Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Goodbye Rusty

There is a likelihood of tears as I type this.
This morning we had to take Rusty to the vet to have him put to sleep.
Rusty lived with Kate's mum and dad in Cornwall. While they owned a pub on one floor, with a big field out back he could run in, all was good.
When Kate's parents moved to a pub where they lived three floor up Rusty started to show his age and struggled with the stairs.
We brought Rusty up to live with us and he was very happy.
Having been raised in pubs and around other people and other animals the lovable temperament of the Golden Retriever was amplified.
In recent years, as he's got older, he'd been taking medication daily to assist with pain in his back legs and hips. More and more often he was struggling to get up and sometimes his back legs would give out on him. The vet said that, given he was 14 years old, pain medication was really all they would recommend.
Last night he collapsed and couldn't get up. Kate and I sat up with him all night. He slept on and off but any time he tried to get up his legs gave way.
We hoped this was just a temporary thing and that on waking up in the morning he'd be bouncing around like a puppy. Hoped but honestly knew this wasn't likely.
We spoke to the vet early this morning and they advised us it was time to bring him in.
Because of the isolation instructions given to the UK just the night before, the veterinary practice, where possible, were asking people to stay in their vehicles in the car park and they would come out and see animals. In a way, this worked out a calmer ending for Rusty.
The vet gave Rusty an injection to sedate him, Kate and I sat with him in the back of her car until he went to sleep.
Lots of people knew Rusty. Kids grew up with him, friends looked after him and anyone that visited got covered in his hair and slobber.
On the odd occasion Rusty would escape and we'd had phone calls from neighbours asking us to come get him.
I have cried a lot today, triggered by little things.
I'll miss you Rusty.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Caffeine Withdrawal

Started the day with a repeat of lat weeks walk. When I got back I had a headache which I thought was due to dehydration. I took some paracetamol and washed them down with a pint of water then went back to bed.
I woke up an hour and a half later still with a headache. Notably not a migraine. Typically headaches I can clear with medication but this one stuck.
It wasn't until later in the afternoon that I realised I'd not had any coffee all day. Typically I'd have at least three.
One coffee later and my head cleared!

22nd March 2014 - No data
22nd March 2015 - 1279 steps
22nd March 2016 - No data
22nd March 2017 - No data
22nd March 2018 - No data
22nd March 2019 - No data
22nd March 2020 - 17724 steps

This evening I fixed the curtain rail in one of the girls rooms and set up a "smart" thermostat in the other. While the thermostat has been replaced I now need to do a little investigation as to how to use it.

What we'd like to do is be able to shut the bedroom radiators down during days when we need the heating on in other rooms but not necessarily the bedroom.

Once I've got this one working as we want to then I can order up the same thermostat for other rooms, potentially then setting up routines and the home assistants to control them.

Saturday, March 21, 2020

A Busy Day

Started the day with a walk to the chemist to collect prescriptions. The tiny chemist has a three customer limit during the social distancing state, still people would come in, ignoring the queue out front, demanding attention. Colourful language and gross ignorance. Anyone working with the public right now gets my respect. The public can be a pain to work with at the best of times.

The walk to the chemist was just that, direct there and back. I may have stopped at a poke-stop but certainly this was a walk with a purpose rather than exercise.

Once back at the house I'd wracked up about 3500 steps. Just short of midday and half way through the 7000 step goal.

Once back home I shut the central heating off as I needed to re-fill the radiator in the recently re-decorated front bedroom. While waiting for the system to cool I cut the grass.

A quick brunch after cutting the grass and then spent the afternoon finishing up the front bedroom.

I re-filled the radiator, built a book case, built a table, built a lamp, built a chair, fitted handles to the wardrobe, then to end the day's work cleared up after myself.

The end of day step count was surprising...

19th March 2014 - No data
19th March 2015 - 3625 steps
19th March 2016 - No data
19th March 2017 - No data
19th March 2018 - No data
19th March 2019 - No data
19th March 2020 - 11277 steps

So reaching 7000 steps while not leaving the house may not be impossible. Even if you ignore the 3500 steps for the walk to the chemist I still made 7000 steps. Granted I'm not going to be decorating all day when I'm also working but perhaps I can attend conference calls using my phone and pacing the room, use the standing desk.

Going to walk the 10km route that I walked last Sunday again tomorrow. Again the step count for previous years is very low, I can only imagine there was a technical error or I didn't wear a watch that day! Even if the walk gets canceled, as long as I make my 7000 steps I'm good.

Friday, March 20, 2020

Not The Top Day!

I said it was going to happen and today was that day! In retrospect I should have checked yesterday what the target was going to be.

20th March 2014 - No data
20th March 2015 - 13066 steps
20th March 2016 - No data
20th March 2017 - No data
20th March 2018 - No data
20th March 2019 - No data
20th March 2020 - 8471 steps

As the phrase goes, on this day in history, March 20th 2015, it appears I walked from home to the station to get the train to work, then in the evening I walked from the station to what appears to be a local petrol station, I'm looking at my "Timeline" on Google Maps, then back home.

Today I just did my 5km lunch time walk that, took me over the 7000 steps but doesn't touch the 13000 from 2015. Thinking back, in 2015 I didn't have my own car so would often walk to the station, walk to the shops and walk in to town. There's likely to be more high step count days from 2015.

Meanwhile the country is locked down further tonight as pubs, restaurants clubs, leisure centres, cinemas, theatres all go on lock down. Many other European cities have banned all but essential street use so it's looking likely that at some point I'm going to have to find a way to keep up my step count without leaving the house! This could mean a lot of step ups on either the stairs or a stool. I really doing want to not make the 7000 steps across March because of this crazy situation. Have to safely and responsibly overcome this hurdle.

Learning from today's mistake, checking historical step counts, previous data shows that I didn't make 7000 so as long as I do my 7000 step goal I'm good.

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Lots Of Steps

Today's count, 12925 steps. That's a run with Maia in the morning followed by a walk at lunch time. The lunchtime walk was just over 5km, will aim to run that route once we can get the current shorter route quicker.

The Strava app' didn't quit half way through my lunchtime walk today, I think the previous issue may have been due to "gesture" unlock and accidental stopping. I'll report back if this continues to work or has more problems.

19th March 2014 - No data
19th March 2015 - 5446 steps
19th March 2016 - No data
19th March 2017 - No data
19th March 2018 - No data
19th March 2019 - No data
19th March 2020 - 12925 steps

I'm going to eventually catch up with one of the dates of one of my mountain walks, but not today! 

For every day in March I've taken over 7000 steps. Not sure yet if I'll try 10000 for April or maybe switching some of the walking for a different exercise?

1st March 2020 - 12684 steps
2nd March 2020 - 16827 steps
3rd March 2020 - 10051 steps
4th March 2020 - 13038 steps
5th March 2020 - 8941 steps
6th March 2020 - 10019 steps
7th March 2020 - 14745 steps
8th March 2020 - 10687 steps
9th March 2020 - 9130 steps
10th March 2020 - 11863 steps
11th March 2020 - 12424 steps
12th March 2020 - 8011 steps
13th March 2020 - 7687 steps
14th March 2020 - 7218 steps
15th March 2020 - 19450 steps
16th March 2020 - 9770 steps
17th March 2020 - 7020 steps
18th March 2020 - 8711 steps
19th March 2020 - 12925 steps

Highest count so far this month was from Sunday when I went for a walk along the Hog's Back. May repeat that route again this coming Sunday.

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Logging Failure

I went out for a reasonably long walk at lunch time and the app or possibly the watch, I'm not sure which, stopped recording half way through the walk.
I've still got data from Google Maps but it lacks some of the data available from Strava.
I've tried disabling the "twist to wake" gesture on the watch to see if this stops accidental wake and app stop.


18th March 2014 - No data
18th March 2015 - 7156 steps
18th March 2016 - No data
18th March 2017 - No data
18th March 2018 - No data
18th March 2019 - No data
18th March 2020 - 8554 steps

I'm running Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Running before 7am, empty streets so still isolated. Alarm set for 6am!


Took Rusty to the vet today to have two "lumps" removed. I was genuinely concerned that this would be serious.
Thankfully at the end of the day the vet was able to tell that one lump was a cyst and the other was not dangerous.

Rusty is very happy to have people home all day.

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Barely Made It

7020 steps. As I sat down at my computer to write this I was still 50 steps short of the 7000 required. I went downstairs, made a cup of coco, and her we are 70 steps later. Despite going for a run this morning which got me to well over half way before 8am the rest of the day I've been at my computer or driving.


17th March 2014 - No data
17th March 2015 - 5964 steps
17th March 2016 - No data
17th March 2017 - No data
17th March 2018 - No data
17th March 2019 - No data
17th March 2020 - 7020 steps

It's a good thing that data from previous years was sparse today.

Tomorrow's goal a little higher since the data for 18th March 2018, since that's the only year I appear to have data covering March, is 7156, which would still be a few more trips down and back up the stairs.

The run was good. Sun rise times meant that the sun is now just above the houses at 6:30am and shone right in my eyes. Not a blistering pace yet, still walking to the start point, running the circuit, then walking back. At a little over 3km I hope to increase the distance and run all the way. At the moment we get 3km covered comfortably within half an hour, still giving us time to shower and prepare before getting out of the door at 8am.

Beware Of Scammers

IF YOU GET A CALL FROM SOMEONE TELLING YOU THEY ARE TECHNICAL SUPPORT AND YOU ARE NOT EXPECTING THE CALL, HANG UP.
Especially as so many people are now working from home, please be aware that "Technical Support" scammers will be trying to take advantage of the current situation. Often scammers will phone home numbers which, when we're at work, we won't answer.

Microsoft, BT, Virgin will not cold call you to tell you that your computer is being hacked or that your Internet connection is running slow. Your corporate IT will generally only call you if you've asked them to and will have some means of verifying who they are.

Your corporate IT should not need any of your passwords, typically companies set up "security questions" to verify who you are. To perform our work IT professionals have our own administrator access and do not need to know your password.

Please do not hesitate to ask me via direct message if you have any technical questions.

Monday, March 16, 2020

Upping The Reaction To COVID-19

In The News


On the day that the action triggered by the COVID-19 virus escalated I was trying to help Jude with medical attention for extreme shoulder pain which she's been suffering with since last week.
Knowing that the NHS services are already hard pressed we first, instead, went to a chiropractor that we've been to in the past. After a consultation he recommended going to the doctor.
As we expected, the doctor surgery is taking emergencies only. Thankfully the triage nurse was able to get a prescription from the doctor for stronger pain killers.
Hopefully the enforced working from home will mean no driving and a more relaxed environment that will help Jude's shoulder settle.

Stepping Up

Various walks to the chemist today put my step count over 9000.

The Google Sheet automatic tracking started in October last year, data before that was from various different phones or step devices.

16th March 2014 - No data
16th March 2015 - 8058 steps
16th March 2016 - No data
16th March 2017 - No data
16th March 2018 - No data
16th March 2019 - No data
16th March 2020 - 9524 steps

Highest recorded steps for 16th March. OK that's not saying much since I only have one other date but I'll take the small victories.

Tomorrows challenge is looking pretty easy too since the highest on record for 17th March isn't even 7000 steps. Once the dates start to overlap more consistently this will get more of a challenge.

Early morning run tomorrow.

Sunday, March 15, 2020

Seven Thousand Steps

I've been trying to maintain seven thousand steps per day. Some days I've had to do a short walk before bedtime to scrape in the step count.

Today's count was 17247 following a 10km walk.

I've got a script set up which is pulling step counts into a Google spreadsheet. I've got data from my Android phone that goes back to 2014, though there's some patches missing in the earlier data.

I think I'll re-awaken this blog to record my fitness journey.

With the COVID-19 outbreak I may have chosen the wrong year to try signing up for a sponsored event. The London Marathon has been postponed until October, likely that other events will get postponed or cancelled too.

I'm currently using Strava, Garmin Connect and Virgin Pulse, along with the spreadsheet which is pulling information from Google Fit.

Strava uses GPS on either my Android phone or Android Wear watch to track my walks and runs. I've had varying success with the app and how it works with the phone and the watch.

Garmin Connect takes my step count from a health band that I wear 24x7. This tracks steps and sleep. The good thing about this specific health band is that, having very few features it doesn't use much battery power and runs off regular watch batteries instead of needing frequent charging.

Virgin Pulse pulls in data from Garmin and Google fit. The reason I'm using this is it's a service paid for by the company I work for. There's various "challenges" within groups and a certain social element to it.

Each of the systems has something that it tracks which it won't share with the others, there's a certain amount of manual data entry for some aspects.

I weigh myself every day. I'm not overly concerned about my weight but I do want to ensure that it stays sensible. I use Renpho ES-20M Bluetooth scales which automatically send my weight to an app on my phone. While the app does write my weight to Google Fit that information isn't then passed on to Strava, Garmin Connect nor Virgin Pulse. I enter the information into Garmin and Virgin Pulse manually.

At the end of the March, if I've been able to maintain 7000 steps all month, then for April I'll up the game to 10000 steps per day.

Stay tuned for updates and statistics!

2004 Nissan Micra Not Starting Warm


Warning

!!! Always disconnect the car battery when performing tasks under the bonnet which involve removing parts and using spanners. Especially in this case there can be live cables which would cause powerful sparks and possibly electric shock if the spanner touches engine while you're undoing the cables. !!! If you're not a confident DIY mechanic please take your car to a proper mechanic.

TLDR:

2004 Nissan Micra won't start when warm, doesn't turn over the engine at all. Starts fine with jump start and starts fine with bump start. Replaced starter motor addressed the issue.
Changing the starter motor not as tricky as some descriptions suggest.

History

Looking back at this now I think this has been a problem since I first got this car but I'd not tied it down and had partly addressed it by other means.
Not long after I first got the 2004 Nissan Micra 1.4 I had trouble starting it after a visit to a hospital. With the car being relatively new to me and still having the factory supplied battery I jumped to the conclusion that the battery was at fault and replaced it. Indeed replacing the battery appeared to address the issue. The non-start was a one off thing and I replaced the battery the next day, a reasonably simple task.
Just recently, again the car has had trouble starting. I hadn't pinpointed the exact problem because first thing in the morning and in the evening when coming home from work, the car would start without problem. It hadn't twigged to me that on the increasing number of times that the car had failed to start the engine had not long been turned off after a drive.
Vid01 shows the problem, the various beeps and pings are from the dash cam. The engine isn't turning over at all. It got to the point where even when cold the starting would be hesitant.

I took the car in for it's annual service and frustratingly the car didn't show the starting problem. After that point the issue became more and more frequent.
Most of the suggestions on the Internet were around a faulty heat sensor, suggesting putting a resistor across the sensor or unplugging the sensor to get to the vehicle to start. However, the symptoms reported by other owners suggested that the engine would turn over but not fire, this didn't match the symptoms I was seeing.
With a reasonably new battery I decided the next thing to try, before getting an expensive diagnostic, would be to replace the starter motor.

Changing The Starter Motor

Much of my Internet searching referred to different vehicles, it seems that there are different vehicles branded as "Micra" in different countries and I couldn't find anything specific to the car I have. I bought the online version of the Haynes manual for the car and it suggested that the replacement was a reasonable job to do for a confident DIY mechanic.
The manual suggested that there were two ways to remove the starter motor, either by jacking the car up and accessing from underneath  or by removing the wiper motor and "support panel" to allow access from above.
Initially I tried removing the wiper motor but failed at step one trying to get the wiper arms off.
Looking at jacking the car up and accessing from underneath I couldn't really see a clear access even if jacked up. The starter motor is at the top of the block at the back of the engine, access from the top is more logical.
First things first, when you're going to be reaching around in the dark for the solenoid ensure you've disconnected the battery (see warning above). The starter motor has a cable direct from the battery and if you were to try undoing that lead and were to short it to the engine this could cause dangerous, high power sparks and possibly electric shock.
I reached in behind the engine and used my mobile phone to take some pictures of the starter so I would get a better idea as to how to reach it.
On looking at the pictures I could see corrosion on the cable from the starter solenoid to the starter motor, this gave me a little more confidence that it was the starter motor that was wrong.
The pictures also gave me more confidence that there was space to get my hands and tools in from around the side/top of the engine without the need to remove the wiper assembly.
With the battery disconnected I used a 13mm socket to remove the main feed cable from the solenoid.

Pic 01 shows the solenoid after the main feed cable was removed.
After removing the feed cable I then used a 10mm socket to remove the switched feed, the smaller cable at the bottom.
With these two cables now out of the way I was able to get a 14mm socket with a half bar extension in to remove one of the two bolts. While the ratchet was able to fit without the half bar extension there was no room to move the handle.
The bolt is quite close to the solenoid (just visible in the picture above, below the switched feed). I did initially make the mistake of removing another bolt from the clutch housing, when it was clear that the starter motor wasn't coming off I realised my mistake.
The lower bolt can be fully removed.
The upper bolt is visible behind the battery and threads in to the starter motor from the opposite direction. I was able to reach in and support the starter motor with one hand while undoing the top bolt with the other.
Once the top bolt was out the starter motor could be lowered onto part of the engine allowing you to then withdraw the ratchet, bolt and your hands, then you can approach the starter motor from a more convenient angle to remove it from the engine compartment.
There was a lot of working by feel for this removal but with care and patience it's certainly a job I was comfortable doing.
Fitting the new starter, as Haynes is so fond of saying, is "reversal of removing". However there's a couple of points that I feel are missing from this vague instruction.
It's definitely easier to remove the bottom then bolt, then the top and when fitting the new motor it's certainly easier to fit the top, then the bottom. As always when tightening bolts it's best to do a little on each rather than tightening the top all the way only to then find the bottom isn't aligned.
Pic 02 shows the new starter motor fitted with the switched feed connected.
There's a potential for the switched feed and the main feed to be touching when they are fitted. If these were to short out then the car would try to start the moment you reconnect the battery. Make sure that the smaller, switched feed cable at the bottom of the solenoid points directly down. As you tighten the nut there is a tendency for the cable to move. As I have done above, I'd suggest taking a photograph with your mobile phone after you've affixed the cable to ensure it's correct.
I then attached the main feed and took further pictures to ensure there was no shorting then slipped the rubber cover back over the main feed.
A further step in being cautious I removed all tools from the engine bay in the expectation that the car would try to start, or the at least give a large spark, when I reconnected the battery.
Now fully prepared, I reconnected the battery and nothing happened. It's always good when you plan for the worst but actually things go well.
After tightening the battery terminal I tested the start and it fired straight away. Leaving the car running for five minutes I stopped the engine and tried starting again. Again the car started without fault.
Vid02 the car now starts consistently.