I think Insinkerator only made one model that turned on like that. Supposedly a safety feature so you couldn't stick one had inside it and turn it on with the other. As I remember, it's somewhat more expensive than their other models and doesn't necessarily do any better grinding job.

If you can find out the manufacturer, it might be worthwhile to contact them. Those solid surface sinks should have a lifespan much longer than 10-12 years.

-p (your friendly plumber)

On 10/5/2013 2:47 PM, Bob Sullivan wrote:
Paul,

I appreciate the comment.
It's a new house for us and the previous owners did this 10-12 years ago.
The disposer is a bit strange as it turns on by pushing the stopper into it.

I'm glad the link worked.  I have some trouble linking to my Google+ albums.
I had to go back to Picasa to get a shot at it.
If anyone has some suggestions on how to show G+ albums here, let's hear it.

Regards,  Bob S.

On Sat, Oct 5, 2013 at 11:28 AM, Paul Sorenson <[email protected]> wrote:
That should never have happened - there's not that much vibration from the
garbage grinder.  The manufacturer should be willing to replace the sink.
Repairs on a crack like that are just a stop-gap measure.  Is the sink
Swanstone or Corian?

-p

On 10/5/2013 10:59 AM, Bob Sullivan wrote:

Christine,
I keep lusting after a new camera, particularly those Fuji's after
seeing Doug's stuff and reading Cotty.
But the K-5 and K-5IIs are so good...
I grabbed a white K-01 as they were closing out.
It's actually surprisingly good with a tiny lens, but not so small.
It rides around in the car with me now.
The K-5 (or IIs) with a 31, 20, or 55 are what I carry now.
Hard to beat.

(pictures I shot this week of a sink I need to have repaired)

https://plus.google.com/photos/115638976374047590388/albums/5930231501357379409?authkey=CLC459SomqGs2QE#photos/115638976374047590388/albums/5930231501357379409?authkey=CLC459SomqGs2QE

Regards,  Bob S.

On Sat, Oct 5, 2013 at 10:24 AM, Christine Aguila <[email protected]>
wrote:

p.s.  I just weighed the K5 with the FA 50mm, and it came in at 2 and 1/4
pounds--nearly half the weight of the entire kit.   The K5 with the DA 40
mounted weighs nearly 2 pounds, about a 1/4 pound less.  The body of the K5
weighs 1 and 3/4 pounds.  And interestingly, the extra battery in my plastic
bag weighs in at about a 1/4 pound.

Cheers, Christine


On Oct 5, 2013, at 10:06 AM, Christine Aguila <[email protected]>
wrote:

Hi Eric:

I'd like to endorse Paul's suggestion about the K5 & DA 40.  Below is a
link that shows my everyday kit.  Now you have to remember that I am a
woman, and as such, I've had to find a way to combine a purse and a camera
kit.  I start with the Domke F-5XB.  The link below shows what I can carry
in the bag as a purse and a camera bag.  I even show a photo depicting total
weight.

Now, as I said this is an everyday kit, which I virtually always have
with me--even if I don't shoot anything that day.  I did add the DA 21mm for
the purposes of this demonstration, but normally I would only carry one lens
mounted on the camera.  Since I got my FA 50 back from repairs, I have that
mounted.  With the DA 40, you'd even have a lot more room in this bag, and
the bag would be lighter.

Now the gender thing is important because men usually carry wallets in
back pants pockets and maybe phones in a shirt pocket, habits which would
actually leave you more room in the bag.  I normally have my keys in my
front jeans pocket, but I put them in the bag for demonstration purposes.

As I said this is an everyday bag, but if I was really restricted for
travel, this is the kit I would carry:  50mm & 21mm (a pared down long and
wide combo).  When I travel for pleasure, I usually always take the DA*
50-135mm, so I use a different bag.  But this past year, I've had to travel
for work, and I used this kit set-up.

Clearly, one good Fujiesque camera would be less gear and lighter; this
kit won't beat that, and I do appreciate the point that even a kit like this
can be burdensome sometimes.  Like you, I've been thinking about a
Fuji/Pentax MX-1 set-up as an alternative,  but if you want to pack a DSLR
with fantastic low light ISO quality, this kit works really well.  Hope that
helps.

Here's the link:
http://www.caguila.com/kit/index.html


Cheers, Christine





On Oct 5, 2013, at 3:47 AM, Eric Weir <[email protected]> wrote:


On Sep 21, 2013, at 6:18 PM, Paul Stenquist <[email protected]>
wrote:

I have a great compact travel camera. I take the battery grip off my
k5 and mount the 40/2.8 pancake. Bingo. For everyday pocket camera, it's an
iphone5, better than many p&s pos.


After returning from my trip, during which I had my camera in-hand all
day during daylight hours almost every day for just short of a month---my
first experience of that---my mind keeps running off in thoughts about a new
camera. Two thoughts: an "enthusiast" level compact walking around camera or
a DSLR with great low-light performance and high image quality. Was leaning
toward the Fuji X10 or X20 regarding the former till I read a review that
said they produce images that are  a bit soft. Regarding the latter, I've
wanted a K-5 since is first saw some of the low-light images. New ones are
still available from Amazon. [I'd go used but KEH wants the same amount for
LN.

My thinking at the moment is to go with Paul's solution and kill two
birds with one stone. You may remember me fretting about what kind of camera
to take on the walk part of my trip. In the end I decided to go with m
*istDS and a couple of short focal length primes, an A 28/2.8 and an A
50/1.7. I never took the 28/2.8 off the camera. Essentially my solution was
Paul's.

So, not a done deal, yet, but leaning very strongly that way.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Weir
Decatur, GA  USA
[email protected]

"With an ounce of willingness, everything can change."

- Kim






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