 Oh, there are humans here. Look, I'm zoomed out so far. Zero people here. It's okay, it's because it wasn't scheduled. And people have to get the notification, which takes like three minutes. Yeah, just about since it is longer. Oh, I guess I can start talking today. I'm pulling a lathe apart. Is that good? Do you want to back up more? Are you going to be here or are you leaving? I'm not going to come back, but I have to get the cinnamon rolls out of the... Do you have cinnamon rolls? I want cinnamon rolls. Yes, I do. Your camera does way better video than mine. You know, when you're videoing me moving the thing and then it switches to my camera, it's like, ah! I think I certainly need to start using my better camera. Even though I don't want to wreck it. But if I never use it, what's the point of having it? I don't know, what's the point of having it? It's kind of stupid. Can you make comments? Show up so I can... Oh, yeah, you should be able to see them when they make comments. Yeah, it'll pop up. Alright, so anyway... Brazil, Talis, Frederico, Brazil. Does that mean this person is from Brazil? Ado, Seio, Feast Coast says hello. Yeah, I think Brazil. I can read from here. Okay. Do you think I can't read? I was just going to say, because I can make it bigger. So, today... Okay. I don't know how long a thing we're going to... Because right now I'm in my workshop on Duchenna's Island. And there's no plugging here. Right. And that's because I'm taking apart this here lathe. I'm just going to adjust this so that it doesn't fall over. Give me a second. The reason I'm doing this is I'm clearing out my workshop here and taking everything to the island. Well, that's not the only reason. Because I said, get out of here, you crazy person. You should name it that way. Because I'm not going to go over there. I'm going to have to get the bolt right there. Okay. So yeah, Duchenna was like, I don't know if you're a crap. You need to get your stuff out of here. Actually, it's because... Before I blow it all up. Well, I want to get all my tools and stuff out of here, which is mostly empty now except for this lathe and a big planer, table saw, jointer. That might be all that's back there. And a bunch of other industrial fans and stuff that I picked up, who knows where. But once I get all this stuff to my house, well, then I can take this building and put it somewhere else. This is a fiberglass dome, 18 feet diameter, 10 foot ceiling. Yeah, which is like five meters by three meters-ish, something like that. Someone wishes they could help. Do you have Hercules powers or Hulk powers? Because this lathe all together weighs something like 1,500 pounds. So I'm taking it apart to get it down to like 500 pounds. But it would be beautiful. Someone could just be like, just take the whole thing. Although I guess I could put that much weight on my bolt. That would be pushing it, but I think it could. So what am I going to talk about today? I'm supposed to do a monologue at the beginning of all these, right? So I did have something to talk about. So last week I got frustrated, right? And I showed my frustration and oh, why did they put this where I can't even get it? Anyway, so several people were like, oh, no, don't get frustrated. Don't get frustrated. And, you know, we live in a society now where if someone gets frustrated, then we have this knee-jerk reaction to say, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, don't get frustrated. Oh, calm down. Oh, just, just relax. Everything's fine. Look how dirty my hands are. But I think that's because people are not understanding the point of frustration. And I think one of the big reasons that we're kind of trained to shun frustration is because of how useful frustration is and what it does. And the people who want to convince us to not show frustration, you know, kind of control our society with just, you know, constant peer pressure and stuff. Anyway, what is frustration? What is the point of it? Like, why does it exist? Why is it there? This is one of those many instincts we have that we kind of push aside thinking it's primitive or whatever. But it's very useful. So when something bad happens, I'll just use myself as an example. So when something bad happens once, I'm like, oh, again, make sure that doesn't happen again. I don't get frustrated. I think it's just like, whatever, you know, things happen. If it happens again, then I'm like, oh, didn't correct properly. All right, let's try this again. When it happens a dozen times, like the same mistake, the same problem keeps happening over and over and over. At some point, I'm just like, OK, now I'm frustrated. And when I get frustrated, that makes me really focus on the thing, on the problem. And that means that I can then solve it in a way that I wouldn't have been able to if I wasn't so laser being focused on it. And that's the point of frustration. The point of frustration is to motivate us to make changes. So we should not be shunning our frustration or putting it aside or something. Frustration is so useful in terms of making changes. And I can think of so many things in my life that have happened partly or even largely because of frustrations. And obviously frustration isn't the only reason for people to make changes. It's not the only motivation, but it is a huge one. And a lot of my lifestyle now is the result of being frustrated with what I was born into. And I just found everything around me so frustrating to the point where I was like, I need to make a change. And I just got angry and upset. And I was like, that's it. I got to do something. And that's what frustration does for you. It's like, oh, that's it. I got to do something. I got to make a change. So, yeah, frustration is super useful. Another thing I want to mention is there's a guy who watches these, he's usually here every week, and his brother's got cancer. Man, I just want to send some good wishes. Like worst nightmare that can happen to you. And when something horrible, horrible like that happens to you, it's like, no. And then it's like, you know, I just got to fight my way through hell and hope I can get out the other side. So to this guy's brother, you know, I hope you can fight your way through hell and get out the other side to something better. Because he's not a very old guy or anything. And you know, like just, you know, anyone can get cancer. And you know, it's just, ah, I hope you battle your way through it and I hope to get through. Okay. I think that's all the stuff I have to talk about right now. Oh, no, I've got another thing. I think I may actually have to make a specific video about this next thing. Some of the people who've been watching for a while will understand why. Do I look weird right now? I feel like I look weird. This is weird lighting in this building. Anyway, I got a ladder. Why? How did I get a ladder? Oh, you're bringing me water? Oh, thank you so much. That was beauty. Can I get that to kind of serve us all the time? No. Anyway, what was I talking about? Oh, yeah, ladder. So for anyone who's new to the game, new to the show or whatever we're talking about here. When I was building the Shana's house, which is right there, big concrete dome, three story concrete dome. While I was building it, I was showing videos. And people kept saying, oh, you need to get a ladder. You need to get a ladder. And I kept saying, no, I don't need a ladder. I just need to stand on the floors of the building as I build them. And it is there. No, I didn't get a ladder. I didn't get a ladder. And then it became this big thing. Jamie, you've got to get yourself on ladder. And now there's been so many references. But even in my movie, the adventure building movie, there's a reference to it. Anyway, it kind of became a thing where it's like, Jamie will never get a ladder. But now I've got a ladder. But I did not buy it for a new. I got it for about $15. It's like a big, big aluminum aluminum ladder, like maybe 10 feet tall, 12 feet tall. I'm not sure how tall it is because it's bent in half. It's one of those ones that goes like this. But then the whole thing is like, and that's why I got it for $15. And I got it for $15. And that's why I got it for $15 because it was at the scrapyard. And that's another exciting thing. Yesterday, I went to town. And every time I go to town, I go by, ooh, Tomaters loves the lathe. I know, isn't it nice? I can't believe I got this thing here. Some dude in the States who was watching some of my videos gave it to me. And yeah, I just had to ship it down here, which was like, man, it was a huge ordeal getting you here. But I'm so happy that it's here. Now I just have to get it from here to my island. What was I talking about? Oh yeah. So yesterday I was in town. And every time I go to town, I stop by the scrap metal guy, guys place. And I've gone through, I've already gone through two different scrap metal guys. The first scrap metal guy I found in town, excuse me, like months to track this guy down, but when I finally found him, he was a cool dude and we have all these cool conversations because he liked to build things. And we were always talking about the things we built and stuff. And then he would sell me scrap metal for like really cheap. And then he ended up moving away. And then there was this other guy who runs like a vegetable stand and also gets scrap metal to sell somewhere. And I got him to sell me some of it, but then he stopped doing the scrap metal. And then one day I'm driving my wheelbarrow down the street and I'm like, I see some guys with some scrap metal. And then sure enough, it was like, I was dropping off a bunch of scrap metal. This guy had a big, big scale. He was weighing it on. And I looked behind like his house and it was just scrap yard. And I was like, oh, can I buy scrap? This conversation took a while because like I'm a white guy and I'm coming and trying to ask him to buy his garbage. And he was like, and I was saying in Spanish too, which I can, I can say all of it, but he's like, I'm not sure you understand what you're saying. You're telling me you want to buy the metal. And I'm like, yes, yes, I would like to buy the metal. He's like, all right. But then, you know, we became kind of cool pals after that because I'd show up every couple of weeks and always have, you know, some, he'd always put aside like aluminum aluminum stuff or stainless stuff because he knows that's what I'm looking for. And he was like, oh man, he had a lot of steel beams. That would have been really nice. But saltwater environment, this stuff rests like crazy. So he'd always put aside stuff that doesn't rust. Anyway, that was, I don't know, a year ago. I also got a meat bandsaw, like a stainless steel bandsaw for like 150 bucks. Yeah, I mean, it was, it's damaged, but like all the important parts are there. I just have to replace a few things. For the last three months, he's been gone. I didn't, I don't know where he went. What happened? He was just gone. And every time I went, he wasn't there. And I was like, I missed him again. But every time for three months, and I was like, oh, maybe I lost my scrap metal guy. But yesterday I was in town and I went there and I found him and he had lost a bunch of weight. And he said, yeah, I've been sick for three months. And I was like, oh man, you know, talk to him. And then he was like, okay, I'm so glad you're back though. Here I got some, I got some stuff for you. And I bought the aluminum ladder that was bent in half. And my first thought, looking at it was, I wonder what happened to the guy on top of the ladder? Oh, I hope there wasn't a guy on top of the ladder. Hopefully like just something fell and landed on the ladder and bent it or something. I hope someone was not on top of that when it, because that guy would have been hurt. But yeah, I also got a few other things. A really nice frying pan. It was like big stainless steel frying pans, like huge one. And it was Teflon coated and the Teflon was all coming off. But since it's stainless steel, I can just like grind off all the Teflon or buff it off, whatever, that'll make it smooth. And then I'll have a stainless steel pan. I like it more without the stainless or without the Teflon anyway, because I just use it, you know, like a cast iron pan, like seasoning it. Oh, stainless steel pans are the best. Once you season them right, they're nonstick, like best pans you can have. Anyway, I got a big one of those. And then a bunch of other aluminum aluminum scrap. And he gave me a couple of things that I didn't really want. But I was like, yeah, I'll buy them too. Because, you know, I want to try to keep this guy happy because he sells me lots of, lots of cool stuff. So yeah, I got a $15 like big aluminum aluminum, one of those ladders. And I just need to do some repairs on it. So now I have a ladder. Let's see, let's see what people are saying. Someone said, greetings from Germany. Oh man, I better not touch the thing with my dirty fingers. I know that, I know a guy that knows a guy that may help you. Oh, no way. Need help moving that thing. Yes, new location. I'm in, I'm in a workshop here. Yes, it is 110 volt lathe. I actually kind of asked the guy about that, when he was sending it to me. Because he sent a bunch of stuff, like several lathes. And I was like, do you have something that's like a 10 volt? And he was like, yeah, man, I totally got one of those. So that was beauty. Because, you know, I'd like to just keep everything on 110. Because then I don't need a second inverter. Listening to Jamie on two-time speed makes his tangents very amusing. Oh, that's good. Maybe you should listen to it on four-time speed. And you don't even have to listen to everything I say. Hello from Norway. Wait, I think this is like the best thing about the internet. Like you can talk to people from like Norway and Germany and all over the place in the States and all over. It's very cool. DeShanna is standing right there with a giant jar of chocolate milk. What the? I'm sorry, what was that? If I hold it with the clean part of my shirt, can I have some? Yeah. I'll touch you my tablet with your fingertips. I wiped my finger off really well. Oh, I touched it with my dirty hands. I just turned the oven off for the cinnamon rolls. I'm going to take my measurements. Okay. Can I drink the rest of this? I guess so. Oh, you mixed it up first though. Oh yeah, there's all kinds of chocolate on the bottom. I can see it right there. Oh man, that's beauty. All right, I'll bring one. No, I have one right here. Oh, a cinnamon roll? Cinnamon roll. I'll use some specifically without sugar. Okay, I tried to drink that really fast. So it's not like horribly irritating. I know chocolate milk, right? Chocolate milk, I love chocolate milk. I don't have any milk products at my house or any chocolate. So I guess occasionally I have cheese, but you know, that doesn't last so long. If I get cheese, we just make like tons of pizzas and like gorge ourselves. Like what was that Spanish thing they said? There's a, in Mexico, there's something they call, there's a term for food coma. It's... Cerdo de... I can't remember now. Something about, something about a pig though. Hi from Canada. Just curious, why do you... Why do you do so much digging by hand when you have a bulldozer? Is it just not suitable for what you're doing? Yeah. So when I built the bulldozer, it was to basically flatten out the top of this island, which was like a ton of digging. So it was actually worth building a machine to do it. And that was basically taking, like just shoving, like I just needed to shove the dirt off the side, like down, down the hill kind of, like, you know, down the hill against the seawall. But it was basically just... The digging I'm doing at my island right now, it's a little more complicated. Like I'm getting the dirt from the top and then going down this winding path that goes down and it goes kind of far and then putting the dirt. So the bulldozer wouldn't be as useful because I'd have to drive it pretty far and, you know, I'd be losing dirt. I was actually considering changing the bulldozer into a dump truck, which would be... I mean, I wouldn't need that much of a change to... It would be more useful to me right now than a bulldozer. Although at some point, you know, I mean, I don't know. The bulldozer is definitely useful for things. But yeah, the digging I'm doing right now, it's not very useful. And, yeah, now I'm sitting here thinking of what machine I could use. Because even if I make a dump truck, like it's going to have to be pretty skinny to get down the path. And it's all downhill, so it's not like hard. Like once I have the dirt in the wheelbarrow, it's pretty easy to wheel it down there and I actually have to pull it back so it doesn't drag me down the hill. Oh, that made my son a wheelbarrow. Oh, that's awesome. He gets his dirt in his little wheelbarrow and he's like... It gets to the end of the path. It's like... I'm sorry. Interested how powdered milk is uncommon in the US, but it's everywhere in America and the Caribbean. Well, in a lot of places in Central America and maybe in the Caribbean, too, around here, most people don't have refrigerators. So you don't have to refrigerate powdered milk. Plus just the transportation of powdered milk is a lot easier than a whole bunch of like... Like one gallon of powdered milk makes how many gallons of wet milk? It would be a lot more to transport. And everybody has water, so that's probably the reason that it's more prevalent here. Because, you know, in the States, everyone lives, like, within a mile of a grocery store. Not everyone, but like so many people. You should come and show these. You can go right there. Oh, come on. You shouldn't have just made cinnamon rolls. Show them. Those look delicious. I want some. And they don't have... Oh, they smell good. And they don't have sugar in them, do they? These ones don't. Oh, you made sugar ones too? So I haven't been eating sugar for years, except like that chocolate milk has some sugar in it. So like the only time I eat sugar is like, if I come to the Shana's house, she always like makes cookies and stuff. And most of the time, I'm like, no, no, I don't want those cookies if I have sugar in them. But every once in a while, I'm like, yeah, I'm just eating them anyway. But, you know, trying not to eat sugar because it's supposed to be good for you. But I'm not like, I'm not like crazy, really just about it or anything. I'll eat some now and then, whatever. Question. I keep thinking about an electric plane for the island. If I put together a couple of concepts, could I share them with you? Yeah, I've actually been thinking about an electric plane too. Although I just want to build like a ground effect plane. I don't need to fly higher or anything. I just want to zip along the surface of the water, you know, like a foot off the water or whatever. Just... Although if I build that, maybe then I'll want to fly higher. But right now I don't care about flying high. I just want to zoom around, which is, you know, you don't need as much. You get a lot more left when you're closer to the ground because of the ground effect. Cinnamon buns. Oh, hydrofoils. Yeah, kind of like a hydrofoil plane. Okay. T.O. Dave asked hydrofoil. The reason I haven't gotten into hydrofoils. I mean, I played with it a little bit just to see like how practical it would be. And I was immediately like, you know, this hydrofoil is kind of in the way. And, you know, if I'm not up on the hydrofoil, it's sticking way down in the water. So that makes it so I can't get into shallow things. Unless I'm zooming, I've got to be going like full speed to go through any shallow areas. But what if I need to like pull up to a shore or something? You know, okay, fine. Then I have to be able to pull the hydrofoils out. But if I make it so I can pull the hydrofoils out, then it's like extra complication of moving parts. And then when the hydrofoils are out, they're like in the way of everything. And I was just like, yes, you could make them fold up. Yeah. And it's just, at the moment, it just seems like it's not worth having hydrofoils. Now, maybe in the future, when I'm driving less cargo around, I might want to do a hydrofoil thing, although I think I want to do like a ground effect airplane more. And yeah, I mean, one of the big reasons no hydrofoils now is because I'm almost always carrying cargo. You know, anytime I go on a trip that would be long enough, that would be worth putting hydrofoils out. And then you also have to like make sure they're, you know, in perfect condition all the time. They can't get any barnacles on them or anything or they don't work. I don't want to make a helicopter for some reason. Why don't I want to make a helicopter? But yeah, I don't have any interest in making a helicopter, but an airplane, a ground effect, low flying airplane, that's what I've been thinking about. But who knows? Maybe if I get to that point, I'll want to build something else. Who knows? Oh, Acron, Acron, Acrona plane would be most efficient. What's an Acrona plane? I'm going to have to look that up. T.O. Dave, what is an Acrona plane? Am I even saying it right? Jamie, final moving stuff to his island. Yeah. Well, not finally. I've been moving it a little bit set of time, but now like the last week and this week, I've been maybe the last two weeks in this week. I've been like, you know, increasingly getting my stuff out of here. So I don't want to touch the thing and aim it, but over here on the workshop, this was like packed like out here. Well, my milling machine was right here, which is at my house right now. And then this was like just shelves all the way up stuff. And all that's at my house. And now I've got a whole bunch of stuff like this. So this is just solid steel. It's just under a quarter inch. Oh, four millimeter. Anyway, I have a whole bunch of steel things like this over here. And I need to move all that stuff. That'll be easy to move. It's just, I just have to take a lot of trips to the boat because it's a lot of, it's a lot of steel. And I already have a bunch of like full buckets of nuts and bolts that I took over the other day. Anyway, okay. A chrono plane is the proper spelling. It looks like a helicopter, but the main rotor isn't actually powered. Oh, um, a gyro plane. That's how that's what I know it is. Tomater's talking about. Oh, copter. Tomater sent me a link, but I obviously can't watch a link right now because I'm doing this. I wonder if a little rail system going down to the water would work. Well, I don't want to do a rail system. Well, I don't want to, I don't want to do a rail system because then you're locked to the rails. And if you want to change it, you got to move the rails. I'd rather just have something with good wheels. And it can go along, you know, anywhere that's relatively smooth. So rails don't make sense. Unless I really need something to run like perfectly smoothly. You know, like a lumber mill, like, yeah, I'll put that on rails because it needs to cut like a real straight line. But if I'm just moving around, I'd rather just have like, like a wagon with some good wheels on it. Oh, we don't see some good wheels. I got some good wheels back here. But these a while ago, because they were, I don't know, it was one of these surplus places online. I'm always keeping an eye out for surplus places that have stuff. And these were actually one of the options to go on my bulldozer. But I ended up using some, some golf cart wheels, which are a little bigger than this. But I'll have to use these for something good. I have four of them. Maybe I'll make it like a heavy wagon. Oh, that would be cool. A big, a big wagon with big hunk and wheels. And my kids will all get in it and I'll drive them around all the time instead. I don't think I can eat that here. I'm going to show you hands. Oh, here. I'm just holding. Oh, God. Take bite. So hey guys, how's it going? Jamie's mouth is totally full of food. So we can't really talk to you. So I'm going to talk to you instead. Those are delicious. Right. So what's up guys? Let's see. Sunday. This is your sugar one? What are you having for breakfast, lunch or dinner depending on where you are? How much did you miss me? I know it's on. Tomatoes, what's up? That is so sweet. I don't care. Now they don't need sugar. Like sugar tastes like disgusting. Oh, on sugar usage. Let's see what John Schlick says. On sugar, the usage stats for the 40s, from the 40s today are frightening. Yeah. Breakfast burrito. Yes. Pizza, pizza, pizza. Awesome. Wait, who's got pizza? Oh, space two. Happy Rosh Hashanah dude. It's up. Yeah. Here. This is Jamie's. His has no sugar on it. Strawberry. Is giving me crap that have my stuff been on your island. Look, this one's mine. It has deliciousness and I have some beef. So I'm going to go eat my shalom. I'm going to go eat my food, but I wanted Jamie to have some. There is another thing happening today. And I'm totally blocking his head. We just got internet. Stop. I'm going to touch you with my dirty hands. We just got internet stuff to send internet to my island and our friend's island too. So. Next week. I may be doing a live from my house. Presuming. You know, I set it up, right? But we'll see. I mean, I shouldn't be able to set it up, right? Unless I'm an idiot. A teaspoon of sugar helps the medicine go down. I want medicine either. Make a cult of cycles four wheel bicycle tractor. I always think, well, I have a like a heavy duty kid car that I've shown before that I haven't finished. I need to finish that. That's probably going to be pedal powered. That we could use as a tractor, although it's not geared down enough. But I was thinking about gear and I don't know. All right. So I kind of feel like I should go and get this thing apart and go take care of some stuff. Should I just leave this going? Do you guys want to sit here and watch me take this thing, stinkin thing apart? Or should I like take off and like get out of your face? Does anyone have any questions actually before I take off? Any more questions? Get to work. Yeah. I know. Yeah. I'm sitting here sending internet short, short distance. All right. I'll leave it on. Sending internet short distance. Well, we have to send. I think the farthest we need to send the internet is like about a kilometer to the other island or friends island. So I don't know, somewhere around like that distance. But the guy said, that what we got will work over three kilometers. So we should have plenty. I want a mill, but used ones go for crazy money. Like a lumber mill. Totally get one. Or just build one, man. I did think about an electric jet ski. How bad does the salt water attack the metal? Oh my God. Salt water is so bad for the metal. So all this steel here, I got because some guy was getting rid of it and I bought it really cheap. And yeah, I just got a whole bunch of steel really cheap. But normally I don't get anything normal steel that I can get either stainless or, you know, some aluminum alloy aluminum alloy that that's corrosion resistant. But like this thing and my milling machine, we'll never go outside. So I mean, like tools inside are okay. They don't get chewed up by the salt water. Although I am very conscious. Anytime I go swimming and come back in the house, get dirt on my nose. Maybe I need more smears. I am very conscious anytime I go swimming and, you know, come in the house that I don't drip on or near any, any steel tools. I don't know, I'm like, I don't go near it when I'm, when I have salt water on me. Cause yeah, the salt water is just horrible for the, for tools. Oh yeah. I said I was going to get back to work. Right. Yeah. I know what I'm doing. I'm not slacking off. Oh, I'm so. All right. I need to get. This thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. This top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top thing. So this top part of the lathe has four bolts. That hold it on. And that's the easy part to get apart. But in addition to that, there is a belt that goes down to the motor. And just before you guys came on here, I was investigating. Drop those. I was investigating disconnecting the motor. And the bolts come off pretty easily. And you know, the belt comes off no problem. But then I was looking at the wiring. You know, it's got all the fancy stuff where it's got the wires going into a little box and stuff. And it's all connected real, real fancy and nice. And I was like, it's not going to be worth it to get the motor off. And then I remembered when I moved this thing into here, I did leave the motor connected to the bottom section. So I should be able to get this out of here with the motor connected. And I already got, you know, any of the tail stock off the lathe, not this part, the part that goes back there. And, you know, all my extra bits and pieces for the lathe over there. So I'll take those. And after I get all that stuff, all that I have left is, you know, the hand and then the main part of the lathe itself. But man, this thing is heavy. I don't know how much it weighs. But like my milling machine, it's a small milling machine. It's like 400 pounds or so. But this one piece weighs more than my milling machine. I'm pretty sure. And then this thing does too. But I got them here somehow. So and I definitely want them. So I'm motivated. All right. The wire goes on that bottom part. I need to remove this thing here because it's got a wire connected. But it looks like I can just take off a couple of bolts and remove that. Let me just check if anyone's asking any questions, any dance here. I used to turn bearings for tanks on a big machine. No way. That must have been crazy. Oil that lathe so it doesn't rest. Yes. So I'm going to get it over there. I mean, when I first put it in here, I oiled the crap out of it. And it's still got like oil all over it. It's all greasy. This is why my hands are all filthy. And, uh, Yeah, as soon as I get it set up on my house, I'm going to oil the crap out of it again. And I'll just oil everything until the kids not to touch it. Yeah. So Talia Rose. Yeah, it was fun and super secret. Man, turning bearings for tanks on a big machine. So did you like make the bearings and then they had to be heat treated? Like I'm presuming like the bearing part, not the balls. You could have used for a trailer for the solar gozer. Yeah. Well, I'm thinking of just making the solar gozer into a dump truck. So when I take it apart to get it off the island, which I'm going to do hopefully pretty soon. When I put it back together, you know, I might just put it back together a little different, change some parts and operate on it. Just make it into a dump truck, something that'll carry stuff. But that, that'll be more useful to me right now. Then bulldozer. Because the bulldozer was kind of a specific use thing. It was really nice for flattening out some. The other thing I could do with the bulldozer is turn it into like a front end loader. Because that would be useful. Although a straight up dump truck would hold more cargo at a time. I don't know. Once I get it out of here and it's all in pieces, I'll have to look at it and think about what I want to do and figure out what's going to be the most useful thing. I could actually, I could make a front end loader and then make a trailer with those big wheels I was just showing back there. And that wouldn't be a bad idea. Last I checked everything on this lathe worked except there's a, I think the start capacitor is bad. So I need to get a new start capacitor. Although it may have been something, some problems with the electricity. The motor for work stuff was some kind of electrical issue. But nothing serious. I should be able to fix it pretty easily. Hey, what are you going to give? Did I go? Oh yeah. Hey, let me know if anyone has anything important to say. Yeah. If any of you have any questions. Make sure to oil that lathe up before hitting the ocean. Well, no, I'm just going to take it over. I need to oil it between here, like when I get on the boat, because it's not wavy between here and there. It's pretty short distance. It's my island. And it's a calm day. Ian would like to know if you would have enough space to turn a dump truck slash front end loader around, or I suppose you could build a little turnaround area. Well, where? Oh, where I'm where I'm putting the dirt. Well, I was talking about changing the bulldozer into a front end loader. So it depends where I'm doing stuff. But yeah, if I was doing like a front end loader or a dump truck, I might make it so I could drive it both directions. He said, yeah, where the dirt is going. Oh, where the dirt's going. Now there's not enough space to turn around. There's not even enough space. The path isn't even wide enough to drive. You know, the bulldozer on it. But, you know, I would make it bigger. I think my fans need to see me too. Sorry. Oh, I couldn't just move over. Yeah, I know I was trying not to block you. Hey, don't kick my stuff. How are you doing, everyone? Hey, guys. So I think I need to get, I think I need to get a board. This is how I got this up here. I'm going to pretend like I'm my daughter for a minute. Is that what she does? What's that Aurora? She's pretty hilarious. So when I got this thing up here, I had a big board from the ground up here and just kind of dragged it up. So I think I'll do that to get it back down. I do have a couple of boards. Thanks, Tomaters. What's Tomaters doing? I wore my special pink shirt today. So Talia Rose used to use a big lathe to make tank bearing. Cool. I wonder if she said anything else about that. No, she said nice. It would have been before. Oh, anyway, that is cool. That was also top secret. That's actually one of the things I would really like to be able to make is a big, good quality bearing. I think it's a good quality bearing. I think it's a good quality bearing because yes, a big process, different metals. And the cater says, Hey, Jamie, why don't you paint the walls inside the buildings to make it brighter indoors? Well, it's definitely bright enough. I think it's brighter in here than it might seem. Is it, is it this building that's not bright enough? Pretty bright. Yeah. But if you could be talking about in my house, could be talking about your house. But yeah, I could paint in here. Yeah. It's definitely bright. El Del Sol says it seems like you could have used, have a use for a trailer for the solar dozer. Yeah. Yeah. I was talking about that earlier. Oh, no. Oh, it's just heavy. That's what it is. Apparently Ben likes the, likes oils with added corrosive inhibitors like corrosion. Corrosion. Hi, Reed. John Schlick says on wall paint the concrete look up a product called Rayco skim wall. It makes the walls light but also perfectly flat. It's a concrete product. Ian says Apache is Spanish for food coma. Hey, do you remember what the guy was saying the other day though? Is something Deserdo. Maldeserdo. Maldeserdo. Yeah. Maldeserdo. Oh, Ben says he was a little worried since this, the live wasn't scheduled. Yeah. Yeah. Well, last week I got frustrated. So I was like, Oh, I'm not doing the lines this way. Actually last week very specifically he fired me. Yeah. And I am pretty much sure that I'm still fired. Pretty much sure. So I just wasn't really sure what to do about the live. So I just didn't. I think you just decided to not do your job. You just, you just like, I'm not doing any more jobs. Space juice says, I'm doing jobs. What do you use to drill stainless? Or do you ever need to drill it? That's a good question. I drill stainless all the time. And when I first started drilling stainless, you know, I'd use regular drill bits and I was having so much trouble because it dulls the crap out of them. Right. Look at my nose. I got crap on it. Keep touching it. Yeah. Okay. This is the point. But now I drill stainless all the time. And I'm not totally sure. What? It's just a raider says, welcome. And then he said, selcom. He said, dude, I can't type. So anyway, I drill stainless a lot. And I was thinking about this the other day when I was drilling a whole bunch of holes and some stainless thing. And it's, it's easy now. And I think the difference is that I know that it's going to dull my drill bits. So I just keep resharpening them every few holes. If you know, if you don't know how to, how to sharpen your drill bits, you should totally learn. But if you don't want to sharpen your drill bits and you're drilling stainless steel, make sure you get your drill bits real sharp. You know, just like, like if your drill bits are generally pretty sharp, just take your angle grind and just, just touch them real quick. Just did just fine tune that edge. And then do your drilling nice and slow. Don't drill fast and get lots of oil in there. And with stainless steel, I mean, people always say don't smoke your oil at all. But with stainless steel and that, you know, most of the time the oil starts smoking even like, even if I'm going pretty slow and it does dull the bits a lot faster. So I just keep, keep tuning up the sharpening. Uncle Dave, this is, I mean, so if you get to the point where you're, you're drilling stainless steel and it's not going just, just sharpen real quick. And if you do it regularly, you just have to barely sharpen it. Just a little bit. What? Teo Dave. This is the first, the only life he's, he's caught. Uncle Dave. Let's see. Jared Swanson says, Hey from Washington state, love your videos. I'm glad you seem to be doing well. Quick question, we have a lot on Starlink for internet. Oh, Oh, Ilan. I don't know. We don't have it. Yeah. Internet. I love our internet. Actually, I wouldn't, I don't think it would change it unless Starlink was going to be cheaper. Well, it also uses a lot of electricity, right? Yeah. Like someone said, like 60 Watts or someone else said, Oh, they got down to 43. 43 Watts is 24 hours a day. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. I'm happy with. We're fine. We're going to stick with them. Their price is reasonable. Um, Yeah. The Starlink is way more than what you were spending out. Right. Yeah. So that guy's question. No, I think I asked it already. It was the, what do you use to drill stainless? And you just answer. Yeah. I just use regular steel drilling. Bits. Sharpening grits are easy to do. Yeah. Using lubes is a good idea. I do. Oh yeah. You got to use your live man. Um, Mr. McGover says maybe. Oh, maybe stainless steel. Yeah. Be careful when you're drilling them holes. You got to keep them lubed up. So you don't destroy that. I thought this was a family friendly show. Oh, I'm just talking about drilling holes. You know, Mr. McGover says maybe stainless steel, fat tire bicycles would be a big, big hit out there where corrosion is a problem. Oh my God. If I could find a stainless steel bicycle, that would be amazing. Or a titanium one, maybe even an aluminum, aluminum one, but then it's going to have all the parts that are steel. Space two wants to know, are you familiar with EDM slash, EDM drilling slash machining? Oh God. I should be. Wait. EDM. Acronyms. What, what does the EDM stand for? And then apparently. Oh wait. The electrocution thing. I think so. Yeah, I just drilled holes. Apparently tomatoes took machine shop in high school and learned it there about the lubing. Oh yeah. You got to keep lubed up. I hear you learn a lot about lubing in high school. Yeah. EDM electric discharge machining. Yes. But Ben says it actually stands for electronic dance. Electronic dance. Yeah. Are you going to buff out your dance moves? Sure. We actually have one child whose initials are EDM. Yeah, that's true. Her initials are EDM. Our last child, who is currently napping. And I probably should be napping too. Should be napping. Not time. Okay. Do I think I can move this thing today? Maybe I should just get all the parts. Okay. Ben says large frames for TI bike. T1 bike or TI? I don't know. That blinks and says, hey, you're getting dirt bits on me. Is that what he said? You're getting dirt bits on me? It's been a while since I've checked in with you guys. I've watched your videos on and off through the years. Good to see you all doing well. How is the video game going? Oh, I don't know anything in a while. Although I have drawn a bunch of pictures of video game characters. I guess I should show them this one. I don't know. I'm debating about whether I should make a video about the video game I'm making. Because, you know, I don't want it to, I don't want to jinx it. You know, when you're doing something and kind of working on something, you tell people about it, then you kind of like, it's like your motivation gets distilled or something. Like, I don't know. I'll say something about it. Tomatoes says high school back in the 80s was a different thing than these days. We actually learned something. Ian Newcomb says, look closely at little markings on older these and 90s mountain bikes. Some are titanium and often cheap. Really? I don't know if I'm going to find one here. Yeah. We can import one. I wouldn't be that excited. Although there might be, there might be an import tax for bicycles. I don't think there is. I kind of want to get this thing off here. Oh, you should. Oh my God. It's so heavy. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's surprising. Oh, that's where it is. Wait a minute. Let's get that thing. Hold it on this end. My last house. A big one. Hi, sweet girl. Yeah. Just don't come near this. Yeah. Don't come in here right now. Cause John shoes on and it's a bit of a mess. And there's ants. Um, John slick said, oh wait a minute. White, oh, white beard adventure. Hey Dave. Comment. I like Brent's tool from half past customs. He has a tool for making holes in metal. It is a giant punch. That sounds like something you have to do. I have made a giant punch once. Yeah. When I built the dome and go on. You know, they actually featured that on the last latest video of the dome. Yeah. Yeah. He was super fascinated with it. And I, I use that punch a lot. Um, uh, tomatoes just mentioned that we had no problems with scammers posting in chat. No more. Have you noticed that? Yeah. I was like, get out of here fools. Get no info. I don't have a big enough audience. John. If you get a low enough audience, scammers don't care. No, I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. So. Yeah. John Schlich says, Seattle has a number of custom bike makers, carbon fiber titanium and then cycle fab. Does interesting double-decker and burning man bikes. Um, Oh, Rafe is here. This um, this lady makes me look so white. Oh, Las is here. Hey, Hazaki is your mom with you? Okay. Do you guys have an simple feature that's not like Do you guys come for a visit? Okay. What, they came for a shovel? I probably, hi. Okay, I'll be back. I have to go talk to my neighbors. Oh, okay, there we go. You guys come watch Jacob's videos. That's what I needed to do. I get the freaking belt out. All right, I forget how these things work. I forget how to get it apart. I take this belt and stuff it up in the top. Should be able to get it off. And get it off. And how do you replace this belt? That's gonna be a pain in the butt. Oh, very exciting stuff. One of my favorite things in here is these little things. It's like a wasp house where they put their dead carcasses in there and eat them later. And I think some of them have baby wasps inside too. Yay. All right, I'm gonna need to go board going down here. Oh, did Shannon move the things so no one can see? Do you know how to use that thing? I do know how to use this thing. Well, maybe I shouldn't say I know how to use it because I haven't used it in a while. But I have used it before. And once I start using it again within five minutes, I'll be like, oh yeah, this goes here and that does that and I don't know how to use it. But yeah, right now I'm not sure how to use it. Well, this is this. Yeah, I know how to close. And then that does, yeah, that does that. Wait, something's sticking, right? Yeah, I'm gonna have to. Okay, maybe I don't know how to use everything right now, but I will totally remember once I start doing it again. What are all these knobs? Wait, this one locks onto that. This one. Yeah, anyway, I'll figure that out again later. I shouldn't move this. Oh crap, it's stuck. Oh no, wait, I just locked it. Oh no, what am I done here? Oh, okay, there we go. Let me talk for five more minutes and then I'm gonna have to go move this thing out of the way and get a board up there and make a ramp coming right where this thing is and then I can get it out the door and go that way. Get to the other end of the island and then take a right and get to the boat. I'm not good with sharpening drill bits. Who says that? You should get good. Pull up on the bottom lever to engage the out of feed. No, I don't. I have to disengage the out of feed so I can move it, right? I'm not good with sharpening drill bits so I built an EDM though. I guess you don't need to be good at them if you're building an electric destroying machine. If you want to reduce the weight, take the traveler, tool holder off as well. Yes, so this thing does not come off very easily. I was starting to do that but I have to get this off and these screws are not loosening very easily. I might, oh, the problem is for me to get these screws off, I have to go get the keys for this, which I didn't bring. I brought a tool bag of stuff but I did not bring the keys for this. So if I go to get those, that means I can't take this on that trip. So I'm gonna see if I can move this with the big thing still attached to it. If I can though, then I'll have to go just take the stuff I have off now. It'll be an extra trip basically if I have to take that off. So I'm gonna try to do it with leaving it on. I'll have to see how bad it is. I think I might be able to do it though. I'm gonna drag it, I have two big long boards, like wide boards that I cut out of a log and I don't know, eight, 10 feet long, 10 feet long, something like that. So I'll just drag this along one board. When I get to the end, I'll take the other board, put it at the end and just drag it along boards until I get it to the boat and then drag it right onto the boat, take it to my house and drag it. Oh, there's gonna be a lot of dragon but I should be able to get out of there. How heavy is that thing? Well, the entire thing is somewhere around 1500 pounds, like 700 kilograms and I think the top piece is at least 500 and this bottom thing is somewhere around the same. I don't know, it's pretty heavy. But the thing is I only have to move it once and then it's there. I've been thinking about building an amphibious camper trike. That's cool. I would actually have, I drew up plans to make one of those, although it wasn't a trike. It was a two-wheeler bicycle that can drive right into the water. But that is, yeah, that sounds awesome. Can you demonstrate how to sharpen a drill bit? I should make a video about that. I think I can demonstrate real quick right now. I take an angle grinder and say this is the part that spins around. Then I'll take my drill bit. I'm just gonna, I should just make a video of this. I don't have showed it before, but it was years ago. I'll take it, take the drill bit and I'll look at where the edge is and just line it up with there and just and then turn it 180 degrees and then just touch it real quick and just basically just match the surface on the top and just grinding it down a tiny bit to leave it a sharp edge. Now that works if you're just sharpening it a tiny bit. Sometimes your drill bit gets like a chip out of it or for some reason the end is messed up or like you get a cracked drill bit like sometimes it'll actually break. So you have to like resharpen. Oh, I mean, people usually just throw them out. But what I do, like sometimes you have like a jagged one I'll just cut it off straight first. So I'll take my angle grinder and just make a flat thing. And then I'll just kind of match, try to get it to match what I've, what it was originally. But then the problem there is that the further down the drill bit you get, the fatter it is. So you might have to drill or grind this way. I need to make a video about that. If I don't make one soon, somebody remind me next week to make a video about how to sharpen drill bits. And it's one of those things where like the first time you do it, it's like, what in the, this isn't going to work right? And then you got to do it a few times. And then once you do it a bunch of times, like now I can do it with almost not even looking. It's just like, perfect, you know? And I can get a really good edge, like really easily. But just because I've done it a bunch of times, the first few times I did it, I didn't do like that good of a job. It's like government, wait. Drill doctor, I've never had a drill doctor that some little machine that sharpened your drill bits, but I've never had it. This is like government work, 60 people supervises, Jamie does all the, dies all the work, does all the work. Do you have clapers? I think you mean calipers, like the things, I actually don't have calipers. I have the one, this might actually be called a caliper too, but I have the one that's like this. And not an electric one, it's, you know, you read the numbers on it, but it's not even good. It doesn't have the dial or anything, but I have kind of a crappy one of those. I should get a good one though, but I don't have one of the, you know, the measuring things like this. That's super useful because sometimes you can't get this in there. Half the people have no idea what I'm talking about. Oh, have you hurt your shoulder? It looks like a bruise. No, well, that's dirt. Well, that's dirt too. This is all dirt. This on my face is dirt. Yeah, I've been working on this lathe back here and I just rubbed my face when you get dirtier. Yeah, I'm not, I have no, currently no bruises as far as I know. Do I have any bruises? I don't think so. Yeah, I think I'm in pretty good condition right now. Everything's good. I don't have a couple of cuts on my knuckles, but nothing serious. Dial calipers, I should say. Yes, dial calipers. I need to get some dial calipers. That would be super useful. Yeah, amphibious camper trike. That does sound cool. Dude, if you start making some drawings, we want to see that. And like if you actually make one, you got to make a video of it and show it. That would be awesome. A lot of dragon, yes. I'm going to be doing a lot of dragon today. Dragon! I actually have my dragon wagon right there. I'm not going to use my bulldozer because it can't get through very far because Dashaina's Island has all kinds of gardens and stuff. Where are you moving it to? Oh, I'm moving the leaves to my house, which is on a different island. Dashaina and I live on different islands. They're very close to each other. Like I can yell at her from mine and she can hear me. So they're not far or anything, but we do much better when we are not in the same space because Dashaina and I don't get along with each other. Like we, people always think so many crazy things when I say that. Yeah, everything's fine though. We just, we've never gotten along with each other, even when we first met. Like we had kids together because it worked out really well in a lot of like very utilitarian ways, not because we actually get along with each other. And you know, when we had kids, we were like, we actually wrote a little contract that said, you know, we would always live near each other and raise our kids together, you know, knowing that we wouldn't want to live with each other because she's crazy. She'd say the same thing about me though, so whatever. Have you ever heard of a stone boat? It's a really low sled with steel runners for moving large stone. Yeah, actually. The one time I had to move, well, I should tell this story. Yeah, the one time I had to move really big stones like, I don't know, several tons. This is how we did it. We got, let me see if I can find some visual aids here. Oh, come on, there's gotta be some visual aids here. Oh, it was so cool how we did it. Okay, we had this huge block of stone. I think it was like 12 feet long and like four feet wide and like a foot tall, like really heavy block of stone. And we didn't have to move at a huge distance, but like, I don't know, 30, 40 meters or something. We had to like move it, go around a corner, move it, get it into position. You know, there was a fair bit of, you know, moving it to get it in the right spot. And it was with my friend and he was like, dude, we're not gonna be able to move this thing. It's like impossible. So I came up with this idea. We got three four by fours. Four by fours are, you know, four inch by four inch square pieces, square boards. And at one end, and they were long enough to go like, come on, visual aids. Okay, say this is the stone, except it was way bigger than this. They were long enough to go like across the stone. So I could put three of these four by fours. And at one end of the four by fours, we drilled a hole straight through that way and straight through this way, like I don't know, like an inch and a quarter hole-ish. And then we took steel strapping and wrapped it around and screwed it in just to reinforce this whole area where it had the holes. And then someone's already gonna know what's going on here. And then we stuck these four by fours under the rocks, which we did by, you know, using crowbars, like really long crowbars to get one end up and get the four by fours on it. But we got the three four by fours under the rock. And then we had steel pipes that were like, as tall as us anyway. Now they weren't even pipes, they were steel rods, like solid steel rods. And we'd put one into the four by four and I'd put one into the back one and he put one into the front one. And then we'd pull and it would take the four by four and turn it, you know, like one quarter revolution. And the rock we were moving was so heavy that as we got it up onto the corners of the four by four, as it was coming back down, like we had to fight to keep it from just slapping down. You know, it was like, I gotta let it down real slow and pull up really hard. And then, you know, take the pipe out, get it in the next hole in the four by four and just, and it took us like an hour or so to move this whole rock and, you know, get it around a corner and get it into place. But we got it there and everything was really good. And it was at this guy's school, it was actually at Yale. He was going to Yale for grad school for architecture. And his idiot professor was there and the entire time this moron, he was supposed to be, you know, a really smart guy because he's at this fancy school as a professor. And, you know, he's a teacher. He's supposed to be disseminating all this amazing knowledge and information. He was just like the whole time, what are you guys doing? You're not gonna work. You don't know what you're doing. You have any idea what you're doing. There's no way that's gonna work. And like the whole time, everything we did, we were there for a few days, like manipulating this rock, getting into the position the whole time. And then finally at the end, he was like, you gotta watch it, I guess, right? It's ridiculous. Liberal arts education. I might as well tell you what the other thing he was haranguing us about. So it was this big, so we wanted a big rectangle piece of rock to go at the front of the house to be like a step. So we wanted like four feet across, like a little over like a meter and a half almost, and then something like 10 or 12 feet long. And then, you know, it was like a foot thick. But the rock we got from the quarry that my friend got really cheap wasn't that shape. It was like a triangle shape. So we had to cut off a chunk there and cut off a chunk there. And the way we did it, like it was, it's a thick piece of rock and they deliver it in this huge truck, plopped it there. And the guy said, I don't know how you guys are gonna do anything with this, but good luck. And he left. So we got this like several ton rocks sitting there. And this teacher is like, what the hell are you guys gonna do with that thing? And we're like, I'm just like, oh God, would you shut up? I'm like, dude, how do you go to school and like listen to these stupid teachers? Anyway, so I was like, here's what we do. You have a rock drill. We drill holes, you know, into the rock. And then we take rebar and we grind the end. So it's a little tapered. So it'll barely fit in the hole. And we put them all in the holes all the way down. And he had all the stuff available. He had a rock drill and he had a bunch of rebar he could use. So we stuck rebar into these holes. And then we pound one with a sledgehammer. Then the next one, then the next one, we just bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang. And the whole time this idiot professor's like, there's no way that's gonna crack in the right place. There's no way that's gonna crack in the right place. You guys don't know what you're doing. You've got a bunch of idiots you think. You think you can just come out here and just do that and it's gonna work. And then like an hour and a half later, after we've been pounding on this thing with a sledgehammer, with these holes, that side just came off. And the guy's like, oh, you got lucky on that one. And then we did the exact same thing over here. And he's like, oh, you think that's gonna work twice in a row? Oh, you can't get lucky that many times. And then we did the exact same thing. 20 minutes later, boop, cracked off. Then we had a rectangular piece of wood. And then we start doing the four by four thing to move it. This idiot professor, oh, I'm gonna work. Oh, you're doing. Then we get into place. Oh, you're lucky. You're lucky. What a waste of education that was. But that was a pretty cool project that he was doing that we got down there. Anyway, what else we got going on here? Hand sharpening is what I learned. How do you sharpen your hands? Do you, well, okay, seriously. Do you sharpen the drill bits like on a stone or on a, you can't do it on a file. They won't be hard enough, right? I hate drilling stainless steel so hard. Yeah, just keep sharpening your bits. Like just presume that every few holes you got to sharpen them again. And don't wait till you really have to sharpen it. Because then you're gonna have to sharpen it a lot because you're gonna like melt the end of the drill bit and you'll like really screw up the end. So you have to sharpen like grind a bunch of metal down. Just presume like every three or four holes you have to resharpen your bits. And just, even if you don't need it, just sharpen them real quick. Just a little bit and you'll have no problems. And drill your stainless slow with lots of lube. With a, I just use mortar oil. I love hand sharpening drills. All those drill doctors things are dumb. Hand sharpening is better. I've never had a drill doctor so I have no idea. Um, this guy says, yeah, you only had to move it once last time you've moved that thing also, right? Yeah, so I had to move the lathe once to get it here. And now I'm going to move it two more times. But each time is less distance. When I moved it here, it was, that was like an all day thing. That was a pretty, pretty long move. And now I'm gonna move it to my island and put it in my house. And then that's not gonna be that, that huge an ordeal. Oh, I have to get it up a hill though, it's really heavy. I had difficulty getting the mill up the hill. I don't know, I'll figure it out. And then the last time I move it is when I build a workshop that's separate from my house. But that's gonna be like close. So it's not gonna have to go far. I'm probably gonna have a really nice path that I can put the thing on wheels and just wheel it right there. So, so each time I have to move it, it'll be less. And once I get it into the workshop, that doesn't exist yet. That'll be it. It won't move again after that. It'll stay there until everyone's dead and no one uses it anymore, I don't know. Let's see. I bought a drill doctor once, took it back the next day, garbage. I would love videos about tool maintenance with an emphasis on do yourself and using minimal equipment, too many channels. Just say go buy a drill doctor, garbage. Yeah, totally. Oh, I know what you mean. I mean, like anytime, like if you wanna do stuff yourself and you don't wanna just buy everything all the time, it's so hard to find any information. Like one of the reasons I don't care about having the internet at my house, although now I'm gonna get it or whatever is because I can never find what I'm looking for. Like whatever I'm looking for is always stuff that's like about doing something for yourself, not buying something. And it's like impossible to find the information most of the time. You have a micrometer. No, I wish I did. I mean, yeah. Yeah, okay, I know what you're talking about. Yeah, the micrometer, this thing. But mine is not, I could not measure micro meters with it because it doesn't have the dial, it doesn't have specific or really fine tuned readouts or anything. Turning threads is hard for me to do. I've actually never turned threads. Like you're talking about on a lathe, right? Like turning threads, like putting threads on a rod or something. Yeah, I've never done that. I've only done it with tap and die stuff. Or a few times I've made threads in stuff with a file just by hand, which is kind of crazy and you can do it. Put it on your wish list, Jamie. I will buy it for you. Oh, Tomaters, can you recommend a micrometer? Because like, or should I just go on Amazon and just find whatever has a good reviews? If anyone has any recommendations on a micrometer that I should get, that would be great because I don't really know anything about who makes a good one. I was thinking of using IBC crates for the bones and the bladders for the skin. She's talking about something I don't know. Oh, Mr. McRoover apparently has videos on his channel about cargo bites that he's built. That's cool. I think there's a whole conversation going on there that I missed. I have a neighbor like this, had a rental of mine. He has a contractor and it's constantly negative about the work I'm doing there. Oh yeah, so many people. It's like anytime you wanna do anything outside of normal, it's like there's always just this line up of clowns. I'm just gonna call them clowns. We're just like, I don't know what you're doing. Nah, it's not gonna work. Well, you've just got lucky that time. Well, you just wait, you just wait. You know, luck's gonna come and run out and you're gonna hurt yourself and kill yourself, blah, blah, blah. Which makes me think of the Mosquito Coast. So everybody who watches this channel probably knows the movie Mosquito Coast because the beginning of the movie is very similar to me and what I've done. It's Harrison Ford is living in the United States with his family, he's like on a farm kind of thing. And he's just saying like, ah, America's turned to garbage. But saying a lot of the same stuff I do. And decides to move to Central America. And actually in the movie, they moved not far from here because they were talking about going down the coast to Panama. So they must not have been that far from here. But anyway, so he's this, you know, this genius inventor who people are always saying, oh, he's crazy, he's crazy. And this guy who doesn't like him, who's one of those brrrr guy that says, you be careful kids. I mean, that father of yours is gonna get you killed one day. And to anyone who's actually like that guy, the inventor is like, why? Why, why? Because I'm different. Why does that mean I'm going to kill my whole family someday? But sure enough, you know, halfway through the movie, after the guy's taken his family to Central America and set up this amazing community and done all this stuff and started inventing, he just goes crazy and just fricking bonkers. Like he just loses his mind and just plummets downhill and just almost gets his whole family killed. And the whole time, I watched it, you know, I watched it when I was a kid a long time ago, but I didn't really remember that well. But I watched it the other day and I was just like the second half of this movie is just garbage. Because it's just, all it is, is the propaganda of, you know, anyone who does anything different, it's gonna end bad. So if I take that message, then you know, everything I'm doing here, everything I've set up, all the work I've done to, you know, create all this stuff and all this, create all this happiness and you know, just create a good life for my family. It's all gonna come crashing down because I'm crazy and I'm doing stuff that's unusual. It means I'm crazy and I'm dangerous. I'm gonna kill everyone. And all the off-grid movies are like that. So like, that's not how it works in real life. That dude who was genius, that character that Harrison Ford was playing, he wouldn't just suddenly get stupid and need his ice to be seen by people who are gonna think it's magical jewels because suddenly his ego just can't handle the happiness anymore. Anyway, there are so many problems in a movie after that once. And just because you're different does not mean you're crazy and gonna get everyone killed. It just doesn't make any sense. You're a fantastic storyteller. Oh, that makes me happy. Thanks, man. Cause I don't know how I'm doing here. That's great to get some feedback. Thank you very much. You have pipe, you have netting, make a sling with two pipes and netting and drag all the way. What am I dragging? I can't drag that. Must be talking about someone else. Oh, you can't move that. You don't know what you were doing. Ah, blah, blah, blah. I hate those guys. Yeah, those guys are ridiculous. And you know what? The annoying thing is all those naysayers and poopy heads, like they function totally fine in the ridiculous society we have going right now, which is unfortunate because they should be getting negative feedback. Like, this is one of the things I love about living here is I don't have all that artificial society around me, all the artificial feedback. Like living in the wilderness, you get like rational, sensible feedback that is not biased. It's just like, it's just the real stuff. And in this kind of environment, if you are creative and imaginative and thinking outside the box, you know, trying to figure things out and trying new things, you end up getting a lot more benefit than what you lose in terms of, you know, you might waste some resources here and there by trying something that doesn't work, but you end up with a lot more benefit from the things you learn and figure out to be able to do from making those mistakes. But, you know, back in the world in civilization, there's so much, there's so much, what's the word? Pressure, there's so much pressure to never make a mistake, to never try anything. And it's really unfortunate because that is what we have to do that. Once we stop trying to do things, I mean, we might as well be dead. Once we stop trying to make some kind of progress, I mean, there's no point in being alive anymore. You know, at that point, you're just floating around waiting to die. What's the point of that? Like, what's the point of life if you're not trying to somehow make it better? And, oh, that actually reminds me of something, that a concept that was mentioned in the Mosquito Coast. So the dad who has gone crazy at this point and has gotten himself shot and their house is destroyed and their second house is destroyed. Basically, they're just in terrible situation. The dad is saying, no, we need to go upstream because dead things go downstream. Living things go upstream. So we need to keep going upstream. And at that point, it's just the context in which he's saying that is just crazy, even though it's a completely sane concept in generally speaking. Living things, try to make progress and keep going and try to get somewhere. They're trying to go upstream. Dead things go downstream. You can't do something wrong, go get it. But obviously you can't do that if you've been shot and they're just destructive. Anyway, what do you want to Shayna? So they're trying to charge Abraham $1,300 for a four-horsepower motor. Oh, don't tell him not to buy that. So I have a friend who's just come. He's actually someone who's been watching these videos for a while. I wonder, did he tell you what his name is on here? It's Abraham. It's Abraham? Okay, has he watched any of the lives? Yeah, I watched a bunch of mine. I'm pretty sure. Anyway, he's one of the guys who watches these. Anyway, he's here now supposedly to stay, hopefully. Seems like a pretty cool guy. And Shayna is telling me that someone's trying to charge him too much money for a boat motor. Yeah, don't buy that. Just tell him not to worry about getting a motor as soon as possible. There's no rush. You can paddle around for a while and if he needs to go to town, like I go to town every couple of weeks or whatever. Ray, I think he just wants to be independent. He wants to get going. No, I think Austin really would like to be independent. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. He wants to get going. He wants to... I'm also going to ask some questions about the solar panels. All right, well I need to go talk to him and did his solar panels come today? No, that's why he wants to talk to you because they're supposed to be coming but he wants to come from passing. All right, I gotta go talk about some solar panels and I hope everyone's having a good day. And... Yes! Yes, this guy saw Vasco Zuzus. Oh, Vasco Zuzus. Saw Mosquito Coast. It's anti-jamie propaganda. Told my brother to watch your movie since we didn't like the movie because of the ending. Yeah, I mean, another movie is Captain Fantastic. Mr. Fantastic. Cap... I think it's Captain Fantastic. Captain Fantastic. It was the guy who played in Lord of the Rings, the King, Viggo Mortensen. If you look it up, look up Viggo Mortensen movies about... Anyway, the movie starts with him living with his kids out in the woods, like off grid, like wild animals. And they have this amazing life. In the first, I don't know, 10 or 15 minutes of the movie shows like just all, like this rich lifestyle they've created. And then the entire rest of the movie is basically saying, don't ever do this because it's all gonna fall apart and you're bad people. Yeah, there's so many movies in that. And that is actually one of the reasons or one of the motivations I had for making my movie. Like I was like, someone needs to make a movie that's gonna have a positive outcome for this whole wilderness living off grid kind of thing. Cause like then... And another reason is that I couldn't find any movies where anything is created. Like so many movies, everything is destroyed. Like any of the superhero movies, just everything is destroyed. And just most movies today, everything gets destroyed. It's so hard to find any movies where something is created. Like you start at the beginning of the movie and at the end of the movie, there's more, not less. All right, I better go help with this stuff. Oh wait, Rain Assist, digital caliper six in, China 50 in, a little all stands. Okay, let me... Okay, I better go. Everybody have a marvelous... I'll check through them if you want. Go talk to your mom. Ground and sharp star are good names for machinist tools. Oh, you're at the end? Yeah, this is the end. Okay. So many ideas running through my head that sometimes I have trouble sleeping and I do have that problem. Well, yes I do. Yeah, I mean... Here, look, I'll follow you back to the house. Get up. Yeah, there's so much I want to do. And there's, I know there's no way I'm going to get to the end of my life and feel like I'm done. Come on, come this way. All right. Come on. I guess I'm going to get my boards over here. No, you need to... I'll get that in a minute. Just come to the house. Don't take my cord. Okay, just walk back to the house. You walk back to the house. Abram, what's the story with this solar panel? Oh yeah, you were saying bye. Yeah. I didn't say bye. Okay, I'm going to push the button. Okay, bye. Hold on, everyone say bye. I'm turning off the thing. It's not videoing you guys. Bye. Bye guys. It's terribly good. I like your headless guy.