freedomlives
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2015
- Messages
- 566
- Location
- Husak, Slovakia, EU
- Tractor
- Iseki TS35F, Goldoni Special 140 with powered trailer -- Goldoni Special 128 -- Goldoni Uno for mowing -- Czech Vari system
I guess I need to get better at welding. There are a lot of items on the "things I enjoy doing" between sex and welding. :-D
Suggestion with flashlights-- put a piece of masking tape on the battery terminal, or cut a circle of cardboard to fit in the flashlight and insulate the battery terminal. Putting one of two batteries of opposite polarity should more or less work, but if there are more than two batteries current will flow, likely resulting the opposite facing battery leaking. Better anyway is just to get a flashlight that can't be easily knocked on.
I keep my Pelican 2690 headlamp in the car now. I used to use it all the time, but on NiMH cells it needed recharging every few days, and it is water resistant with a screw-on cover so it was a bit annoying with the batteries. Anyway, it is a mechanical switch that you have to turn the bezel of the headlamp to turn it on, so there is no risk of it accidentally getting turned on. And it comes with a lifetime warranty, as long as the damage isn't caused by "sharks, bears or children under 3". 269� Flashlights - Headlamp | LED HeadsUp Lite | Pelican Professional
For day to day use I recently got some rechargeable headlights with built in Li-ion batteries that charges with a microUSB charger like all the mobile phones now use. Much more convenient to keep charged.
Suggestion with flashlights-- put a piece of masking tape on the battery terminal, or cut a circle of cardboard to fit in the flashlight and insulate the battery terminal. Putting one of two batteries of opposite polarity should more or less work, but if there are more than two batteries current will flow, likely resulting the opposite facing battery leaking. Better anyway is just to get a flashlight that can't be easily knocked on.
I keep my Pelican 2690 headlamp in the car now. I used to use it all the time, but on NiMH cells it needed recharging every few days, and it is water resistant with a screw-on cover so it was a bit annoying with the batteries. Anyway, it is a mechanical switch that you have to turn the bezel of the headlamp to turn it on, so there is no risk of it accidentally getting turned on. And it comes with a lifetime warranty, as long as the damage isn't caused by "sharks, bears or children under 3". 269� Flashlights - Headlamp | LED HeadsUp Lite | Pelican Professional
For day to day use I recently got some rechargeable headlights with built in Li-ion batteries that charges with a microUSB charger like all the mobile phones now use. Much more convenient to keep charged.