Frosted Flake

Venus, the Moon, and I rose at the same time this morning.

Twenty-four degrees
I stood out in my skivvies
Like a frosted flake

Venus and the Moon shapeshifted through the glass.

The various crescents are moonlight fractured by condensation on the glass. Venus made some mean-looking faces.

Back to normal

Venus and the Moon at dawn.

Lower left to top: Orion, Kiss Flying-V, and The Pleiades. Top right: Jupiter.

Brad mentioned seeing The Pleiades in yesterday’s photo meant Orion was not far behind. I’ve taken many photos with Orion in them recently, but I haven’t posted Orion in a while.

Driven To Recycle

Sculpture I made out of rare earth magnets.

As you might have guessed from the title and the above sculpture, I took apart hard drives to recycle them. We are having the carpets at the office cleaned on Friday, and in the process of picking things up off the floor under desks, I pulled out a box of old hard drives that I had taken out of computers before I sent them off to recycling. I had intended to recycle those drives for years. Some of the hard drives were over 20 years old.

I could have taken them to an electronics recycler, but they charge a fee to destroy hard drives. But I wouldn’t know that the drives were truly destroyed unless I witnessed the recycler destroying the drives. So I took the drives apart and threw the drive cases in one box, the tops off the drives in a second box, the circuit boards, the swingarm, and other plastic parts in a third box, and the platters in a fourth box. I put all the rings and turnstiles in a bag. It seems they could be used to make jewelry or other crafty things. Things like the “my little pillow” filters went into the trash, and all the screws were tossed into a plastic thingamajig parts drawer.

A Stack-O-Drives. Half of the drives I took apart for recycling. The start of the first rare earth magnet sculpture I put together as I took the magnets out of the drives sits atop the Stack-O-Drives.

Reflecting on a silver platter

Four platter drive. Depending on the size of the hard drives, they had one to four platters.

I was curious to see what a fast kitty 15K rpm drive looked like inside compared to the slow cat 7.2K rpm drives I’d been taking apart.

The first difference was the long screws securing the platters’ spindle and the swingarm. The second difference was smaller platters in a beefier case. The third difference was large rare earth magnets three to four times as thick as the other drive’s magnets, much wider and a whole lot stronger.

This hard drive’s platters were trashed on a couple of drives. The “my little pillow” filter was black from the dust that came off the ground surfaces of the platters.

“My little pillow” filters. Most filters were clean, but the drives with trashed platters had black filters. The drives also had little clear plastic cases filled with metallic-looking pellets that seemed like hard drive catalytic converters. They were most likely dehumidifiers.

That Platters ready to sing “I’ll Never Smile Again!”

Segregated parts of the hard drives ready for recycling.

The first two photos are of the rare earth magnet sculpture I put together as I took the magnets out of the drive. I knocked the first sculpture over, trying to put lights on it, and much of it came apart. The third photo is the second sculpture I put together with lights. I didn’t like that one, so I gave up on the lights and put together the sculpture in the lead photo.

Burned

My Canon sun filter got burned by the sun.

I had not tested my Canon sun filter for the Bazooka before the eclipse. I should have. Since it fits at the back of the lens, the sun simply burned through it. I used an old iPhone 6 with a single lens to photograph the eclipse through the eyepiece of my telescope. I didn’t have time to mess with putting a camera on the telescope, plus people wanted to look through the telescope because the clarity was amazing.

Eclipse Shark

Since I had to move the iPhone around on the eyepiece for each photo, the GIF is a bit jumpy.

From the bazooka at ring time

The color of the sun becomes whiter as the eclipse advances because the phone’s camera overexposed the sun because of the dark side of the moon.