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  • Several Regions have held meetups already, but others are being planned or are evaluating the interest. The Ontario GTA West area meetup is planned for Saturday April 26th at Greasemonkeys shop in Aylmer Ontario. If you are interested and haven’t signed up yet, click here! Arbutus has also explored interest in a Fraser Valley meetup but it seems members either missed his thread or had other plans. Let him know if you are interested in a meetup later in the year by posting here! Slowpoke is trying to pull together an Ottawa area meetup later this summer. No date has been selected yet, so let him know if you are interested here! We are not aware of any other meetups being planned this year. If you are interested in doing something in your area, let everyone know and make it happen! Meetups are a great way to make new machining friends and get hands on help in your area. Don’t be shy, sign up and come, or plan your own meetup!

Real estate listings suck

The whole carbon neutral, green energy thing is a farce. It's just a convenient non-verifyable way for crooks to market total crap.
Totally Agree. My attitude is the climate has been in consistent flux since it was created. Until China and India reduce their emissions we could live like cave men and it still wouldn't be enough to make a dent or appease the tree huggers. When I can grow pineapples on the back 40 then I might change my mind. I figure I have been gentrified as I get older. I don't do oil changes over the city sewer grates anymore as it was a common practice growing up or use DDT or Agent Orange as grass / bush control.
 
The whole carbon neutral, green energy thing is a farce. It's just a convenient non-verifyable way for crooks to market total crap.
Agree with this. Unfortunately lots of people have been convinced otherwise so we're stuck with it until the next great leader that will set us on another path.
I'm middle of the road when it comes to green, having been involved in green energy (wind turbines) and the oil & gas industry rather equally. Neither are great for the environment (local or globally), but we all want our internet, computers, cars and tropical fruits which we can't have without the energy to make, operate or transport them.
The approach I'm taking is that of acceptance regardless the cause, I think its inevitable that things are warming up and climate is shifting / changing. Accept, adapt and move on for this individual. I'll let a bigger brain figure out if we can really change things with all the variables that are in play.
I'll also be more efficient and less wasteful - that just goes to the cheap side of me. No need to burn 18L/100km in a truck that does the same job (for me/my requirements), when one can be had that burns 12L/100km - I can be "good for the environment" while being cheap.

I had a debate with a coworker who was talking all uppity about how he was saving the world with his eco friendly hybrid commuter car and was putting me down over driving a pickup truck to work. How many KM's to work? Me - 15, him - 45. How many liters a week? He was burning more per week than me. Who's doing better for the environment? My truck has probably another 10 years in it and double the current km's. How friendly is it to go buy something new and add that consumption to the environment? And wear it out at 3 times the rate? 3 times the tires added to a pile somewhere. He didn't like me.

As for the farce of 'net zero' - I guess my current house might qualify too, the carbon captured in the wood framing and sheathing, wood floors and kitchen cabinets is pretty significant. Just need to do some messy math that no one will question and its probably carbon negative! Heck, even the drywall has paper with carbon captured in it on 2 sides!
 
I'll also be more efficient and less wasteful - that just goes to the cheap side of me. No need to burn 18L/100km in a truck that does the same job (for me/my requirements), when one can be had that burns 12L/100km - I can be "good for the environment" while being cheap.
I use to love to drive V8's but as times and needs changed I downside first to V6 and then to 4 cylinder's (diesel and gas). At present I am driving a Honda Fit a 4 cylinder gas clown car. It does the job and as fuel economy goes if I put high test in and drive to Toronto then back I get 4.0 litres to 100 km. If I'm easy on the gas pedal and keep to the flow of traffic I have gotten as low as 3.8 L/100. In town driving I typically get 4.9 to 5.2 L/100 depending on the weather, summer vs winter. I always buy a vehicle based on the need not the want.
I funny thing is back in the seventies a V8 1/2 ton pickup got 15 mpg or 15.6 L/ 100 and forty years later they still get the same gas mileage with all the fancy anti pollution gadgets and complicated computer systems that the average joe can't fix themselves. Hum...
 
I'm pausing my real estate search for a few weeks at least, but this thread has been helpful for when I pick it up again.
 
funny thing is back in the seventies a V8 1/2 ton pickup got 15 mpg or 15.6 L/ 100 and forty years later they still get the same gas mileage with all the fancy anti pollution gadgets and complicated computer systems that the average joe can't fix
Tires are twice the size and vehicles have doubled thier weight.
 
I use to love to drive V8's but as times and needs changed I downside first to V6 and then to 4 cylinder's (diesel and gas). At present I am driving a Honda Fit a 4 cylinder gas clown car. It does the job and as fuel economy goes if I put high test in and drive to Toronto then back I get 4.0 litres to 100 km. If I'm easy on the gas pedal and keep to the flow of traffic I have gotten as low as 3.8 L/100. In town driving I typically get 4.9 to 5.2 L/100 depending on the weather, summer vs winter. I always buy a vehicle based on the need not the want.
I funny thing is back in the seventies a V8 1/2 ton pickup got 15 mpg or 15.6 L/ 100 and forty years later they still get the same gas mileage with all the fancy anti pollution gadgets and complicated computer systems that the average joe can't fix themselves. Hum...
Back in the 70’s…. 1978 for example a 350 chev made about 190hp. Now a v8 makes 400hp. Modern 400hp v8’s do well into 20 mpg.
 
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