From the category archives:

Every Guy Should Know How To….

Handle a Blowout

So you’re cruising down the interstate on your way to the beach. Traffic is light so you’re going slightly over the speed limit. The tunes are cranked up and you’re in the zone when all of  sudden you hear a loud pop and your car starts pulling into the other lane. You’ve had a blowout. Would you know what to do?

“Instead of hitting the brakes, maintain your speed,” says Eric Espinosa, executive director of the Maryland-based National Institute of Vehicle Dynamics. Sudden changes of speed can compromise what structural integrity the tire may still have. Steer gently for the same reason. With things fully under control, slow gradually and pull over to the shoulder.

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Read a Tape Measure

Reading a tape measure is one of the building blocks to a ton of different projects. When you first look at tape measure it can be intimidating,  what’s up with all of the lines?  The good news is that it’s really not all that difficult. Here are the steps.

Reading the Inches

The most obvious marks you’ll find on your tape measure are the ones for inches. They’re the ones with the large numbers on your strip of tape. Each distance from one number to the next is exactly one inch.

Reading the Half Inch Marks

When you read a tape measure you’ll notice that there are lines in between each number representing an inch. The lines are of different lengths and the tallest ones mark each half inch. These are usually in between each number for every inch on your measuring tape.

Quarter, Eighth, and Sixteenth Inch Marks

The next thing you’ll notice is that there are other marks in between the half inch and inch numbers. The next tallest ones are the quarter inch markers, followed by the eighth inch, and sixteenth inch markers. Each smaller fraction of an inch is marked with a shorter line.

Here’s how you read a tape measure:

Step one: Pull out a length of your tape measure starting at the point where you want to begin measuring. If you’re using a heavy duty measuring tape you can lock it at the length where you stopped so you don’t have to hold the length of tape down with your fingers.

Step two:
The first thing you read from your measuring tape is the inches. Read or write down the closest number to where you stopped.

Step three:
You then go over each of the half inch, quarter, and other lines on it and write them down until you get to the point where you stopped.

Reminders

If you’re measuring large spaces you may hook one end of the tape measure and pull the whole length back. You may also lay and read a tape measure on the floor. Most tape measures you’ll find will have the same unit of measurement

This picture will hopefully help pull it all together.

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Make a Good Home Movie

If you’ve got an smart phone chances are it’s got a video camera it. Same with most pocket point-and-shoot cameras. Not only do they have them, some of them are good enough to turn out some really good stuff (check out examples below).

But let’s be honest, most home movies suck. Not because the person shooting them didn’t want or intend it to be good, they just didn’t know how to make their movie good. So here’s a few tips from “Popular Mechanics”.

“Sure, a $400 video-editing suite gives you advanced features like special effects, but inexpensive software such as Adobe’s Premiere Elements or preinstalled programs such as Apple’s iMovie serve just fine for most amateur moviemakers. No amount of editing, though, overcomes shoddy camera work. Here are simple ways to make your home movies look great.

Avoid a common rookie mistake by taking establishing shots. Typically, they are filmed at the beginning of a scene to give context. One example: an exterior of a house, followed by interior shots.

Another tip: Start the camera a few seconds earlier than you need to and run it a few seconds to gain better control over pacing and lots of room to edit. Reshooting the same action from different perspectives allows multiangle cuts of exciting moments. For great transitions, shoot the people, places and scenery that surround the action. Try to shoot ahead of the action so it appears to be entering the frame, not leaving it.”

These movies were shot completely with an iPhone 4

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Every Guy Should Know How To…

Replace a Broken Window Pane Wearing thick leather gloves, knock or pull out all the remaining glass. Soften the putty with a hair dryer, then cut it away with a putty knife. Using needle-nose pliers, pull out the glazing points holding the window. Cut the new glass 1/8 in. undersize, press it into a thin [...]

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Every Guy Should Know How To….

FIX A TOILET Is there anything more annoying than a toilet that won’t stop running? Well, don’t spend the big bucks on a plumber, this is one any guy can fix for less than $20. A worn-out flapper valve is the usual culprit when a toilet sounds as though it’s continually flushing itself. Water drains [...]

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