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An Enslaving Motorcycle?

Enslaving Motorcycle, that's a contradiction in terms isn't it?

I read a post on a Motorcycle Forum ridiculing a fella for talking about the Freedom of the Open Road.

This great thinker posed the idea that a person who'd spent the money to ride a fine Motorcycle was enslaved by the cost of his obsession. He actually put it into the realm of hypocrisy.

Enslaved by my bike? uhhh... Don't think so.

Hmmm... I think, that statement and those like it are where the phrases... "If you don't ride... you don't know" and... "If I have to explain it to you, you won't understand", and "Only Motorcycle riders understand why dogs hang their heads out the window" came from.

Apparently, to achieve Freedom, in the eyes of these philisophical giants... You have to live naked in the jungle, living on bugs and drinking out of a creek or licking water off the leaves!

There is a cost to everything. There never has been, never will be, such a thing as a free ride. Let's face it... something that is free... ain't worth much... is it?

Freedom is one of the most expensive, and by far the most precious of things a man can own. The work he had to do, to put his butt on the Fine Motorcycle, that hangs the grin on his face and lights his spirit with the high shine of FREEDOM, is a sacrifice well made.

Enslaving Motorcycle? If the sheer, giggling, joy I get from riding a fine Motorcycle is Slavery... then Slavery has been maligned! I've always thought of slavery as grinding, painful, heart searing, imprisonment; something that does damage to you.

Roaring down the two lane... following my nose... splitting the wind on my V Star... and one day soon a sweet VICTORY Motorcycle... is not grinding... it ain't painful... and it sure ain't imprisonment.

An action that lifts the spirit, and motivates your imagination and ambitions is not hardly damaging.

A Motorcycle does however, often sear the heart. That's a pretty good description of the sensation you feel, when you come leaning around that last corner, coming out of a narrow canyon, up in Wyoming... as the road straightens out before you, the sun glittering off the dew on the grass, as the valley glows in front of you, and gets lost in the distant, misty horizon...

The giggles that were heard in your helmet, as you cranked through the bends in that river canyon, surrender to a soft... "Oh Lordy", as the beauty and the FREEDOM get hammered home... and you realize... with maybe a few tears you'll never admit to... just how fortunate you were... to be smart enough... to sacrifice those many hours...

... for the purpose of gracing your life... with a Fine Motorcycle.

Brian is the "editor" of Goin' RV Boondocking, a website dedicated to the full-time, dry camping lifestyle, and also, Motorcycle Touring on Freedom Road, where the name says it all. After a couple decades of motorized yondering he has learned a few things the hard way!

http://www.rv-boondocking-the-good-life.com
http://www.motorcycle-touring-the-good-life.com

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Overhead Fastening Without Ladders and Lifts

Overhead Fastening to Concrete Decks

Many times on the site, you are called on to suspend items from a concrete deck, bar joist or metal deck. This article will give you a few ideas to fasten to the deck from the floor in particular, hanging ceiling grid wire, jack chain and threaded rod. Just some applications include electricians suspending light fixtures and cable, low voltage contractors suspending cable runs or speakers, ceiling contractors suspending grid and many others.

To Concrete

If you do any amount of fastening at all to concrete, you likely have a Hilti or Ramset gun, but do you have an extension pole? Most of these tools can be mounted on an extension pole allowing the worker to reach the deck without a lift or ladder. The most common type of pole tool is a fixed length pole, usually 6' that you mount your tool in. The tool will have a actuator lever at the other end like a clutch lever on a motorcycle to actuate the tool. Some tools like the Ramset Viper tool are specifically made for use on a pole tool. There is a telescopic pole tool that will extend from 6'-12' in one foot increments allowing you to reach almost a 20' deck from the floor. You can shoot ceiling clips with grid wire, or jack chain or a threaded rod clip to suspend threaded rod.

To Bar Joist

Tall buildings with bar joist ceilings can be a real challenge when the deck is 20' in the air. While some electricians have a "trick" they use with piece of EMT to twist around the bar joist, this can be difficult to do all day. Flange clip tools can make this job easier. You can get a flange clip that you can fasten to grid wire or jack chain and then using a special install tool, you can raise the clip to the bar joist and engage the clip and your done. You can also get flange clips that will screw on to a piece of threaded rod, and you can reach up and install to the joist.

Wood Ceilings

Fastening to wood beams from the floor can be easy if you have the right tool. Look for a tool called the lagmaster that will telescope from 6'-12' and drive an eye lag and tie the grid wire to the lag all at once. There is a version of this tool that will allow you to install Sammy screws (rod hangers) from the floor with the threaded rod already installed.

Metal Decks

Metal decks can be handled much like the wood ceilings mentioned above, you would just use a self drilling eye lag for metal on the end of a lagmaster pole and you can zip right along.

Even Faster

Want to move along even faster? The above mentioned ceiling clips and flange clips can be purchased pre tied with grid wire, saving you the time of tying them your self. You may pay a little more but many of these costs can be passed to the end user. Also, I often figure it costs a buck a minute to run a guy, I would rather have him focus on his trade rather than assembly work.

You can find extension poles including the lagmaster at http://constructionfastening.com/ Find out more about powder actuated tools at http://www.protoolguide.com/powderactuatedtools.html

Article Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Jeffrey_Richard

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