the device if you're not sure about it, just to see if there are warnings about working on it.

                            Surprising (in some sense) things to avoid working on:

                            Microwave oven. This is the object in your house that is trying hardest to kill you. High frequency, high-voltage AC will kill you dead if you get it across your body.

                            Old-fashioned CRT (TV/monitor) tubes. Very high voltages, and frequently hold a charge for a long time.

                            Gas-powered equipment. You can't "unplug" them, and there's always a chance there's enough gas hidden in the carburetor or the removed spark plug wire bumps into the plug that it could puff to life if you turn the crankshaft. One revolution is enough to maim or kill you.

                            Have fun!

                            2/2

                            #danger #DangerWillRobinson #DIY #fixit #DarwinAward #NaturalSelection

                            krnlg@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                            krnlg@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                            krnlg@mastodon.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @cazabon There's a lot you can learn to be sure, and a lot of valuable knowledge - but the biggest step is to appreciate that stuff *can* be fixed and you can actually work it out. Repair cafes are such a great idea.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • ncrav@mas.toN ncrav@mas.to

                              @cazabon indeed! perhaps there's a tinkerer god that takes socks and gives out random parts 🤔

                              slash909uk@mastodon.me.ukS This user is from outside of this forum
                              slash909uk@mastodon.me.ukS This user is from outside of this forum
                              slash909uk@mastodon.me.uk
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @ncrav @cazabon i did exactly this with an old 1950s record player recently 🙂

                              But it almost worked... the arm did not come down straight onto the record. about 100 moving parts!! One spring left over... hmm. No good manuals / diagrams I could find.

                              I had one blurry picture that I could just see the edge of a spring I forgot to put back on. It worked!

                              Be brave. Take stuff apart and learn. Take pictures! Happy tinkerer for 50 years...

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • ncrav@mas.toN ncrav@mas.to

                                @cazabon *takes machine apart puts it back together, notices extra part that was not put back in, yet machine now works: should I open it again? 🫣*

                                timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
                                timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
                                timwardcam@c.im
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @ncrav @cazabon I've got a laptop like that.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                                  I like #fixing things and have since I was a kid. Friends and relatives give me #broken things, I mostly try to give them back #working things. It's fun, it can be a challenge, and sometimes you learn something new, which is exciting.

                                  I #volunteer at my local #Repair Cafe. It started up a year or so ago, and I joined it when I heard about it a few months later. Now I get to fix things in "real time", no advance planning, and an audience! Well, 90% of the time it's fine.

                                  Over the years I've heard numerous comments from people that "Oh, I'd like to be able to fix things" or "I don't know how to do that" or the more direct question "How do you learn to fix stuff?"

                                  There isn't a big "secret" to it. It's simple.

                                  1. Take something that's broken, and take it apart.
                                  2. Look at the bits and see if you can guess at why it isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing, or why it is doing something that it shouldn't.
                                  3. If you have an idea from (2), try fixing it. Maybe it's "lube this" or "un-jam that" or "that hidden fuse looks burnt".
                                  4. Put it back together. Even if you didn't find anything to try fixing it. You learn a lot from this.

                                  (You can repeat 2 and 3 multiple times if you want.)

                                  At the end of this, you either have a working thing, or a broken thing. If it's working, congratulations, you fixed your first thing!

                                  And if it's broken, well, it was already broken. Nothing lost. No need to feel ashamed or embarrassed or like you failed.

                                  1/2

                                  #HowToFix #RepairCafe #skill

                                  timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  timwardcam@c.im
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @cazabon So many things these days fail at stage 1 - there's no completely obvious way to take it apart no-destructively. Probably you have to apply force somewhere, but, if you can't find a manual or YouTube video, how much force and where? So stage 0 is to ask the punter "do you mind if I destroy it trying to take it apart?"

                                  cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • timwardcam@c.imT timwardcam@c.im

                                    @cazabon So many things these days fail at stage 1 - there's no completely obvious way to take it apart no-destructively. Probably you have to apply force somewhere, but, if you can't find a manual or YouTube video, how much force and where? So stage 0 is to ask the punter "do you mind if I destroy it trying to take it apart?"

                                    cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cazabon@mindly.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @TimWardCam

                                    Yes, this is always a risk, and a challenge. You quickly learn to guess how something is held together - where the hidden screws are, or where the clips are along that circumferential seam, or when something is just snap-apart.

                                    Newer stuff, particularly consumer electronics, can be very frustrating. The cases can be clipped together so tightly that it takes *forever* to finally get it apart, futzing with your spudger for an hour.

                                    Even worse is that some things are now designed to be assembled with what I call one-way clips. There's literally no way to use a spudger to open the clips from the outside; one it's clipped together, the only way to get it apart is by force or cutting, breaking the clips, at least on one side. And now you have to figure out how to hold it together again.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ncrav@mas.toN ncrav@mas.to

                                      @cazabon *takes machine apart puts it back together, notices extra part that was not put back in, yet machine now works: should I open it again? 🫣*

                                      hattifattener@wandering.shopH This user is from outside of this forum
                                      hattifattener@wandering.shopH This user is from outside of this forum
                                      hattifattener@wandering.shop
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @ncrav @cazabon If you do this enough times, will you end up with enough parts to assemble a second machine? Is this the secret unlock to a post scarcity society? 🤔

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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