Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Electronics / microcontrollers.

Took just a few months to go from, “I can make a wifi connected weather station for like $20 in components!?” to “oscilloscopes cost how much?”

SamsonSeinfelder,

Has there already grown a noteworthy Arduino/ESP Community on Lemmy?

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

There are quite a few but none are super active.

anonono,

yeah I got a fancy lab power supply but stopped at oscilloscopes, those things are expensive.

it’s still cheap and fun to do a lot of stuff, but now I wanna build a sound-card based oscilloscope.

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I haven’t bought an oscilloscope yet either, but I keep window shopping.

choss,

I would love to read about this $20 weather station! Do you maybe have a link?

Juno,
Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Mine is pretty basic but is built on the shoulders of giants. Also that $20 was from pre-pandemic / pre-chip shortage prices. I’m guessing it’s more like $35 now, or maybe high $20s from ali express.

I use Home Assistant for home automation. It has a now official addon called ESPHome for easily configuring esp devices and adding them to Home Assistant.


<span style="color:#323232;">I bought some cheap dev boards off amazon and thankfully they worked
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    an esp8266 microcontroller with IC2 headers and a microusb port already onboard
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    a bmp280 that measures temp, humidity, and barometric pressure
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    a lux sensor with a plastic dome over the top
</span><span style="color:#323232;">I soldered them together on a prototyping board
</span>

All the components were supported by esphome, so I just needed to write the device config and then flash the devboard via esphome (in a web browser) over the built in usb.

I 3d printed a housing for it, but you can also buy boxes. It needs airflow but also needs to stay dry. You can use a spray sealant to help avoid corrosion from ambient humidity. I skipped that step because I want to see how quickly it becomes problematic… and I should probably check on that.

gregoryw3,

Just an fyi bmp280 is not real temperature but an estimation based on air pressure.

agressivelyPassive,

I’m really happy I don’t have enough space for that stuff. Otherwise I would be poor. It’s hard enough to keep myself from buying another old computer.

colonial,
@colonial@lemmy.world avatar

Good soldering gear already makes me wince. I couldn’t imagine paying $500+ for an oscilloscope.

Fortunately I’m more interested in the software side of things… thank God nobody charges for programming toolchains anymore.

CoderKat,

Same. I’m lucky for software to be my hobby/career. It’s practically free. Contrary to popular misconception, it doesn’t require any kind of special or more powerful hardware (for most dev, at least). Maybe $150 for a second monitor, for sanity, but that’s not actually necessary.

…I mean, I do have good hardware too, but that’s for my gaming hobby, not my software hobby.

colonial,
@colonial@lemmy.world avatar

To be fair, if C++ or Rust is your thing… let’s just say I’d have a Threadripper if they weren’t five grand.

I once had to (repeatedly) compile a C++ codebase on some Lenovo shitbook. It ended up being so infuriating (thirty seconds, minimum) that I wrote a few load-bearing shell scripts to rsync everything to my desktop, build it, and copy the binary back… which was ultimately about five times faster.

Man, I wish I could have just used MicroPython for that project.

foofiepie,

Erk. I got into this. What’s the tipping point that gets you eyeing oscilloscopes? I’m at the fiddly smd stage.

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

My next step is custom boards and smds, and an oscilloscope seems like a good way to diagnose when reflow goes wrong. I already have had some fights with I2C using dev boards. But really I’m eyeing one because I have allusions about doing fine calibration on analog sensors.

I should add that I’ve been talking myself out of an oscilloscope for 2+ years now. I don’t REALLY need one.

teamevil,
agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.one avatar

Lol I feel ya. I ended up making and selling electronics kits to fund the hobby somewhat.

I have been using cheap vintage oscilloscopes the whole time.

Not sure what they go for now but $100 for a 20MHz scope and $200 for a 100MHz was what it was several years ago. Cheapest I got off a buddy for $40. I am still using that one.

Sometimes I fix broken ones and sell them. One time I got one that they thought was broken but turned out it was just the basic settings. I like trying different ones so I have gone through a dozen or so by now.

Now* that I think about it, o-scopes are a whole other hobby lol.

Anyway. Yeah by the time you get the test gear and enough sensors and microcontrollers and whatever it adds up.

Right now I’m working on a power supply design for a 50W class D stereo. Found out big toroidal transformers are not cheap. Oof. And enclosures big enough (especially if labeled “amplifier” or “stereo”) are ridiculously spendy.

NaoPb,

This sounds like the point where you dive into the next rabbit hole of making enclures. At least I could see that happening.

I’m looking to make some wooden enclosures for some things myself.

Goopadrew,

Just be careful or you might go fullDIY Perks after long

teamevil,

My next project is to make an oscilloscope clock

teamevil,

You can get a cheap oscilloscope that uses USB and your computer. sainsmart.com/…/sainsmart-dds-140-40m-200m-s-virt…

Not that I have an electronics problem

ptz,
@ptz@dubvee.org avatar

Self-hosting apps / homelab

Getting used enterprise gear is not prohibitively expensive, but the electric bills balloon very quickly.

protput,

How much do you pay for electricity and how much for internet and what speeds?

anteaters,
@anteaters@feddit.de avatar

I’m glad I quickly stopped “homelab” after my old laptop that I used as a server in a cupboard died. Switched to a rented root server for all my selfhosting needs since.

PlexSheep,
@PlexSheep@feddit.de avatar

I currently bought an old desktop from a friend that I use as my Homeserver.

  • I bought 3 HDDs for storage
  • I rent a VPS
  • I rented Proton to host mail for my domain, but switched to netcup groupware because that sucked.
  • Some domains
  • Electricity

Wow I thought it was way more.

One time costs: ~500€ Monthly costs: ~15€ Plus electricity, but I have solar. I assume it’s about 150€/year

But I’m a cheap selfhosted, but eventually, I will have a huge ass Enterprise Level Rack in my basement.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

We need a r/homeDatacenter on lemmy!

JJROKCZ,

Pretty sure I’ve seen a few home lab communities already, one on lemmy.world even

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Already aware of some of those! They are really cool.
But homelab aint datacenter (yet) ;)

PlexSheep,
@PlexSheep@feddit.de avatar

Would be cool if we found some kind of use for the community of people that likes to host network infrastructure. We could be a cdn or share compute, with the power of the federation!

davefischer,
@davefischer@beehaw.org avatar

I ran a “midrange” Sun at home for about ten years. The electric bill was painful, but I never had to turn on the heat in the winter.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

But the summers :(
27°C at home during the hotter days was atrocious.

davefischer,
@davefischer@beehaw.org avatar

Yeah, hot days were bad.

mdd,

Yep. Half height rack, a couple servers, UPS, switch, etc.

And I still keep looking at used gear. Being in Silicon Valley there is always a deal to be had.

Yonrak,

Coffee.

I blame James Hoffman entirely.

Within a year I went from:

Drinking instant coffee at home, but really enjoying “proper coffee”

To

Buying a cafetiere (~£15) + preground coffee

To

Buying a Nespresso (~£60 on offer) + pods

To

Buying a budget espresso machine (~£120) + preground coffee

To

Wasting my money on a cheap manual coffee grinder (~£50) + beans

To

Immediately replacing it with an entry level Sage grinder (~£170)

To

Buying an entry Level “proper” espresso machine (~£700)

It took me a good 2-3 weeks of practicing and dialling in before pulling a good shot of coffee that I’d actually want to drink, but by that point it was also about learning a new skill, learning how different aspects of the process affect the end result and learning how to make all sorts of different espresso-based drinks.

My girlfriend thought I was nuts at first, but a year or so later even she agrees it was worth the investment. I still for the life of me can’t get the hang of latte art though.

The problem is now though that I’m a waaaay more critical of coffee from coffee shops, because I spent a long time making bad coffee whilst learning!

Templa,

Don’t forget to get that pretty Fellow Stag just because it is pretty and no other reason whatsoever

Yonrak,

I genuinely almost did!

Not branched out into different brewing methods yet though. I’ve already claimed enough kitchen surface space, my GF will kill me!

Templa,

We will get it eventually, we’re just delaying the inevitable. hahah

Mrkawfee,

What’s your " proper" espresso machine?

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I would say budget restaurant class?

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.one avatar

Not op, but ours is a Lelit Elizabeth dual boiler. Not cheap but I expect it to last like our Gaggia Espresso Deluxe did, about 15 years. I could’ve gotten away with a single boiler, truth be told but the ability to preinfuse (in a somewhat proper way) depends on it. Non negotiable was the PID temp control. Timed shots is nice to have.

But really I could’ve spent more on the grinder and less on the machine. The grinder I first got wasn’t up to the task of espresso. Didn’t have the range of settings and the grind quality was subpar. Had to get one a year later (grr) and settled on the Eureka Mignon Silencio. The flavor profile is so much clearer (this was obvious from the first shot I made with it) due to grind quality and it has stepless adjustment. So I can dial in the shot pretty well. Timed grind is nice too.

But damn what a lot of money for all this. Still worth it. It’s not much over 10-15 y. And it pays for itself quickly. I can have an espresso drink every day that is far better than many places offer and it costs significantly less even for the super expensive, fancy beans.

Yonrak,

Sage Barista Pro. Definitely an entry level machine, but I’m very happy with it… I’m not invested enough to go for a dual boiler or higher end machine quite yet - They start to get very big and very expensive very quickly, and I have limited space.

BraveSirZaphod,
@BraveSirZaphod@kbin.social avatar

Espresso is the line I won't let myself cross (and I don't have the counter space lol), but the $350 for the Kinu M47 was hard to swallow.

Plus side, it's also a great espresso grinder if I do ever eventually head down that road.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

Me too. Besides, I have just enough space for my AeroPress. Gettin a machine of any type would make it difficult for me to do other things in my small kitchen.

Besides, I’m not entirely sure I would appreciate the flavors I can get out of coffee using an espresso machine. I’ve tried a bunch of different drinks at several cafes and I just don’t see the value in owning a machine like that. AP coffee is just fine or even really good as long as you use the right type of beans.

Goopadrew,

Aww cmon, you might be able to find a used flair lever machine for under $100 like I did, and then it’s game over

dlok,

Also would like to know the machine you went with, you’re quoting GBP so same country

Mr_Blott,

If you don’t want to splash out too much to start with, I can highly recommend the Beko bean to cup machine for about 250. I’ve had mine three years now and it produces better coffee than any shop

Yonrak,

Sage Barista Pro. Really happy with it to be fair.

It goes on sale fairly often so you could save £100 or more on the price I quoted.

lorax,
@lorax@lemmy.ca avatar

Similar but different : tea! You go from cheap bagged tea to going down the rabbit hole of loose leaf variations, temp control kettles, brewing vessels and brewing styles.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

Have you reached the gaiwan stage already?

lorax,
@lorax@lemmy.ca avatar

I have! …then full circle back to grandpa style. I still use a gaiwan from time to time on the weekend but I like bringing a container up with me at my desk without needing to refill constantly.

Krauerking,

I agree but disagree on it being expensive.

I have a temp controlled kettle that only cost like $40, some really nice french presses from thrift stores, and a couple really nice pots ranging from iron to ceramic but they were a one time cost about 10 years ago.

You can cold brew tea in a big mason jar and strain with a dollar store strainer even.

The scale for weighing was expensive but is super useful in a kitchen anyways.

So the expensive part of Tea is mostly just the tea but that varies all over and is down to taste preferences and marketing. And per glass is pretty negligible in cost. As long as you aren’t buying like the aged fermented monkey picked stuff.

Tea is a lot about patience and remembering organization of steps to get it perfect and that can be prohibitive but not cost if you don’t want it to be.

lorax,
@lorax@lemmy.ca avatar

You raise good points. The expensive part for me was the discovery aspect. Once you know what you like it’s not bad but the learning part…trying all the different greens and oolongs and pu’er and black teas - that was a little nuts at the beginning.

Now I have about 10 varieties that I like for different occasions and I stick to those and it’s not too bad.

Biggest splurge for me was an ember mug. Im a little embarrassed by how expensive it was, but honestly no regrets. Perfect temp tea for hours.

Krauerking,

Nice! Never be ashamed of a purchase you actually use.

But yeah I still spend money trying a different tea flavor all the time but I know where and what my cheap Chinese greens are and have to make my own English breakfast tea but that’s because I’m not importing stuff and it’s easy enough for a flavor I can’t get otherwise

abraxas,

Even low-grade Dragonwell is eyeopeningly expensive. And nothing tastes quite like it.

It tastes a ground up $20 bill soaked in hot water ;)

Kerfuffle,

Time to start roasting your own coffee!

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

That is the next level in this hobby.

Kerfuffle,

It’s actually quite easy. I wrote a post about this a while back: sh.itjust.works/post/2040870

I like coffee but don’t consider it a hobby. I just started roasting my own because it gave me more control/variation and green coffee is cheaper.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

Before diving into this hobby I was worried that I might not be able to tolerate the type of coffee that happens to be available to me at some random gas station or cafe along the way. That hasn’t been a problem for me yet, but how about you?

Having spent some time experimenting with my AeroPress, I have learned to notice some basic flavors and notes, but I wouldn’t call myself a experienced coffee taster yet. I can tell the difference between light and dark roast. Trying to tell the difference between two expensive coffees is usually very difficult for me, so I guess gettin an espresso machine might not be worth it yet.

Yonrak,

I might not be able to tolerate the type of coffee that happens to be available to me at some random gas station or cafe along the way. That hasn’t been a problem for me yet, but how about you?

Not really been an issue for me either. I’d say I notice more now when a coffee is slightly under/over extracted, but I’d probably have noticed it tasted 'weird" before and just not known what was wrong. That said, I’ve found it to be very rare. A lot of places just use quite forgiving dark roasts that are a LOT easier to make than more lightly roasted beans.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

Oh, so that’s why I can’t seem to find any cafe making good light roast. Every place seems to love dark roast, super dark roast, ultra-mega-hyper-dark-still-smoking-black-hole-shade roast.

About a month a go I went to my local cafe and asked if they’re selling coffee beans. They had some options, so I bought a bag of their lightest. Back home I tried it out and it tasted rather dark to me. I compared it with a cheap store brand that is labeled as roast level 1, and the taste difference was significant. Their lightest is probably like level 3 or 4, which is nowhere near what I’m looking for.

MadBob,

It took me a good 2-3 weeks of practicing and dialling in before pulling a good shot of coffee that I’d actually want to drink,

Could you elaborate? I’m a chef so I’ve helped myself to a fair few coffees from the big espresso machines and I’ve found it easy every time, and the coffee very potable indeed. Just haven’t got the hang of foaming milk yet.

Yonrak, (edited )

I’m still learning myself, but it’s potentially because the machines are already warmed up and the grinder is “dialled in” for the beans on offer. One very important aspect (among other things such as temperature, pressure etc) with espresso is the grind size, which will need adjusting between different bean types and roasts. Everything else being equal, a grind that’s too coarse will let the water through too quickly and give you an under-extracted “sour” tasting coffee, whereas too fine and the water moves too slowly and you end up overextracting (and/or choking the machine) and it gets very astringent and bitter tasting; not pleasant at all.

Alternatively, they could be using a pressurised portafilter, which give much more consistent results, but do take away some control and limit the end result. If it’s a high end machine though it’s probably an unpressured filter basket.

Edit: Also the roast makes a big difference to how difficult it is to pull a good tasting espresso. Many restaurants/ chains use fairly dark roasted beans which are generally a lot more forgiving than lighter roasts. At least that’s been my experience.

IonAddis,
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

This is why I appreciate my “tea hobby”. For minimal investment, you can get a lot of bang out of your buck, and it doesn’t need to go as hog-wild as fancy coffee or wine or beer.

Dry loose leaf tea is just relatively cheap to be snobby over, compared to coffee and other things.

Get an electric kettle for $40-70, a $20 teapot…and you won’t spend more than $100-$200 year for some tea (if you drink a LOT of it) that is head and shoulders better than ANYTHING in the grocery store.

Like, you can have a giant improvement in the quality of your tea for not too much.

You CAN go hog-wild and spend lots and lots…there are fancy expensive teas to be had…but even if you don’t it’s still way better than grocery store teabags.

Yonrak,

I do enjoy my tea… I think it might be my next rabbit hole to go down. I just got back from a business trip to China, and was gifted a few different black and green teas, loose and bagged. Really enjoying them so far.

I really want one of their…uh… Tea tables(?), which has a tap and temperature controlled kettle and drain built in. I’d drink so much tea…

abraxas,

I can’t believe I answered “board games” to this before. Yes, espresso wins it over. I just got an espresso machine for my 10th anniversary (price too high for me to be willing to admit). And here I have a wishlist of $500+ in “devices” for it.

Like you, I’m about 3 weeks in and just now getting my burr grind just right for that perfect 26s shot. Luckily my vendor was giving out a free badass scale. It keeps telling me how bad my shot is.

I still for the life of me can’t get the hang of latte art though.

Ditto. I just got my first “correct emulsified foam” today. Usually I end up with hot milk with hot whipped milk on top.

Luxsidus,

Mechanical keyboards. The next one is my endgame, I swear. Just one more groupbuy for those keycaps. It never truly ends.

lobut,

That’ll only happen if you build your own boards and stuff. Not like me! I just got a simple Moonlander with some custom keycaps, dampeners, and red switches rather than my initial brown. After that, I realised that the Kinesis Advantage 360 is the way to go, so I’m fully settled now, not like everyone else … right?

fakkrs,

I’ve had the Advantage360 for 6 months or so and it’s life changing when typing for 10 hours a day. Haven’t gotten around to relearning on Dvorak or Colmak layout as I learnt qwerty on the 360 first.

Templa,

My first “good” keyboard is my current one, which is a Ducky One 2 Mini with MX Cherry Browns I bought really cheap 2nd hand. It has been almost 2 years I’ve been using it and I recently got a coiled cable for it. I was cleaning it the last time and I started to wonder how hard it would be if I wanted to change my switches and fell into a hole where now I want to desolder everything and install sockets. My spouse got lubs for his stabilizers (he has a Filco Majestouch 2 Ninja with MX Cherry Blues) after watching a few videos… We just started diving into this deeper and deeper after using keyboards from the time cherry still had the patent up for so long. Yeah, we are screwed.

agressivelyPassive,

I never got the appeal of mechanical keyboards. If you actually have to type all day, a proper flat keyboard like in the old MacBooks ('09-ish) is way nicer and costs much less.

icesentry,

That’s extremely subjective. I definitely don’t feel like flat keyboards are nicer. These days I use a split keyboard with an angle and I will never go back.

apfel,
@apfel@lemmy.world avatar

If you actually have to type all day, you get into ergonomic mechanical keyboards 😎

Bo7a,

Your experience is not universal. I type all day and if a client/employer gave me one of those flat keyboards I would quickly quit and go dig ditches instead.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I have a laptop (HP Elitebook G6) as a workstation at work which I use to type reports on site and a varmilo with linear switches in the office.
At home I have a GMMK Pro with Kailh Box white switches.

I can type on my laptop but I still prefer my GMMK pro over it thrice and I enjoy my varmilo in the office because of the numpad. Else I’d bring my GMMK pro there (with quieter switches).

In the end: This hobby is very personal and one may like linear while another likes clicky and in the end both spend 500€ on hardware but all do one thing: They enjoy what they type on :)

variants,

thats what I thought when I built my quefrency, then rev 5 came out, then now rev 6 is coming out, now I have my first proto* one I built lying around, and I have a rev 4 at home and a rev 5 at the office for work, need to figure out how Im going to get that rev 6, each one I build better than the last even though I thought my second one was going to be my end game haha

r1veRRR,

And then it turns out some horrendously ugly piece of plastic (like the Kinesis Advantage 360) is better for actually using.

MichaelobRegular,

Ditto on that. Thought I was content with my first ergo but one thing after another led to an artisan keyboard with CNC backplates and plates, 2 year long group buys, and artisans to match the whole theme that costs the same as the keyboard. At this point I’m so far in the hole that my artisan keycap collection cost more than my keyboard collection.

It’s just another one of those hobbies that has many moving parts so you can optimize and personalize each part.

renownedballoonthief,

One IBM Model M that I got for free and I’m set for life.

Nindelofocho,

mechanical keyboards go two ways, you start shelling out for way overpriced cncd metal or wacky boards or you become a pcb designer and make a board that could be used for camping

DrMango, (edited )

Running.

Was supposed to be the cheapest way to get exercise. You can do it right from your front door, no gym subscriptions, no specialized equipment (some people will tell you you don’t even need shoes), and it’s far and away the best time-value exercise I’ve ever found. You can get away with like 20 minutes 3-4 times a week and be doing great.

Well, turns out I love running and I love distance running so I’m now putting up enough miles to need new shoes 2-3 times a year, a nice Garmin smart watch and heart rate monitor to track my progress, sign-ups for several long-distance races each year, shorts, socks, you get the picture.

Could I do it cheaper? Yeah. But at the end of the day it’s a hobby and I like it

criticon,

The races are so expensive! I can’t justify signing into one yet, I’m ready to run a half marathon but I’ll wait until I can run a nice full marathon since it’s almost the same price

DrMango,

They can be wildly expensive, and some truly aren’t worth it. I almost always opt to donate the shirt I get because frankly I’m a little picky about my gear and they’re rarely good quality, but even beyond that I’ve run a few where the race coordinators just haven’t got a clue how to host a race and I really start to question why I even paid to register at all.

Fortunately I’ve found an amazing local company that hosts trail runs and is managed by a former ultramarathoner and they’re the best races I’ve been a part of. I also feel good about paying a local small business.

Good luck making it to your first marathon 😀

whoisearth,

You realize it’s an addiction when you intend to do 5k. Realize after that Strava didn’t work properly on your watch and then you end up doing a second 5k because the first 5k didn’t count.

DrMango,

Finish marathon

Legs on fire

Garmin says you only ran 25.6 miles

Have to run another half mile at race pace (so you don’t ruin your stats) to make sure you get credit for a marathon

jrubal1462,

Dang. Congrats on your sweet tangents! Every race I run, ESPECIALLY that kinda distance, my watch is always going to be a bit over.

senkora,

I felt the same way about running until I started getting into triathlons. Watch out for that trap; races are at least $200 each, and road bikes ain’t cheap!

DrMango,

I already have a lovely gravel bike that I am comfortable making my Last Bike Ever ™. I mean the frame is great but I’ve been looking at upgrading the group set… It’s cheaper if I do the work myself!

franzfurdinand,
@franzfurdinand@lemmy.world avatar

I’m just getting into cycling and I’m super lucky to have gotten my dad’s old tri bike for free. He had it all kitted out and it’s pretty well perfect for me. It was in pristine shape until I wrecked it a couple times. One of them requiring 24 stitches.

So I guess that’s the most expensive hobby I’ve had - not in terms of financial cost, but definitely in terms of blood drawn!

Protip if you’re not used to race bikes: they can be a lot twitchier than you might be used to!

GBU_28,

I fucking love trail running gear and I’m not afraid to admit it

DrMango,

Oh yeah, forgot about that one. You thought you just needed one pair of shoes? Well, no I need a different pair for trail running and road running. And it gets cold here and I like to run in the winter so that’s a whole other set of clothing I gotta have. And let’s don’t even get started talking about how the grocery bill gets hiked up during the training cycle…

Still cheaper than my cycling hobby!

geekworking,

I was running for a couple of years , and my knee started to give me problems.

I went to an orthopedic Dr, and his advice was to take up swimming and if I wanted to keep running that I should hold on to his business card because someone needed to pay for his kids’ college.

I stopped running soon after and avoided surgery for a decade, but it still caught up with me. Knees are definitely cheap with for-profit healthcare.

qooqie,

This is why shoes these days are super engineered cushions essentially. Don’t skimp on shoes if you’re young and reading this, buy the good shit because it’s good (and usually it’s more expensive). $200 now saves thousands in replacements and tons of pain along the way.

narrowide96lochkreis,

Every so often you read something where someone perfectly summarised your own thoughts and experiences.

MyDogLovesMe,

Growing cannabis (legal here in Canada)

anyone can grow weed. Growing GOOD weed is an art.

plactagonic,

I unintentionally grow weed because I made some tincture for grandma.

Now it just grows on my garden and I can’t get rid of it.

azimir,

One of it’s many nicknames is ditchweed for a reason. It’s a weed like any other. The US spends millions per year burning it out of ditches on the side of the road all around the country.

MyDogLovesMe,

I’d be happy to burn it for them!

A little bit at a time!

plactagonic,

We call it “The Granny choice” variety.

And trust me it is horrible, for tinctures it is great, but for anything else not.

Zippy,

2000 into my fully automated hydroponic weed factory. Another 500 to make my nutrient solutions from scratch. Mind you that 500 dollars when making from scratch likely last 20 years of crops. It does make a good 1.5 pounds of dry weed every 3 to 4 months with the for legal plants allowed in Canada. I barely smoke so give nearly all away.

Three year prior, harvested a crop down right before going to Mexico for three month trip. Was still some shoots barely growing so for shits and giggles I turn the lights back to 22 hours per day to see if they would go back to the veg state. Have camera so can watch it remotely. Shit starts fully growing like a new plant. Anyhow COVID puts a wrinkle in my return. Ended up in Mexico for 18 months. Over that time, thing kept growing like nuts. Automation on water replacement and nutrient injection along with pH monitoring. Became sort of a how long can this thing go with near zero human intervention. Had only to send my brother in law in three times to cut it down and refill my nutrient injectors from solutions I made before leaving.

MyDogLovesMe,

Right? When you grow, you really get an appreciation for what an amazing, and resilient plant it is.

I used to grow, but never smoked except to taste my harvest. My spouse smoked daily and heavily. I didn’t, but I LOVED coming home from work to my grow room. It was so therapeutic! Still is, but I miss my old HPS & MH lights.

Zippy,

Well it is called weed for a reason. Is definately therapeutic for me too. I started with MH lights. Without question they resulted in a better crop. I am now all LED but I had to double the specified wattage equivalence. In other words if you’re taking out a 1000 watt MH light, you need to put in 2000 watts of LED equivalence. More or less all the LED manufacturers lie when they state what the equivalence is for growing. Still worth it as you will save on power within two or three years and you are not dealing with excessive heat or burning your tops. I forgot about that full cost now that I think of it. Likely spent more than I said.

MaggiWuerze,
@MaggiWuerze@feddit.de avatar

In Germany we will be allowed to grow some for private use come next year. I have no idea what to get yet, but I will just plant it in a planter in the garden and hope that it works I guess :D

MyDogLovesMe,

Thats growing weed.

MaggiWuerze,
@MaggiWuerze@feddit.de avatar

Any tips for good weed?

Zippy,

If you can grow indoor and force into flower (8 to 12 hours per day light and lower the temp a bit) that will give you the most consistent crops. Bugs are likely the number one problem particularly with normal soil grown plants. I recommend doing smaller shorter grows but more per year. The shorter grows time means less likely you will have an infestation problem. Well mean smaller harvests but you can do more per year. This kind of control requires a location you can entirely remove any light sources but your grow lights.

Overall it is really hard to kill a weed plant. They grow like a weed. Thus the name. In my case, I able leave them in the grow stage for a month then flip the lights to 10 hours days to force flowering. At that point they might be a foot high but even in flower they will grow another 3 feet over the next two months. Clean out any dead or crappy branches. Also at some point about half way thru I start to remove bottom leaves and thin out a bit. 90 percent of your harvest will be from the top. They will get super sticky if you do it right. Leaves on the bottom typically get little light and use up energy. Stressing your plant is part of the cycle. Basically the low light and leaves being cut off tells the plant fall is coming and I am struggling a bit so start to flower heavily to carry on my species.

And for God’s sake, don’t over fertilizer. Most soils are good by themself or only require a small amount of nutrients. I don’t know how many people grew but get these crappy returns as they over fertilizer and as it hurts their growth, they keep think even more will make it better.

Anyhow this is just part of a good crop advice. Lots of videos. Mostly keep a clean room and other than water and a bit of love, you will get good crops.

Forgot one thing. Get feminized seeds. You can’t have males. You don’t even want your neighbors to have males. Burn their house.

MyDogLovesMe,

“You don’t even want your neighbors to have males. Burn their house.”

This is actually quite reasonable, IMO.

(No. Please don’t actually!)

Riyria,

I hope you’ll be able to get seeds and strains imported from the US and Canada. I smoked weed in Germany while I was living there in 2015 a few times and it was the worst weed I’ve ever smoked. It tasted weird, smelled bad, and didn’t even get me high. When I asked someone about it they were just like “weed isn’t as strong here as it is in the U.S.”

neal33,

There are European based seed banks. Also they share a border with the Netherlands.

MaggiWuerze,
@MaggiWuerze@feddit.de avatar

I think that’s still up for debate. Let’s see. But I haven’t been smoking for quite some time, so maybe my first batch is fine being on the weak side

Riyria,

Have you smoked outside of Germany? I only ever smoked in Germany so I don’t know how it is anywhere else in Europe so maybe my experience is the problem, but I have friends who have come to the US and said weed is way stronger here.

MaggiWuerze,
@MaggiWuerze@feddit.de avatar

No, only ever smoked in Germany. That would explain how it is shown in american media

TheButtonJustSpins,

I bought myself a raspberry pi for my birthday a few years ago.

I now have thousands of dollars in hardware sitting in a server rack in my office. Whoops.

dingleberry,
droans,

A single 1TB drive should be enough for my Plex server, I said.

123TB isn’t enough, I need more 18TB hard drives, I said.

Krauerking,

Oh my God… I’m running a jellyfin with 8TB… Don’t get me wrong I want more and will eventually figure out how to do it cheaper but that’s so impressive

droans,

The cheaper way is to either use shucked EasyStores when they’re on sale or to buy them from ServerPartsDeals or whatever the site is called.

I got some 18TB drives for $200 from them. With EasyStores, 14TB drives are about the same price. The 18TB drives are refurbed and come with a shorter warranty, but you have to be rather careful with the EasyStores to maintain the warranty and you’ll still likely lose it.

Krauerking,

Just want you to know that you have just made my life better and now I have a dangerous game ahead of me to not buy so many of these drives and completely lose all my money

WhyJiffie,

This is not the first post where I feel it but I love it so much that we have a lot of people on Lemmy that can talk about things not related to computers!

plactagonic,

Except the selfhost crowd here.

iesou,

Lol that was going to be mine… from using an old laptop as an xbmc->Plex server to running a thread ripper UnRaid server with 48TB and 2TB cache

plactagonic,

There is large thread for this somewhere down.

WhyJiffie,

Yes but that’s only good. I’m a computer guy too, but I couldn’t talk much about anything else, and I want to read about other topics too, besides this

plactagonic,

For me it is maybe camping.

I just tested my new sleeping bag - under 0.5kg rated to -5°C. And realised that I bought/ replaced lots of gear to higher quality gear over few years.

luckyhunter,

Camp stoves and fuel! I can buy a lot of bic lighters and cheap metal camping mugs for the cost of a dang Jetboil stove and fuel.

plactagonic,

When I can I just make fire. I have some camping stove, really cheap one, but I use it maybe 2 times per year.

The cheap one I have is for ethanol/ urotropin tablets.

variants,

I love my pocket rocket, nothing like getting up early in the morning and boiling some water super quick for some coffee, then heat some more water for some quick oatmeal and sit in my chair and just decompress

coldv,

Oh my! I spent so much on camping! I get so excited by all the gadgets that people come up with.

foofiepie,

Ok now you have to share. A decent bag at a half kilo?

plactagonic,

It is some feather filled bag (300g). But it is not durable, the fabric that holds it is really thin.

I just picked what my older brother got (but with more filling).

At 5°C it is still in the boxers range inside. The e-shop I bought it from had some details about the sleeping bags like quality of feathers and filling quantity. This one had 900 in quality and 300g of filling.

Nindelofocho,

trying to get a motocamping setup going. Spent over $200 at REI last weekend just for a tarp shelter and accoutrements and I still have 75% of the list to go which is only NECESSARY items…

ThrowawayPermanente,

Board games. Things get expensive once you start collecting

BudgieMania,

But you don't understand, I totally need that 30$ Oceania expansion for my Wingspan that I will play maybe twice a year

elvith,

Oooh right - I totally forgot about that expansion! I should finally unbox it and prepare it to be played just in case…

My board game group usually buys games more often than we have time to meet and play, so it just comes with this hobby I guess. A friend told me all the time about the stack of three games he had bought and never played and that we still need to play them and then informed me today, that he has just bought Council of Shadows…

BudgieMania,

The stack of shame of never-played games is real... Everyone ends up defaulting to the same selection of tried and true games of the group because nobody wants to learn a new thing when you can just get to playing immediately, it's very unfortunate

lorax,
@lorax@lemmy.ca avatar

European expansion is worth it! I like the round end goals!

BudgieMania,

I swear I've tried to enjoy the European expansion but some of the birds require you to pull some Hannibal Barca 4d chess shit to use them properly

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

For me it was D&D: all those fucking books, dice and lead figurines.

cheery_coffee,

New character means new dice! Even if it’s just the idea for a new character…

plactagonic,

Here are some pubs where you can borrow games and play them there.

But it is usually tradeoff - good game selection and bad beer, or bad games and great beer.

lorax,
@lorax@lemmy.ca avatar

I had to create a “if you add one, you sell one” rule after running out of shelf space.

Moonguide,

Coffee. I’m in a coffee producing country. It could be as cheap as grabbing a bag from the coffee institute (really good and cheap), a cloth filter and call it a day. Instead, I’m on my second espresso machine, fourth grinder, second portafilter set, and have all the doodads to make it just how I like it.

TrustingZebra,

I am starting to become more interested in coffee, but even so I don’t think I want to put this much effort into my coffee. Coffee gives me energy, so it can’t be too difficult.

Moonguide,

Started like that for me. Used to buy shitty coffee cups from the gas station. Upgraded to a moka pof, then to french press, chemex, v60, aeropress, and landed on espresso about two years back. Slippery slope

ringnal,

So the other day my brother came visiting and brought with him a new portafilter for my run of the mill espresso machine. We messed around with setting the grinder, measuring the exact amount of coffee, and so on and we did get a decent cup of coffee. Thing is, I can live with my old bad coffee, my peasant taste buds don’t really tell the difference, so I’d rather spend my dough on the other 99 things that deplete the bank account. But to you, who make a passion out of brewing coffee, more power to you!

Moonguide,

Oh I started that way too. I’m not as deep into the rabbithole as I could be, but I’ve gotten far enough I know how to make a good enough cup of joe (which by all accounts of people whom I’ve made coffee for, is pretty damn good). I’ve had to balance that hobby with my other hobbies, and well… It turned out to be my cheapest hobby, sadly.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Same with tea…Once you get to loose tea , the step to importing tea is not very far.
Oh the import tax and shipping :(

plactagonic,

Fortunately here are few shops that import themselves.

But you reminded me that I need new kettle to my new house.

Appoxo,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

My pleasure. Don’t foget to buy more tea than you have storage.
Just get more storage.

Moonguide,

Yup! Used to drink cheap black tea, went to the UK and bought Yorkshire gold. Ain’t no way I’m going back to the cheap stuff.

verity_kindle,

Spiffing Brit made me improve my tea game, curse his charismatic influencing!

Moonguide,

Exactly! I was fine drinking Bigelow and Twinnings before!

grabyourmotherskeys, (edited )

Don’t listen to the others. What you are doing is good. I, too, am obsessed with a decent cup.

Just yesterday, I was out with my wife and we went to a coffee shop. I got a superlative cappuccino and picked up a pretty expensive bag of beans meant for espresso. So good.

When I was younger, I could never afford this sort of thing, but as I get older I can’t really enjoy a lot of other things and don’t need to spend much to live other than basic expenses. :)

Moonguide,

Man, lucky you got coffee shops around that serve food coffee, I got 2 shops in the whole of my city that serve decent, not good, coffee.

grabyourmotherskeys,

It’s a big city so there’s a few. I don’t get out much, though. :)

Icaria,

I needed a new saucepan.

I’ve now replaced half my kitchen.

plactagonic,

I want to try buying cheap old copper pan and refurbishe it. New ones are 20x more expensive.

Krauerking,

Oh, I don’t really recommend copper as someone that cooks.

Like, you can accidentally poison yourself or possibly give yourself early dementia. They are a pain to clean unless you are willing to buff them constantly to keep the shine… Do yourself a favor and get like a couple decorative pieces if you really want copper but cook with steel/iron

plactagonic,

I have a cast iron pan, but it is more about the refurbishing proces. I want to try relining it with tin.

From my understanding about them it is generally safe when you have intact lining.

Krauerking,

Oh… Yeah… Good luck getting it to keep that lining.

If you want to do it for just the experience go ahead but also still don’t cook with it.

Tin sucks. Like straight up. Super soft. Scratches easy. Melts easy. It’s not nonstick and things will stick to it and the act of scrubbing it will potentially strip the tin off and make you get to enjoy relining it again, and again, and again, and again and…

Copper is pretty, but you’d have to really put a gun to my head to make me want to cook with it ever

Icaria,

I think you’re just supposed to avoid heavy acids with them. And it’s one of those ‘lifetime risk’ dealies.

hsl,
@hsl@wayfarershaven.eu avatar

Fountain pens - I started with a 30 euro Parker but it seems like just one is never enough.

cduke23,
@cduke23@beehaw.org avatar

Started with a $50 aluminum Lamy, now I have a brass Kaweco that was about $220. I have a shelf full of inks now.

Help me….

CADmonkey,

Truth. I started with some disposable Pilot Varsity fountain pens because someone I worked with was forging my signature on paperwork. I haven’t worked there for 12 years, and now I have a collection of different fountain pens and ink.

triclops6,

Scrolled down for this, hi all!

TroubadourDrew,

This. At first you’re like “oh geez, $20 for a pen?” Then it’s “oh, I absolutely need to spend $400 for a custom handmade Edison or (insert your favorite brand)” sure it writes a little better than the $20 pen, but holy schnikes does it look and feel so much better.

One is never enough. I mean, you gotta have one for each ink, right? RIGHT??

There are so many options to try to see what you like. Plus, the fountain pen community is honestly one of the best. Dangerous for the wallet…

Pattern,
@Pattern@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah. I had to start pinching myself when I began to look at a $400 pen as a “bargain”. Still love my fountain pens, though.

foofiepie,

Oh shit that’s like 3 hobbies in this one thread. I stopped at a (very) decent Lamy 2000 and Iroshizuku inks.

retrolasered,
@retrolasered@lemmy.zip avatar

I have autism and ADHD, so all of them:

  • Cycling
  • Bicycle touring
  • Skateboarding
  • Vert Skateboarding
  • Freestyle Skateboarding
  • Retro Video Gaming
  • Drawing
  • Reading
  • Programming and Raspberry Pi’s

That’s only my 30’s which is the last 4 years. Hobbies for me are normally short and fierce obsessions when I start, they eventually slow down into a more ‘normal’ pasttime that I do sometimes to past the time.

gmtom,

Wait did you start skateboarding in your 30s and skate a vert ramp within a couple years?

retrolasered, (edited )
@retrolasered@lemmy.zip avatar

Haha no ive been skating aqut 20 years. Vert was most of my 20s until I switched to freestyle after a lot of broken bones

edit: I stll occasionally skate a vert or large miniramp so still grab the occasional shaped deck or slider rails

Krauerking,

LoL I feel that so hard but I’m way to cheap and frugal so everything I do is done used and on a budget to keep me from going overboard so I generally only end up spending a couple hundred max before it turns into a part-time that I pull out on occasion while looking for something to distract me from impending doomerism

spike,
@spike@discuss.tchncs.de avatar
  • Speed Cubing
  • Aggressive Inline Skating
  • Magic The Gathering
  • Misc. Video Games
  • Self Hosting
  • Historical European Martial Arts (Swordfighting with a Longsword especially)

Those are the ones for me. Yeah turned 30 this year as well. No Autism (probably) but have ADHD.

Programming is my job, so I don’t define that as a hobby 😅

tissek,
@tissek@ttrpg.network avatar

Bicycling for me. Started off with a cheap old bike that I tried keeping in as goid condition as possible without spending too much on it. Problem with old bikes is wear and tear so things break and new old parts are hard to cheaply. So it became a hackjob. Then got me a new one and realised riding on roads only got boring so I started experimenting with gravel and singletrack.

Guess what? Time for a new bike. And a more expensive one. Carbon. And to maintain it I needed more tools. Also new tubes as the spare ones I had didn’t fit that big of tyres. Also moved to a new place and now I got a MTB arena within a few km from home. So of course I had to get me one of those. And to maintain the suspension I needed new stuff, oils and tools.

Clothing. Bags. Events. It becomes a lot after a while.

Also planning for bike nr4, a steel fatbike. Promised myself not to buy anything this year, but the year is soon over…

Did I mention bikepacking? Yeah that is another big black hole of expenses. But a fair bit of overlap with backpacking so costs are split.

hactar42,

I remember when I first got into cycling I went to get new tires and noticed two tires that looked the same to me but one was more than double the cost of the other. I asked the guy what the difference was and he just said, “maybe half an ounce.” It’s unreal how expensive cycling stuff can get.

tissek,
@tissek@ttrpg.network avatar

Marginal gains. Expensive marginal gains. I’m glad I’m not into that. When it comes to saving weight it is far better for me to shave it of me rather than the bike. And cheaper too!

blackbrook,

In my opinion they aren’t even gains. Making the bike more efficient just makes it less exercise efficient. You have to bike longer to get the same workout.

tissek,
@tissek@ttrpg.network avatar

But it will run quiter. And I can attack KOMs harder. Et cetera.

But yes for working out a watt is a watt is a watt

blackbrook,

Upgrading the drivetrain can make sense. Perhaps the brakes. Shocks if you are mountain biking. But no one needs a carbon fiber frame unless they are competing.

ChickenLadyLovesLife,

I have a $2200 road bike, a $600 mountain bike, and a 20+ year old hybrid that I bought on Craigslist for $100. Guess which one I enjoy riding the most?

That being said, the latest bikes with their electric wireless shifters, disc brakes, built-in phone holders and no cables anywhere are making me a bit jealous. But I’ve been able to resist the urge so far.

tissek,
@tissek@ttrpg.network avatar

The Craigslist hybrid? Riding the beater is often so much fun because you feel like you are allowed to ride it hard. Or it couldbe the older geometry making it more lively.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • [email protected]
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • oklahoma
  • Socialism
  • KbinCafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • Ask_kbincafe
  • SuperSentai
  • feritale
  • KamenRider
  • All magazines