My second battery for the bike came in today. Installed it and the bike started right up. Now I just need to alter the wiring in the bike, mount both batteries with a switch so if one battery dies, all I have to do is flip the switch to the other battery.
So, I have the old battery on the slow charger, to allow it to gain a deep charge. Once that's complete, I'll put the charger on the new battery. Want them both completely charged.
From what I've been reading, motorcycle batteries are even more unstable than I knew. It's not uncommon to have to replace them every six months. A really good battery, well maintained, may last up to 3 years. Makes me even happier to have gotten a spare.
Got an expected call today. The interview for tomorrow was canceled. My credit check didn't pass. Since it's an investment firm, it was no surprise.
Had an interview with Farmers Insurance today. Again, my credit could eliminate me as a possible candidate for employment. Still some chance. However, I was advised that getting a license as an insurance agent would greatly improve my chances.
Had the second interview, as a forensic nurse with a legal office. That one sounds quite promising. They are moving my application forward. It is a contract position which would last for 3-4 months and may lead to a permanent position.
During that time, I can work on getting an insurance license. It will cost a few hundred dollars between training and testing. Something to shoot for, though.
So, I have the old battery on the slow charger, to allow it to gain a deep charge. Once that's complete, I'll put the charger on the new battery. Want them both completely charged.
From what I've been reading, motorcycle batteries are even more unstable than I knew. It's not uncommon to have to replace them every six months. A really good battery, well maintained, may last up to 3 years. Makes me even happier to have gotten a spare.
Got an expected call today. The interview for tomorrow was canceled. My credit check didn't pass. Since it's an investment firm, it was no surprise.
Had an interview with Farmers Insurance today. Again, my credit could eliminate me as a possible candidate for employment. Still some chance. However, I was advised that getting a license as an insurance agent would greatly improve my chances.
Had the second interview, as a forensic nurse with a legal office. That one sounds quite promising. They are moving my application forward. It is a contract position which would last for 3-4 months and may lead to a permanent position.
During that time, I can work on getting an insurance license. It will cost a few hundred dollars between training and testing. Something to shoot for, though.
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