My family has always been very handy. My father and uncle both skilled craftsmen. My father did a lot of home repairs, and my uncle, being an engineer, handled a lot of the electrical work. Perhaps this is where I got my interest in DIY projects.
I remember working with my father and uncle years ago, putting together electronics projects. I was young and didn’t know what was going on, but learned at a very early age what electrical components were called, how to read resistors, and even picked up some general theory about electronics. It was back then that I learned to solder electronics, a skill I apparently still have today.
After what must be 10 or so years of not touching a soldering iron, I decided to assemble the TV-B-Gone kit I picked up at The Last Hope conference. I’d say it took me about 30 minutes to an hour to assemble, kinda pathetic considering it’s just 19 components. Then again, I had to re-acquaint myself to the equipment, and try to deal with my tremors, which were actually no problem at all. My hand was rather steady.
I took my time, and the TV-B-Gone is assembled and works. I was able to shut off my TV (Funny thing is, it turns it off, then on, then off again. I guess my TV uses the same code for on and off. Makes sense since there’s only 1 power button on the remote). The next trial will have to be somewhere where there’s a lot of TVs. Maybe Wal-Mart/Best Buy/etc…Maybe a bar. Who knows. I’m still impressed that it works!
I’ll have to look for some other electronics projects to pick up so I can get used to this sort of thing. Then, maybe next time my stereo breaks, instead of spending $600 on a new one, I’ll try to fix it myself.

Our last stop was at one of the coolest toy stores in the USA. The building is shaped like a UFO that had crashed on the side of the road. The front door is designed to look like an aft thruster, all burnt out. This place had lots of great toys. Board Games, Juggling Supplies, R/C Cars and Helli copters, Trains, Slot-Cars, Learning/Educational kits and so much more They even had Segways ($5k ouch!). They were really cool there. They hooked me up with some parts I needed for my R/C helicopter, and I picked up a rubber band gun. The kind that you can load 7 rubber bands and shoot them one at a time by pulling the trigger (Hopefully the picture (to the left) is still there by the time you read this.)