Bosch Legacy/Watch All 10 Episodes(Season 1 Complete)

I enjoyed it, but dislike the commercials. I think if they need/want more money, Prime should just say, "Wanna watch some more Bosch? That'll be another buck for this series."

I like the characters. Harry, of course, but his daughter, Maddie, the female lawyer, Honey, and the new techie pal, Maurice, as well. And Crate and Barrel are back.
 
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The daughter, Lintz, is more believable as a rookie than I would have imagined. (Thanks Ono)
Thanks for the heads-up about the show!
 
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Kintz is more believable as a rookie than I would have imagined.
Thanks for the heads-up about the show!
Was trying to figure out "Kintz." Typo. Now I got it:



(I don't recall names well, actors or characters, especially in movies/fiction, so stuck this in to help me if nobody else.)
 
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There's 8 Episodes up for viewing now.

May only be an 8 Episode Season 1.

Internet says this is a 10-episode season.

I'm actually dumb enough that when I had binged the 6 episodes last week and Netflix switched to a preview for something else, I thought "Not very well-made finale, that". Then I got to thinking and googled :rolleyes:
 
On the one episode they had something way wrong. As a industrial pipe guy I have to say that when you hot tap a big bore line carrying hydro carbons you want it running near wide open, NOT shut down. Moving fluid takes heat with it. With no flow hydrocarbons or even water, heat up, boil cause excess pressure and a rupture. Your weld is already dropping the pressure limit on the steel near your bead until it cools.

Did my share of hot taps. You are not going to do one very fast either. Once you get the new flange on, you have to bolt on a valve with a full bore gate, then a special drill with seals on drive. Drill out side of pipe, using a metal hole saw retract drill and a special tip on the drill bit catches the coupon and retracts it. Even just drilling you want some flow to keep pipe cool. Over heated metal and hydrocarbons do not play well together. Then one bit is retracted past the new valve's gate you close the gate and bleed off the pressure that remains between it and drill, make sure there is zero flow and then remove the drill. Now you can connect to it.
 
Here's how I see it:

You better watch "Bosch"
before securing your "Legacy"
and if you don't you'll never
be "Justified" in life and only be
so much "Deadwood," condemned
to an eternity of singing like
"Sopranos" on the "Boardwalk"
in New Jersey.
 
On the one episode they had something way wrong. As a industrial pipe guy I have to say that when you hot tap a big bore line carrying hydro carbons you want it running near wide open, NOT shut down. Moving fluid takes heat with it. With no flow hydrocarbons or even water, heat up, boil cause excess pressure and a rupture. Your weld is already dropping the pressure limit on the steel near your bead until it cools.

Did my share of hot taps. You are not going to do one very fast either. Once you get the new flange on, you have to bolt on a valve with a full bore gate, then a special drill with seals on drive. Drill out side of pipe, using a metal hole saw retract drill and a special tip on the drill bit catches the coupon and retracts it. Even just drilling you want some flow to keep pipe cool. Over heated metal and hydrocarbons do not play well together. Then one bit is retracted past the new valve's gate you close the gate and bleed off the pressure that remains between it and drill, make sure there is zero flow and then remove the drill. Now you can connect to it.

I participated in one hot tap on a shutdown back in my power plant days. It was on a main steam line on a super critical coal fired steam plant. I don't remember if it was a CE or a B&W boiler. It was a long time ago. I worked my last Shut down in the spring of '86. It was a very interesting experience......
 
326MOD10 ...

Well at least two of us think Harry's got great taste! Can't recall ever having spotted one ever having been used before.

That was a nice touch at the end. With Harry no longer being a cop, I missed seeing his Kimber Custom throughout the season.

Great season, nice integration of several story lines. My only peeve at the end was that I don't like it much if the cliffhanger/hook for the next season is as blatantly obvious as it was here.
 
Wouldn't have minded seeing
more screen time for Tetiana
Gaidar. I guess most of her
movie work has been as a
weapons trainer.
 
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