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Wednesday 22 April 2015

Self-driving Cars Are No Longer a Thing of the Future

But how long will it be until your car no longer needs you?

Driverless automobiles made flashy appearances at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, although nobody expects them to take over the roads anytime soon. And I know one big reason why that won’t happen. The Department of Motor Vehicles. I recently became one of the first people on the planet to earn an all-new license from the California DMV that allows me to drive a car that drives itself. Just one of the wacky bits of bureaucracy that comes with disruptive new technologies like self-driving automobiles.

Technically, my license is an “autonomous vehicle testing” permit. That sounds a bit less sexy that a driverless license, but actually it means that I’m one of the first people, ever, to be allowed to not touch the steering wheel of a moving car for extended periods of time.

Cool, right? Texting, iPad movies and long naps—here I come. Maybe not—at least not in the foreseeable future. Even though I was chauffeured earlier this week by a prototype Audi from Silicon Valley all the way to Vegas, I still had to pay attention when I was behind the wheel—because in a Stage 3 autonomous car like the Audi (there are five stages, the fifth being a completely robotic taxi) things could still go very wrong. “Really, this is an important responsibility,” Volkswagen group senior engineer—VW owns Audi— and co-passenger Daniel Lipinski told me sternly. “In an emergency you have to take control immediately.”
There’s no doubt that auto autos will become mainstream. But despite a chorus of sunny pronouncements from companies like Google, don’t book your robotic Uber ride just yet. “We won’t see piloted driving on the freeway until the next decade,” said Jรถrg Schlinkheider, head of driver assistance systems for the VW of America. “And fully autonomous driving with no human assistance is far, far away.”It may all sound futuristic, but driverless autos are already here. Carmakers such as Audi, Mercedes-Benz and Tesla are testing them on public roads around the U.S., readying technology that will change the way we commute, not to mention pizza deliveries. Audi timed its road trip, and our exclusive first drive, to the start of the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show, where Mercedes-Benz and Ford also made announcements about autonomous technology.
This statement was a bit stark, considering I’d just spent more than two hours schussing south down Interstate 5 towards Bakersfield, Calif., in a prototype Audi A7 sedan that drove itself. Traffic was thick, and yet the Audi handled itself capably, changing lanes and keeping up with the flow of traffic. Even at speeds of 70 m.p.h., my hands were in my lap and my feet tucked out of the way. It was eerie at first, but then I relaxed. Perhaps too much. I stopped paying keen attention to traffic, even turning to chat with the unnerved passenger in the back seat. (Sorry, Daniel.)
The 550-mile road trip was a powerhouse display meant to show how far Audi’s technology has come. The car uses an array of sensors, radars and a front-facing camera to negotiate traffic. At this point, the system works only on the freeway and cannot handle construction zones or areas with poor lane markings. When the car reaches a construction zone or the end of a highway, a voice orders you to take the wheel back. You’ve got about 10 seconds to do so before an array of LED lights goes from blue to amber, and then flashing red. You need only grab the wheel or apply the gas or brake to resume control.
If the technology still needs to evolve, the laws governing autonomous cars must evolve even more. The federal government does not yet have specific laws pertaining to the subject, leaving individual states to create their own mandates. California is easily the most proactive, allowing carmakers to test cars under specific circumstances. “California is taking this very seriously,” said Schlinkheider. Still, Audi is hoping the laws will become clearer when federal agencies eventually step in. “We can’t deal with 50 different states and 50 different sets of regulations. Right now we have to take special steps for drivers in California, but anyone with a driver’s license can pilot a prototype in Michigan.”
One of California’s stipulations is that drivers receive special instruction in how not to drive. I got mine at the VW Group’s semi-secret testing grounds outside of Phoenix. (Imagine a desert spy lab surrounded by high hedges and walls.) The training included basics like turning the system on and off and learning the circumstances in which it could be used. The rest was about handling emergencies, such as making lane changes to avoid crashing. Not that anything would go wrong, the Audi execs stressed (I briefly had visions of a Skynet takeover). Better to be over-prepared, they said. In all, it was far more difficult and involved than a regular driving test.
Average buyers will not need such training. That’s because the roll-out will be slow. In Audi’s case, it will be with a program that allows the car to operate itself in stop-and-go highway traffic jams. When the jam clears, though, the driver will have to take the wheel again. We’ll likely see that within the next couple of years, said Schlinkheider. As for the kind of high-speed freeway driving that I experienced, Audi will not release it “until the next decade.”
“It makes me happy to hear a major manufacturer saying that,” said Dr. Jeffrey Miller, an associate professor at the University of Southern California who specializes in intelligent transportation systems. “We’ve got these players like Google with very ambitious timelines, but I think Audi’s timeline is spot on. Not only does tech need to mature more, so does driver acceptance.”
Even better, he also thought my license was pretty cool. “A lot of people will say licenses — and drivers — will be obsolete, but that’s not the case. The driver will always have to take over in case of a failure.”

Source:- http://time.com/3661446/self-driving-driverless-cars-ces/

Sunday 19 April 2015

Bio-Climatic Solar House

This is a bio-climatic solar house in Eastern France. The house is designed as a three-dimensional sundial that keeps the temperature cool during summer months, and warms the living space in the winter, fall, and spring.

This h is a bio-climatic solar house in Eastern France. The house is designed as a three-dimensional sundial that keeps the temperature cool during summer months, and warms the living space in the winter, fall, and spring.


Source:- Reuters
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-18-coolest-homes-on-earth-2013-6?op=1#ixzz3XJzeNCPN

Saturday 18 April 2015

A Tiny House Adorned With Tomato Cans And Grocery Bags

Are tiny houses becoming too "cookie-cutter"? 
That's the fear of Phoenix Vo-Dinh, a tiny-house renter who fears the rise of "miniature McMansions." And she knows from McMansions: Before her current home, she lived in a Maryland house 10 times its size. The Maryland house had four bedrooms and four bathrooms in its 3,500 square feet, with seven entry doors.
Vo-Dinh now lives with her 24-year-old son, artist Christopher Lollar, in what she calls a "witch's cottage" in Portland, Oregon. Its interior walls are papered over with Trader Joe's grocery bags and pinto bean and flour sacks (coated in linseed oil); the exterior makes use of a local pizzeria's tomato-sauce cans; and flowerboxes are made from discarded stove hoods turned upside down and poked with drainage holes.

 go to a slideshow at http://yhoo.it/PortlandTomatoCanCottagePix.
Cottage designer Brad confesses in the video: "We're after the cute factor -- cute and adorable." (He preferred not to disclose his last name. Brad and his partner, not shown in the video, also designed the cottage next door.)
Vo-Dinh obviously appreciates the approach. "In Maryland," she says, "the size of the house -- it was too big! It was a big house with no hiding places in it! It was the weirdest thing. I didn't know that would happen.
"And this is huge. This is 364 square feet."
The home's other touches include a vaulted ceiling (which was key to a sense of expansiveness, plus it created room for lofts), a wine caddy in the crawl space, a porch swing made from an old Dairy Queen Bench, and a "patio-door bathroom" that Vo-Dinh says feels like a "light box." There's no drywall anywhere, says Brad, but every surface tells a story.
We spotted some great space-saving tips and tricks in the video:
• Restaurant supply stores are a great source for basics. A few big containers, like a big soup pot, are more useful than lots of small items, Vo-Dinh says.
• Folding chairs and other collapsible furniture can make a big difference. "It's really neat to put your furniture away when you don't need it, because the surface gets cleared. So when you're ready to use it, it's a clear, empty space," she says.
• A storage bed can supplement or substitute for a closet. Storage beds are available at many price points; we think hers might be from IKEA.
• Speaking of IKEA, that wall-mounted drop-leaf table looks suspiciously like the $30 Norbo table.
• If you have crawlspace but you don't drink wine, you could easily adapt the wine caddy idea to hide away other items.
Do you have any space-saving or upcycling tips to share, either ones we missed in the video or from your own life? We'd love to hear them in the comments!
You can also share photos with Yahoo Homes' Flickr group. We love to see your submissions, and we feature one every day on our Spaces blog.
Source:- https://homes.yahoo.com/blogs/spaces/a-tiny-house-built-with-used-tomato-cans-and-paper-grocery-bags-235727897.html

Friday 17 April 2015

The Tale Of One Woman's Radically Simplified 'Built-It-Myself' Life

Dee Williams.

Williams' memoir, released to coincide with Earth Day. Click an image to go to a slideshow.
Ask for a tour of Dee Williams's house, and it won't take long. The 84-square-foot space is no bigger than a parking spot.
There's no running water, no Wi-Fi, the fridge is a cooler, and the toilet is compostable. Williams knows how extreme this sounds. Before she downsized, she used to worry about the mortgage on her three-bedroom home, how to outfit her kitchen with matching appliances, and the endless string of home repairs.
But in 2003, after suffering congestive heart failure in her early 40s, Williams decided to simplify. She shed most of her belongings and sold her home in Portland, Oregon.
Now 51, she moved into the miniature house in Olympia, Washington, 10 years ago. Williams describes the self-built home on wheels in her memoir -- "The Big Tiny: A Built-It-Myself Memoir," being released today to coincide with Earth Day -- as "a mobile gingerbread house, or a cuckoo clock on wheels." She spends her workdays teaching others how to build their own tiny houses through her company, Portland Alternative Dwellings, and also works at the Washington State Department of Ecology in Olympia.
While hard numbers are difficult to come by, Williams estimates that there are hundreds of tiny houses around the country. She notes that since she built hers in 2004, "interest in building tiny houses, particularly from the DIY market, seems to have redoubled every year." She adds that workshops that once drew a couple of people are now routinely sold out.
By the way: They don't have to forgo running water, Wi-Fi, and flush toilets. "But I don't regret my own choices," Williams told Yahoo Homes.
The gingerbread house on wheels sits in the backyard of her neighbor (who is very generous with her shower, as are other friends; more on that below). There's a kitchen with a sink, pots and pans, a water jug, and a one-burner stove. Most of the space is taken up by what Williams calls the great room, a living area that's about the "size of an elevator" but feels bigger due to 11.5-feet-high ceilings and plenty of light.
Then there's Oly, her 30-pound Australian shepherd: The pooch gets a lift up the 7-foot ladder to Williams's lofted full-size bed at night. A skylight provides a view of the clouds, the moon, and, often, the rain. (It is Olympia, Washington, after all.) Being more connected to the outdoors was an unexpected perk, Williams noted.
"If you're living in a house with a roof that's 5 feet, 4 feet over your head, you're going to hear it when the rain comes in," said Williams. "Nature is in your face a little bit differently. I didn't realize what I was missing before I moved into the smaller space."
After an initial home-building investment of about $10,000, Williams these days keeps warm using a propane heater for about $8 a month. It's her only home bill. Her power comes from solar panels. The frugality and low maintenance are a huge benefit of living small.
She does miss having her own shower, though.
"It feels inconvenient. It never felt horrible," she said. She has plenty of bathing options thanks to generous friends and neighbors, who all gave her the keys to their houses. "My possessions have grown exponentially small. Except for my keychain. I have this massive keychain."
When nature calls, there's the compost toilet that works without water. After use, the waste is covered with sawdust. Williams admits to taking advantage of shower facilities at her Department of Ecology office, too.
In fact, Williams has found that the smaller the house, the more she depends on the people around her, and neighborhood necessities like the local market and the public library. "I thought I would be so contained in this little house with no running water," she said. "The big surprise, of course, is the smaller you go, the more you absolutely have to lean into your community. It gets smaller and bigger. It gets to be this big, tiny thing, you know?"
Here she is talking about her choices:

https://homes.yahoo.com/blogs/spaces/dee-williams--tiny-house--big-change-193912961.html


Source:- https://homes.yahoo.com/blogs/spaces/dee-williams--tiny-house--big-change-193912961.html

Thursday 16 April 2015

Woman Lives In TINY HOUSE In Orlando, FL- (RV parked and legal)




Elaine Walker, and Emily show you the tiny house (one Elaine once lived in) that resides in an RV park in Orlando, Florida- land of Mickey Mouse, The Magic Kingdom, and vacationing galore. This tiny house, a Tumbleweed Lusby, has trekked from California, to Washington D.C. and now to Florida over the past 5 or so years. Its a Tumbleweed model formerly called "The Lusby", which featured a sleep loft and a downstairs tiny bedroom. Elaine runs a website called http://www.tinyhousecommunity.com

Wednesday 15 April 2015

Boise Tiny House


Boise Tiny House

Boise resident and architect Macy Miller is getting national attention for her tiny house in downtown Boise. The 196-square foot, $11,400 micro house was featured on Yahoo.com this week. The home features radiant-heat floors, a king-size bed, living room, washer and dryer and a kitchen. Photo courtesy of Marc Walters Photography













Source:- http://www.kboi2.com/news/local/Boise-Tiny-House-236744441.html?tab=gallery&c=y&img=22

Tuesday 14 April 2015

Santa Cruz Woman Builds Tiny House, Donates To Homeless




Kendall Ronzano, 20, started building a mini-home when she was 16. She’s now at Dartmouth and last week, saw her house, named “Ruby” head to Austin, Texas, donated to an organization that houses the homeless. (Dan Coyro -- Santa Cruz Sentinel) 
SANTA CRUZ >> After a complicated, arduous three-and-a-half-year relationship, “Ruby” feels like a family member to Kendall Ronzano.
Ruby is a 117-square-foot trailer-mounted “tiny home” Ronzano began building at age 16 in her Westside backyard. Last week, Ruby figuratively rolled off into the sunset, on its way to Austin, Texas. The house will provide shelter to a homeless person or family in a budding supportive housing community there.
“Preferably, I wanted a place in Santa Cruz,” Ronzano said of plans to donate her tiny home. “Because I love the amount of support for our community, it’s been amazing. Even just the local industries.
“But, as soon as I found this organization, it really kind of appealed to me is I was watching Alan Graham’s videos, just his views and concepts, and he’s been working for the past 10 years on creating this plan,” Ronzano said. “One of the things that I’ve admired is they just have it together on that portion.”
The lessons Ronzano learned along the way, in addition to the practical skills needed to build a home single-handedly, were about community support and gender prejudices inherent in her chosen future career field of design in mechanical engineering.
Ronzano created her own website and construction blog, dubbed her effort Nerd Girl Homes blog, and solicited public donations of cash in materials amounting to nearly $16,000 from more than 200 people. Now a 20-year-old Dartmouth College sophomore, Ronzano said she has felt better equipped to progress professionally.
“It definitely taught me some lessons along the way. Something about keeping with it, getting back on the horse as fast as you can,” Ronzano said inside her recently finished project. “I received some emails along the way from people who thought I didn’t have the right intention. I was kind of surprised, like, ‘You don’t even know me.’ They thought that I was just trying to take people’s money, to build it for myself.”
The scaled-down pine-wood home, complete with porch and loft, consists of a living room, dining area, kitchen, bathroom, and two sleeping areas. The house has its own electrical and plumbing systems, and propane boat heater. In building it and dealing with some friends’ and neighbors skepticisms about the ability of a 16-year-old girl to build a home from scratch, family friend Victor “Chip” Bogaard III, president of Santa Cruz-based Bogard Construction, said that although he has always known that Ronzano is “a big thinker and is not afraid of anything,” he was somewhat surprised at her undertaking nearly four years ago.
“In terms of employer and general contractor, the fact that she took this on to do herself because she was curious is great,” Bogaard said. “If I see a resume that comes in my office and everything else is equal, that would stand out in my mind. Not even just for construction; for any field. (The house) is amazing. It’s great. It looks just like it should.”
Last week, Ronzano saw her plan through to near completion, as volunteers from the Austin-based Mobile Loaves and Fishes arrived in Santa Cruz to drive Ruby across the country to join the 27-acre homeless Community First! Village. The housing project will allow the home to be used at the site into perpetuity, even if its future family outgrows it, Ronzano said. The Community First! plan also provides supportive services for its residents, who are expected to work and pay rent, and has funding and oversight, Ronzano said. She said she first heard about the initiative through public referrals on her blog.
The impetus behind Ronzano’s project was to donate the completed and self-contained house to a homeless person or family in great need. Ronzano, the daughter of a contractor, said she has had a lifelong interest in figuring out how things work and compassion for homeless people she saw daily in her commute to York School in Monterey. Combining the two interests, Ronzano launched a project that would require more than 800 hours of her time, and which would chose to not apply toward high school community service requirements.
As the days were counting down on Ronzano’s time with her tiny house, Community First! organizers asked her what she wanted to have on the dedication plaque that will reside in front of the home in Texas. Ronzano said she decided to name it Ruby, in honor of her grandmother Dorothy, “my biggest supporter and fan,” who died in 2013.
“My grandma always told me to remember that no matter what I did or where I went, there really is no place like home, and just like Dorothy in the “Wizard of Oz,” I should just click my ruby slippers,” Ronzano said. “I wanted to name it Ruby as a token of good luck for it.”
Ronzano plans to travel to Austin later this month to make sure that Ruby made the trip safely, and to see where it will permanently reside.

Source:- http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/social-affairs/20150216/santa-cruz-woman-builds-tiny-house-donates-to-homeless

Wednesday 8 April 2015

Top Ten UK Property Hotspots

Sutton, Cambridge and Watford are most sought-after areas while Bristol's popularity soars

  • London borough of Sutton sees surge of interest from homebuyers
  • All top 10 areas in demand are in South East - except Bristol at no.4
  • Northern areas show biggest surges in demand compared to previous quarter 

Nine out of the ten areas in the UK where demand for property was highest last month are in the South East, new research shows.
But with commuters put off by sky-high property prices in and around the capital, potential buyers are flocking further out to commuter towns like Guildford and Reading, data from online estate agent eMoov suggests.
Further north, a tale of two-halves is emerging. Eight out of 10 of the highest climbers in terms of housing demand since December were located in the North, but half of the locations where demand dropped the most in recent months were in the North East.
Scroll down for video 
Appealing: There is high demand for housing in Guildford, Surrey as commuters look outside of London for a base
Appealing: There is high demand for housing in Guildford, Surrey as commuters look outside of London for a base
Sutton has overtaken Bexley since the last eMoov study in December as the area with the greatest level of demand for properties, with the latter borough dropping down to sixth place.
Other popular locations where demand continues to outstrip supply include Cambridge, Watford, Bristol, Reading and Guildford. 
Nine Elms, a district in the far north-eastern corner of Wandsworth, fared particularly poorly, with demand for property coming out at only 12 per cent last month. This makes Nine Elms 'the coldest spot in the UK', according to eMoov's findings.

Top 10 hottest locations in March 2015 

1. Sutton 67% 
2. Cambridge 66%
3. Watford 64%
4. Bristol 63%
5.Reading 63%
6. Bexley LBO 62%
7. Guildford 59%
8. Aylesbury 57%
9. Havering LBO 57%
10. Hillingdon 56%  
Nine Elms is on course to benefit from the planned extension of the Northern Line, but homeowners who have already sold their property in the area may have jumped the gun and raised prices in anticipation of better transport links and regeneration.
The online estate agent said: 'The resulting inflation in house prices looks to be a factor influencing the low demand in the area at present'.
Sefton in Merseyside has enjoyed a surge in popularity in recent months with an 80 per cent increase in demand for properties since December last year. 
Other locations where demand is increasing include Huddersfield (56 per cent), Trafford (24 per cent), Bradford (23 per cent), Stoke-on-Trent (21 per cent), Bolton (21 per cent) and Warrington (19 per cent).
In all, eighty per cent of the top 10 highest climbers in terms of demand for properties since December 2014 are located in the North, eMoov suggests. 
Struggling: Nine Elms, a district in the far north-eastern corner of Wandsworth, fared particularly poorly, with demand for property coming out at only 12 per cent last month
Struggling: Nine Elms, a district in the far north-eastern corner of Wandsworth, fared particularly poorly, with demand for property coming out at only 12 per cent last month
While demand for property in the North West is increasing in certain areas, spots in the North East are faring less well, accounting for half of the top 10 'coldest spots' in terms of demand for property.
In North Tyneside, since December 2014 demand for property has fallen by 43 per cent and now stands at 13 per cent, eMoov says.

Top 10 coldest locations in March 2015 

1. Nine Elms 12% 
2. North Tyneside 13%
3. Sunderland 14%
4. County Durham 14%
5. City of Westminster 15%
6. Aberdeenshire 15%
7. Rochdale 15%
8. Highland 15%
9. Stockton-on-Tees 17%
10. Northumberland 18%
Similarly, in County Durham demand has dropped by 37 per cent since December last year.
Surprisingly, demand in the southern university town of Oxford - located about an hour away from London by train - has also decreased by 21 per cent in recent months.
Oxford's property demand downturn could, eMoov suggests, be the result of its recent accolade as the UK's most unaffordable place to buy. 
Russell Quirk, of eMoov, said: 'It's almost a tale of two halves in the North alone, let alone the North and South.
'The North West seems to be flourishing as demand for housing increases almost across the board. It is however a very different picture in the North East, as it accounts for a number of the coldest spots in the March Hotspots Index.
'As we predicted last summer, commuter towns around the capital seem to be in particularly strong form. I think it will be a long, long time before we see prices in central London become affordable enough to reverse this trend, if at all.
'Nine Elms is probably the shock pick of the bunch. It just goes to show, people are trying to anticipate what the market will do and get a jump on it, rather than pricing their property to reflect the market at the time'.  
Surprising: Demand for property in  Oxford - located about an hour away from London by train - has decreased by 21 per cent in recent months
Surprising: Demand for property in Oxford - located about an hour away from London by train - has decreased by 21 per cent in recent months
While demand for property across the UK continues to vary, approvals for mortgages reached a six-month high, the Bank of England said last week.
The average cost of a two-year fixed-rate mortgage for a borrower with a 25 per cent deposit fell below 2 per cent for the first time ever, the Bank’s data revealed, while five-year fixed-rates edged close to 3 per cent.
In February, 61,760 mortgages were approved, compared with an average of 60,750 over the previous six months, the Bank of England said.
The Chancellor's recent Budget also heralded a better era for would-be first time buyers, with the proposed introduction of a Help to Buy Isa.
With the Help To Buy Isa, the Government rewards savings of £200 a month with a £50 bonus. First-time buyers can also snap up a new-build home with just a 5 per cent deposit by using the Help To Buy scheme. 
With this, the Government offers a 20 per cent interest-free loan for five years. This means the buyer needs to borrow only 75 per cent of the property value as a mortgage. 

Highest climbers since Dec 14 

1. Sefton +80%
2. Huddersfield +56%
3. Trafford +24%
4. Bradford +23%
5. Stoke-on-Trent +21%
6. Cornwall +21%
7. Bolton +21%
8. Wakefield +20%
9. Fife +20%
10. Warrington +19%

Biggest fallers since Dec 14 

1. North Tyneside -43%
2. County Durham -37%
3. Sandwell -29%
4. Barnet -26%
5. Oxford -26%
6. Gateshead -18&
7. Cardiff -17%
8. Westminster -16%
9. Bexley -13%
10. Swansea -12% 


Source:- 
http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/mortgageshome/article-3023108/Top-ten-UK-property-hotspots-Sutton-Cambridge-Watford-sought-areas-Bristol-s-popularity-soars.html

Tuesday 7 April 2015

It Is A Bit Of A Tight Fit


Some mad fool has an MG Midget in his collection too.  I measured it and the Vanguard fits into the garage - just!

Every time I want/need to get the MG Midget out though, I have to re-arrange the cars on the driveway and then I have to manually push out the Vanguard, drive out the MG Midget then push the Vanguard back into the garage.  Perform the reverse when wanting to put the MG Midget away again.
Things were a little tight, but I was managing to get some small bits of work done.

The major flaw was the car was just too low and I was not able to open the doors properly to do the work on the electric windows / actuators/door poppers.  I did some work, but it really didn't progress over the 6 month period.

I was getting grouchy with myself at this point.  If anyone asked about the car, I ignored them.  I locked the garage door for several weeks at one point, not wanting to even see the car.  It was a dark time.  Again, I seriously considered throwing the towel in and either scrapping the car or selling it as an un-finished project.  I tested the water on the selling as an un-finished project and the most I was offered was 6k.  I seriously considered taking that offer, just have something rather than (in my depressed vision of the world at the time) having the worlds most expensive car-shaped door stop.


And then it happened.  I was getting rid of the old used V8 engine and I managed to dent the bullet in the front grille - garage door came ajar, slammed and whacked the trolley jack handle that then smacked against the bullet.  Was really not happy about that.  I know how much time / effort Valley Gas had spent making that custom grille (and how much it'd cost me to get done).

Ten minutes later I reversed my Jaguar S-Type into the front wing of the Vanguard.  I literally bounced off it at 1/2mph.  It was enough to dent it though.  Some action needed to be taken.  I went for a long walk.  Today just wasn't my day.
Whilst searching for a larger space to work on the Vanguard I did manage to get some pieces of work done on the car.  I decided to tackle the electric loom first as that was the least impact on the car.
I made some minor progress on understanding how the door actuators worked - I wired them up to the controller box.  I also fitted the passenger electric window.

I also started to make progress on the brakes.  That was when I decided I really need a bigger space to work in.  To jack the car up, I had to remove the bumpers.  Then get axle stands under one end, then switch to the other, jack that up, put it on ramps, then switch back to the other end and jack that up and stick ramps underneath.... that gave me about 18" of clearance.  (Oh, for a pit or a 4-poster lift!)

Now, I'm not saying I've eaten all the pies, but 18" of clearance is very tight for a 40yr old to wiggle about underneath this car.

I did get the 3/16" copper brake pipes worked out and put into place ready for flaring and fitting.  It was whilst laying underneath the car that I was then reminded just how much work had been done to the car and just how "clean" it was.  As Suzanne can now quote me, "Most of the money has been spent on the underneath, unfortunately where you cannot see it - but it really is wonderful underneath there".  "Sure", she still says.