cewait
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2000
- Messages
- 5,695
What a difference a week makes in attitude! Woo hoo.
I am taking tomorrow off for my long run. Looks like a cold (for Houston) and rainy day with a possibility of white stuff. No not dandruff! I am looking for a nice mid teen run.
My midweek runs were spot on this week, almost. I hate to say this but I broke my treadmill list night. We are in a new house and my DW and I have not come to terms on the need to make the treadmill a centerpiece of the last bedroom. So it now lives in the garage Anyway, given the cooler weather this week and the fact the coefficient of expansion for the deck material is greater than that of the belt on the treadmill (if you did not do well in physics, the bed of the treadmill shrinks more in cool weather than the belt) the first 2-3 minutes of any run below 60F is a little dicey on the unit. Literally, the run feels like ice as the belt slips on foot strike. I got the brilliant idea of starting the mill up and letting it warm up while I changed clothes. When I got back out the thing was in siren mode alerting me to a dead sensor. I played around with the unit and I think that the speed sensor failed or needs reset. The unit starts fine but never stops at a speed; it just continues to gain speed until the unit faults out to protect itself.
Fortunately, the repair company will be in my part of town tomorrow afternoon. I am sure the tech will admonish me for selecting the garage. I will tell him to put it in writing and then use that as ammunition for our new exercise room.
I am taking tomorrow off for my long run. Looks like a cold (for Houston) and rainy day with a possibility of white stuff. No not dandruff! I am looking for a nice mid teen run.
My midweek runs were spot on this week, almost. I hate to say this but I broke my treadmill list night. We are in a new house and my DW and I have not come to terms on the need to make the treadmill a centerpiece of the last bedroom. So it now lives in the garage Anyway, given the cooler weather this week and the fact the coefficient of expansion for the deck material is greater than that of the belt on the treadmill (if you did not do well in physics, the bed of the treadmill shrinks more in cool weather than the belt) the first 2-3 minutes of any run below 60F is a little dicey on the unit. Literally, the run feels like ice as the belt slips on foot strike. I got the brilliant idea of starting the mill up and letting it warm up while I changed clothes. When I got back out the thing was in siren mode alerting me to a dead sensor. I played around with the unit and I think that the speed sensor failed or needs reset. The unit starts fine but never stops at a speed; it just continues to gain speed until the unit faults out to protect itself.
Fortunately, the repair company will be in my part of town tomorrow afternoon. I am sure the tech will admonish me for selecting the garage. I will tell him to put it in writing and then use that as ammunition for our new exercise room.