John Starnes’ Urban Farm: Mirror Floor Update

I’ve wanted a mirror floor since I was an HCC art major in 1977 and rented a home with a fireplace and imagined the ambience such a floor would add. Thankfully, years ago in my last house I can totally trip out I made that dream come true with recycled mirror by taking the advice of a famous mirror company in north Tampa and covering the back of each mirror with contact paper before laying it on the 50s era linoleum floor atop a concrete slad……this adds great tensile strength to each mirror panel and very much delays cracking. Plus it holds shards together if and when cracking occurs. Some visitors enjoy seeing the progress of the crackle patterns, which remind me of raku glazes on a room-sized scale. But that first mirror floor was largely composed of quite small panels connected at their edges with metal duct tape. But I am now pulling up that first effort and laying down MUCH bigger and more numerous thick mirrors I’ve been accumulating for years now. Plus yesterday Mary Jo brought me long mirror strips that could serve either as “filler” between large panels that don’t quite match up, or, more likely, positioned vertically in each room corner to add a new level of trippiness to my “Gay Trailer Trash on Acid Livingroom” made almost entirely from scavenged and donated items. Some weeks ago I set up in my Victorian Roses reading and workout room some of these mirror panels to help me assess the possibilities of fitting them together jig saw puzzle style on the floor. Plus I lucked out and dumpster-dived a BIG brand new roll of contact paper! on some of the mirror panel backs I am applying gray duct tape to see if that also is effective at adding tensile strength while holding shards together if breakage occurs. I am delighted to see that I have MUCH more mirror than I thought and can imagine the floor easily ending up 80% or more mirror! Here are a few pics of mirrors ready for cleaning and contact papering, plus a pic someone sent me years ago….a breathtaking environmental sculpture that art patrons ENTER….a room with 100% mirror floors, walls and ceiling, plus every object in the room is covered completely in mirror, much like an instructional poem I wrote in December 1984….see it below too. the new floor should be ready and pristinely polished in time for this Saturday’s Wacky Hat Firepit Potluck Party.

                                                   koo koo ka CHOO!

1301335232 30 John Starnes Urban Farm: Mirror Floor Update
1301335232 49 John Starnes Urban Farm: Mirror Floor Update
1301335232 78 John Starnes Urban Farm: Mirror Floor Update                                                                        
                                                                                 John

                                                Interior III

                        Completely mirrorize a tiny windowless room……
                   
                        floor, ceiling, walls.

                        Release 1,000 fireflies then

                        turn out the light.

                        Sit with a friend and watch.

Uniontown police officer dies after getting hit by SUV

1298441406 69 Uniontown police officer dies after getting hit by SUV

NewsNet5/WEWS-TV

A police officer in Stark County has died after being struck by an SUV in Uniontown Tuesday morning.

The incident happened around 8 a.m. on state Route 619, at the intersection of Edison Street NW and Kaufman Avenue NW.

During a news conference near the scene, police said Capt. Daniel Stiles of the Uniontown Police Department was wearing a reflective vest when he was hit by a 2004 Ford Explorer driven by a woman from Uniontown.

1298441406 45 Uniontown police officer dies after getting hit by SUV

Capt. Stiles was transported to Akron City Hospital, where he died at 10:40 a.m., according to a Gary Guenther, Investigator Supervisor for the Summit County Medical Examiner’s Office. he was 46 years old.

He leaves behind a wife and two children, who are both in grade school.

Investigators said the driver of the SUV told police she was going to the nearby high school to pick someone up, and didn’t realize she hit the officer until impact.

Our crews at the scene said the sun was very bright in the area — and police are looking to see if sun glare was a factor in the incident. Police said that the intersection gets backed up in the mornings, between 7:45-8 a.m., with sun glare being a key reason.

Police questioned the driver of the SUV, who they said was cooperative. no charges have been filed at this time, and NewsNet5.com is not releasing her name because she has not been charged with a crime.

Investigators said that they will remove a “black box” from the vehicle involved in the crash, which will provide details about how fast the SUV was traveling at the time.

Capt. Stiles has been with the Uniontown Police Department for two years. Prior to working in Uniontown, he worked for at least 15 years at the nearby Hartville Police Department. he was the 2010 Officer of the Year in Uniontown, and was brought to the department to become the new chief of police.

Capt. Stiles graduated from Hudson High School, and was a superb athlete. he still played golf and baseball.

The road where the accident occurred re-opened just before noon.

This crash in the sixth fatal crash the Ohio State Highway Patrol has investigated in Stark County this year, with the eighth fatality. during this time last year, there was only one fatal crash in the area.

Sun provides Earth with less energy than we thought

1296828620 97 Sun provides Earth with less energy than we thought

Researchers in the US claim to have the most reliable estimates yet of the amount of energy that the Sun provides to Earth – and it is less than previously thought. the findings will give scientists more robust solar data to feed into climate models, though much more work needs to be done to fully understand the relationship between the Sun and the Earth.

Historical and geological records reveal that the Sun has remained relatively stable for the past 250 years, with the total solar irradiance (TSI) fluctuating by less than 1% over the roughly 11-year solar cycle. and since the first space-based radiometers were launched in the late 1970s, scientists have been able to measure this irradiation directly. but to date, these space measurements have remained uncalibrated – researchers had to assume that their instruments function in the same way in space as they do on Earth.

Greg Kopp of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) in Boulder, Colorado, and Judith Lean of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington DC say they have acquired a more reliable estimate of solar activity. they analysed data collected by NASA’s Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE), a satellite launched in 2003 to investigate why solar variability occurs and how it affects Earth’s atmosphere and climate.

Simulating space on Earth

Crucially, Kopp and Lean were able to calibrate data collected by the Total Irradiance Monitor (TIM) instrument aboard this craft at a new calibration centre at LASP. this facility in Boulder enables researchers to verify their findings by recreating the conditions of interplanetary space with vacuum operations and high solar power levels. Kopp and Lean find that the TSI during the last solar minimum in 2008 was 1360.8 ± 0.5 W m–2, which is roughly 5 W m–2 less than the accepted value used in climate models.

“Although it seems small, this level of difference is very large for the instruments acquiring these measurements,” Kopp tells physicsworld.com. He says that while the latest finding is purely an improvement in instrument accuracy, it can help to inform climate studies about the influence of the Sun.

“The major climate models agree that the majority of climate change over the last century is caused by changes in greenhouse gases, while the Sun’s influence is responsible for about 15% of the observed warming over this time,” he says. “Prior to the 1900s, the Sun was responsible for much more of the changes in Earth’s climate.”

Little Ice Age

Indeed, geologists agree that over the course of Earth’s history, variations in the Sun’s energy output are likely to have influenced the climate on Earth. the “Little Ice Age”, for instance, which extended from the 16th to the 19th century, is often linked with a roughly 70-year stretch beginning in 1645 known as the Maunder Minimum when the Sun was particularly weak.

Friedhelm Steinhilber, a geologist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, near Zurich, agrees that Kopp and Lean’s measurements of TSI are the most accurate to date. but he warns that the significance of the lower value is far from fully understood.

“The Sun’s influence on Earth’s climate is not so much the absolute value. It is the relative variation”. Steinhilber believes that the significance of solar fluctuations is only really felt over longer time periods, like that observed during the Maunder Minimum.

These findings are presented in a paper in Geophysical Research Letters.

Would a small windmill generator placed in a truck bed produce enough energy to power the truck (if electric)?

windmills25 Would a small windmill generator placed in a truck bed produce enough energy to power the truck (if electric)?


If placed in the truck bed it would take drag out of the question and would have wind conditions ideal for its designs. would it be enough to power the truck?

how much would a windmill cost to get enough energy for a 1500 sq.ft.home. What kind to use?



seriously i want lots of info.