Something Shiny

New Tag Arrived Today

Tailgate

When I traded the old truck in for the new one, I removed my personalized license plates and set them aside until the MVD sent me the new tag to affix to the rear plate. Well, when I checked the PO Box today, the registration and tag were in the mail.

When I got home, I removed the temporary tags and installed my personalized plate with a new chrome frame. No front plate this time, since it would block the intake of the new truck. Arizona is one of those states where a front license plate is optional. Click on the image to enlarge.

More Truck Accessorizing

Accessorizing

I did a little internet shopping for a couple of things we needed to add to the truck. First, we discovered that a dashboard cover is almost essential here in the desert. Even though the cars are garaged, the short time they are in a parking lot when shopping during the summer, the dash (and seats, etc.) gets mighty hot. You can see the dash cover in the top panel of the image above.

Next, we saw a TV commercial about WeatherTech floor covers. I ordered those this week and installed them today. The covers go a bit beyond the aftermarket floor mats in the auto supply stores in that they are custom fitted for the exact vehicle and cover not only the carpet, but the trim areas all around. You can see the driver side cover in the lower left panel and the crew cab cover on the right (the seats are in the up position).

The salesman who sold the truck to us recommended a couple of places down in the northwest Phoenix Metro area that can install the bed liner and tonneau cover. We will probably get those things done soon.

Click on the image to enlarge.

Accessorizing the New Truck

accessories.jpg

We received a couple of items I ordered on line for the truck. A cover for the hitch receptacle and extension mirrors for towing the trailer are here. I installed the hitch cover and a hitch lock yesterday. I tried out the extension mirrors today. The mirrors were quite a bit easier to install and remove as compared to the mirror set we had for the GMC.

We still have to order a bed liner and a tonneau cover for the truck. We transported stuff to California and back using just a tarp and bungees to hold stuff in the bed. The tonneau will cover the stuff but we still have ratchet straps and bungees to hold cargo in place.

Taking the New Truck Plunge

Ford F-150 Pickup Truck

We didn’t plan to drive a new truck home today, but that’s what happened. We had been toying with the prospect of upgrading to a new vehicle for a while now and contacted a friend who is a salesman at the local dealer. We gave him some specifications about what we wanted and he came up with a list of possible matches a few days later. At first, we had trouble getting on the same wavelength with our “druthers,” but we met with him today at the dealership and found a truck that we could flex our initial wishlist to come to an agreement. Both Damsel and I test drove the truck and we liked it a lot.

Our buddy made us a really good offer for a trade in of our SUV, so we decided to go forward with the deal. We still have the SUV for tonight, but tomorrow morning we will be cleaning it out and taking it to the dealer.

A couple of years ago, this dealer posted a billboard that convinced us that we would come here for a new truck deal. It was the famous (to us) “Thanks, Ford, for NOT taking the bail out from the government.” Click on the image to enlarge.

Coin Box

Coin Box

I’m not a coin collector per se, but over the years, I have tossed some coins into a box that I keep in the safe. I halfheartedly saved the quarters with the states on them, but only amassed a few of them, many being duplicates. I also saved JFK half-dollars when I found them and put a lot of “Suzi Bucks” (Susan B. Anthony one-dollar coins) in the box, most of which came out of postage stamp vending machines as change.

On the foreign coins side of the box, I have a variety of coinage from places we have visited or have come to possess mysteriously. There is a 500 peso Mexican piece, a bunch of Italian coins brought back from Rome, some interesting French-Polynesian coins from a long-ago visit to Tahiti and a cold-war relic zehn pfennig (ten pennies) coin from the Bundesrepublik of West Germany.

I have no use for them other than as money in the US coins case. For the foreign coins, I may pass them along to the grandchildren for their amusement. Click on the image to enlarge.

NIST Time Widget

Quite by accident, I found this widget at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) website, time.gov. I was looking for the NIST time applet, but siince I have Java® disabled, I was unable to view the time. Then, I noticed a link on that page to their Flash® NIST Widget.

Once I clicked on the link to the widget, I saw another link to a page that published details about embedding the widget on your own website. That page had the HTML embed code along with details on how to customize the widget for your own preferences of how to display the time, background color and time zone. I set this one to ?setcolor=#EAEDF2&setzone=-07&set24=true which represent the parameters for our light blue background color, the UTC minus seven timezone (Arizona) and to display the time in 24 hour format.

Since I already have my own Flash® time and date widget in the sidebar on the main page, I doubt that I will be embedding this one. Note that my widget is driven by the time YOUR computer is set to and the NIST widget gets the time from the NIST Time and Frequency Division (with a minor network delay).

Lugnutz

Lugnutz

On the way back from the valley a few days ago, Damsel snapped this photo of the front wheel of an eighteen wheeler. The operator had replaced the lug nuts with this exotic array of spiked cones that reminded me of the Ben Hur Chariot Race where the evil Massala had extended axles on his chariot designed to rip out the spokes of competing chariots. Click on the image to enlarge.