I meant charging. Darn auto correct.Thank you for the pictures. Please keep them coming. What a fantastic location plus the view to boot while changing.
You can install our site as a web app on your iOS device by utilizing the Add to Home Screen feature in Safari. Please see this thread for more details on this.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I meant charging. Darn auto correct.Thank you for the pictures. Please keep them coming. What a fantastic location plus the view to boot while changing.
You get more bees with honey..
Of course! I saw someone else here say the same thing, and at the time I came to the same conclusion. Truth is, you get more honey with bees. I have also heard "you get more flies with honey," but who the heck wants flies!!And, all this time, I thought it was the bees who made the honey!!! Just teasing you, 4SUPER9
Interesting in how fast those went in. My guess is they are doing some trenchless work similar to the new Burbank location.2 chargers installed!
4Super9 how does that work? Adding SC stations without digging to lay electric transmission wire?Interesting in how fast those went in. My guess is they are doing some trenchless work similar to the new Burbank location.
I've also had success using that approach. I can't tell you any A-B tests, though, since I've always used that approach.Since the City of San Clemente has already approved the permit, the biggest hold up would be the inspectors nit-picking. Typically, this can be overcome by simply establishing a good rapport and showing the inspector proper respect. Ask what the rules are and follow them from the onset. Ask the inspector questions about what he/she expects along the way so that their needs are fulfilled. This has worked for me on every project I have done. The inspector starts off with an attitude, and by the second visit has a smile on his face, looks over everything, makes a comment or two, signs the paperwork, shakes my hand and happily drives off. You get more bees with honey...
I learned something new this summer: some places use vacuums to dig holes to find existing conduit so they don't do damage to it when doing more groundwork. I suppose vacuums could also be used to dig holes under sidewalks, but I'd really hate that as a method, since it would be near impossible to fill all those weird vacuum-made voids. The vacuums I'm talking about are powerful truck sized vacuums that are owned by the groundwork companies. For instance, in Santa Clara County, Albanese has one. On a project I was on, they vacuumed dozens of holes in the area where they were going to put new trenches and re-grade, to find all the existing conduit. It only took them a couple hours to do all of that vacuuming to find conduit work, and identified all the conduit no problem very quickly; I certainly see why they use that method, since it's easy, quick and mostly non-destructive. It annoyed me a lot, though, since they left the holes there all summer, and I had to drive around them the whole time with my forklift (they created a hazard, and they had dozens of the damn holes all over). I also was perplexed how they'd fill them; hopefully with some sort of space filling sand.4Super9 how does that work? Adding SC stations without digging to lay electric transmission wire?