INCIDENT REPORT:0007. Baseline Held. PROGRESS: 15 out of 100.

 

Bender-Bot, the Bender’s Club mascot, overlooks Boise, Idaho while smoking a cigar—an industrial robot embodying Kevin Wikse’s strength discipline and Industrial Strength Bastardry.
Bender-Bot surveys Boise—systems steady, baseline held. Strength earned through discipline. Industrial Strength Bastardry by Kevin Wikse.

I’m finally settled. Today marks the first official “normal” Monday back in Boise, Idaho.

The weekend was active. A lot of work got done—helping a friend move into a new apartment, clearing out a garage, plenty of heavy lifting. Productive, but taxing. In the background, I was already running the question: how will the Bender Bar feel after this?

The answer arrived immediately.

The first bend was difficult. I got it, but the initial energy expenditure was significant. Either my force vectors weren’t perfectly aligned, or residual fatigue was still present in the system. Possibly both.

Bends two through thirteen felt standard. Predictable. On bend fourteen, however, I felt my strength begin to falter—a breakdown somewhere in the circuit. Not catastrophic, but noticeable.

At that point, I knew there would be no new PR today. Worse, there was a real possibility of missing baseline.

That wasn’t acceptable.

After a significant additional effort, I locked in bend fifteen. 

No backslide.

That’s a win on its own.

OUTCOME: Baseline held under fatigue.
SYSTEM NOTE: Capacity intact. Calibration required.

I now look ahead to Friday. The focus shifts to a measured dial-in—tightening alignment, refining output, focusing the servos—to pursue bend sixteen. 


-Kevin WikseIndustrial Strength Bastardry 

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