In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Next you will be connecting your spindle to your tower. Doing so while your turbine assembly is attached to the spindle can be quite difficult to manage. Then you'll need to invert your assembly hub-upwards to complete your turbine. Pull the assembly (including the hub, spokes, magnet rotors, stator, and all associated parts) off the spindle with an upwards motion. Then place your assembly on your work area, hub-side facing up. your spindle flange to your tower. If you have a kit, these parts were likely provided, but a metal plate attached to the top of a thick, sturdy metal pipe should suffice for your tower. Be sure that your pipe can withstand the forces the wind will be exerting on your wind turbine. Your tower will need to be installed at a sturdy location. You might want to pour a concrete slab into which you install your tower to give it additional stability. The bracket should fit over your spindle like a collar. You should then bolt the bracket into place, attaching the bracket to the tower. Then cut a 3/8" (.375 cm) threaded rod into four 4½" pieces. Use a thread locking compound first, and then use nuts and washers to attach these to the outside of your bracket facing upwards. Nuts should be placed on the 3/8" (.375 cm) threaded rod studs about ¾ of the way from the top of the rod. These nuts will allow you to adjust the position of your stator while the rod holds it in place. Before you do so, you should smear a liberal amount of general purpose bearing grease onto your bearing. After greasing, simply slide your tapered bearing onto the spindle so it rests at the base of your spindle. The greasing process is most easily done with your fingers. Have some paper towel or a work rag close by to wipe your fingers clean once the bearing is greased and placed. Lift the main assembly so that the hub is facing upwards and settle it onto the spindle with the tapered bearing beneath. The mounting holes in your stator should line up with the 3/8" threaded rod studs that you fastened to your bracket.  Once the assembly is in place, you'll need to put another tapered bearing into the cap of your hub. Grease the bearing with general purpose bearing grease. Atop your bearing you'll need to fasten a castle nut. The castle nut should be screwed into place with your fingers. When you cannot turn the nut easily, unscrew it until the gap in the castle nut aligns with the hole in the shaft of your spindle. Slide a cotter pin in this hole and use pliers to bend the legs of the pin to lock the castle nut into place. Use one hex nut per rod to lock the stator firmly into place on your assembly. Then, using two wrenches, adjust the hex nuts sandwiching your stator until it is directly in between the magnet rotors. Once your stator is positioned, all you need to do is add a grease cap to the top of your hub and your turbine is complete.
Summary: Remove the assembly from the spindle. Weld Install a bracket for your spindle and stator. Place a tapered roller bearing on the spindle. Attach the main assembly of your turbine. Fasten your stator and complete the turbine with a grease cap.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Cornmeal gives cornbread its classic color and flavor, but too much can make your bread crumbly. Try replacing a little bit of cornmeal with flour. The specific measurements will depend on how much cornmeal and flour is in your recipe, but you should try to have more flour than cornmeal in your batter. Many traditional recipes have no flour at all. For these, subtract 1–2 tablespoons (15–30 ml) of cornmeal and replace them with flour. Not all bags of flour are the same! If you’ve been baking with the same old flour and your cornbread is still crumbly, try switching to another brand. If you aren’t using all-purpose white wheat flour, switch to that type. Frozen corn will add moisture to your batter during the baking process. Whole food additions don’t need to be precisely measured, but about a handful will be fine for most recipes. Melty, gooey cheese will hold your cornbread together and give it a fantastic flavor. Shredded cheddar cheese is best for most cornbread recipes, but you can try experimenting with another variety. Precise measurements aren’t necessary--a handful or two will do.
Summary: Adjust the proportion of flour to cornmeal. Try a different brand of flour. Add a handful of frozen corn. Add shredded cheese.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: You can do this as the story develops. Is it modern? It can be set at any time at all. Will it be first person (I, me) or third person (he, she, it). You won't usually find a book written from second person point of view, which is you, you did, you will. That is really breaking the fourth wall (talking to your reader). The tense is usually either past or present. Past tense (was, happened) is the common tense for writings; it's common and works well, and is comfortable reading. Present tense is with current timing (is, is happening) and can work well, but carries a risk of uncomfortable reading along with it.
Summary:
Do not decide on the title first. Think of the time the book happens. Decide upon the viewpoint and tense.