![]() |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
1 Attachment(s)
Machined a Harley S&S crankcase for 124" cubic inch cylinders
Attachment 2046981 |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
oh but I do miss the rental calls: "How many bathrooms is it" Me: "One" Them: "Are you sure, could you go and check" 😳 |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
How do you diagnose a faulty capacitor? Asking for future reference.
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
they are also cheap $25 bucks online so even if you replace it and it still dont fix the problem you know you wont be paying $400 for a service call for something simple home ACs only have four components, the capacitor being one of them |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Check. Thank you.
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
A start capacitor is used to briefly shift phase on a start winding in a single phase electric motor to create an increase in torque. |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Thanks!
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
2 Attachment(s)
Raining today so I worked on the bathroom . Put in a Schluter kerdi board shelf unit in the shower . Even with the carbide tile attachment it was slow going . Good ventilation and a mask are mandatory
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
I finally have home health coming to me now. So it was Physical therpy for me 4 times a week now. Ihad a stroke 3 years ago and I've noticed that my rite side has been losing all the stregth I once had in it plus my left knee has gotten worse about not wanting towork like it should. after 6 falls in a month I realised it was time to do something.
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
1 Attachment(s)
Hope you feel better. Therapy is very important my wife is certified yoga therapist and works with many people who are afflicted with body restrictions the results are amazing . I've even started and feel the difference in movement.
Yesterday put a new patio slider at the rental. Just need to trim it out |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
3 Attachment(s)
Quote:
We had off and on rain on Wed and I went for it with digging out, forming, and pouring some concrete to allow for next doing the steps at the rear corner of my little garage. They are my way of dealing with the garage being built into the hill. It's pretty slippery on the grass when it's wet, too, so I always wanted to do the steps even before the garage. I will also do a sidewalk and curb to deal with the grade along the uphill side. I realized I better get going so I can get some grass growing before it gets cold. Not a lot of sun on those areas and my hopes (dreams) are to be ready for market come spring. Got to keep shifting priorites. |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
K, I wish I had your skills and energy level.
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
5 Attachment(s)
I got all excited about putting the SWB in it's new garage, thinking now I'll get moving on it. But reality set in and that is I need to stay focused on getting the property in shape to sell. I tend to make little of what needs to be done, because I just do it then it's done. But there is a ton to do. I need to use all the space in the garage I can to move things out of my barn and side shed. That maple tree has grown into the building, not good, and it is only getting worse. I have moisture in the lower barn now and upstairs is starting to smell musky. The building needs to move away from that giant tree. And, the roof needs to be replaced with a metal one. I've been waiting until after I move it. Might tear the shakes off, then move, then put metal on.
My screen house has been turned into a storage shed for parts. But the first reason I moved the picnic table out was to store a bunch of cherry boards I had been given 4 or 5 years ago. Selling it would make sense, but what's that? I really want to get a woodshop set up at my next place and I want to have that wood. I also had a sheet of 3/4" CDX and another 3/4" sheet of birch solid core... both very heavy!. I put those on the truck frame and loaded all the cherry on. This made space for the woodshop tools to move in from the barn. Before moving the plywood I put my transmissions, transfer cases, steering boxes, and master cylinder/boosters under the tail end of the truck. It's been a lot of heavy moving and the work has just begun. I got all the woodworking tools moved and emptied out all the lumber from the shed to a pile I have tarped. Now I need to build a rack over the SWB to store that. I'm not sure I'll have time anyway, but even with all I'll be cramming around the trick I can still work on it from cab forward. I want to install the engine & trans. Great way to save space! I'd like to put the front clip on too, and lay the bedsides on top of the cherry. It's so much stuff, I'll still need more space. The initial plan is to empty the shed side and dismantle. After that is when the challenge of what to do with everything else will hit. There's an upstairs floor you know! |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
I got bunches of stuff to do out here. We're trying to decide whether to fix up our current garage (1 bay with attached room) or tear it down and build a 4-5 bay garage into the hill with half high concrete walls at the back and sides ... |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Daaaang. Like I have said for years, the more storage room you have the more things you will hang onto creating the need for more storage room. ;)
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
1 Attachment(s)
I moved here 34 years ago. Lived here over half my life. It looks like so much because I don't have enough room. I had a barn I rented for years for shop and storage. But in '07 the place got sold, so it's been tight ever since.
Anyone need any good cores? :cool: There was a pile of lumber in front of that Attachment 2047680 First picture is the cherry in the screen house before moving any. The third is same spot filling back in with woodshop tools. The second one is the dirt floor in the shed where the transfer cases had been (on metal roof scraps). The fourth is in the barn before I moved anything. Last one is the radial arm on it's way up. Quote:
I went out there after posting and it's all so bewildering looking at what to move next, when, and where will it go. I decided since this is prepping to sell, and I'm only doing this as a remedy to the deterrent of the monster tree growing into the building, I'm going the minimal route, leave the shed side standing, take 3' - 4' out of it, and move the barn over to it. Cheapest, quickest, and easiest. Cutting the tree down would be an enormous expense, it makes good shade, could use some serious trimming, but not a deterrent to the sale. I'll have a good bit of space for things in the lower barn to be moved to under the shed. I also plan this winter to gut the master bedroom I have never touched since I moved in. I never thought about it with all the other work I've done. Just a place to sleep. Plus it's still original plaster. I insulated from outside way back when. I was kind of thinking it would be cool to leave a room original. But again, for the sale I need to make the master bedroom an attractive feature, not be deterrent #2. The ceiling is low and I plan to tear it out to frame it higher, then use the old hand-hewn ceiling beams exposed underneath. I'll wire it, put a floor down, new closets, trim. Nothing fancy, but fresh and more spacious feeling. I'm probably being unrealistic thinking I'll get it on the market next spring. I'd sell as is but all this work is more work than money, and that's what I do and enjoy. It's not your typical house for just anyone. But I want everything right because it's value is in that it's going to really appeal to someone, like a classic vehicle you just have to have. It needs to be in "no excuses" condition. I don't want to hear words like "fixer-upper" or "lot's of potential". So, the other big thing I plan (other than new main roof... no biggie) is line the entire dug out cellar with block. That's deterrent #3. I've got the block, so just need mortar and time (bad weather days). The roof is a deterrent I was going to live with. The lower roofs are all new. No leaks in the steeper main roof but the cedar shakes look very tired. I know it will be called out by a home inspector. Shakes have gotten crazy high and I'd really like to see them replaced. But I decided to go with metal like the rest. It's four separate sections, so I'll start with the front (biggest), it's just straight across. Talk talk talk. I need to get back out there. Quote:
That's the crossroad I was at for a long time. If I was staying I would have taken the barn/shed down, not built the single car garage, and built a bigger building in line with the driveway all the way back. Where my garage is would have been a carport off the front of the left garage bay. I'm looking forward to a place with a real shop when I move. I hate having this set outside. |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Brother your to do list sounds long. If we were closer I'd sure try to give you a hand. I see your hand truck and smile. The last time I went junk yarding I took our hand truck. I bungie corded two milk crates to it to put my parts and tools in. It got tiring pushing that thing all over acres and acres in this heat but it sure beat trying to carry everything. ;)
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
I've got a huge pine tree about three feet from the end of our garage/room. Healthy tree, nice shade, and far enough from the wildland that it's not really a fire hazard. But to add on or replace the garage, or even build a carport beside the garage, the tree will have to come down. I can do it no problem but the cleanup will be a big job and I hate to see it go. It's about a cord of firewood, though :)
I really want to do something to get our two newer vehicles in out of the weather. |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
5 Attachment(s)
Quote:
Moving the barn, it seems, is pretty far fetched to the people I tell. It's a pole building and only 12 x 20. It does have a second floor and I put oak flooring down. But I think I can dig the footers, pour them and the 3' of slab, support, cut posts, brace up, and slide it on over. I may use pipe to roll it on and push with a skid loader. I moved the screen house (10' x 14') 3' with a come along. That has a second floor, too, and the first floor is framed with decking boards. Quote:
So here are the transmissions and transfer cases before I put the steering boxes with them Attachment 2047716 This is the screen house now. Attachment 2047712 The barn somewhat cleared out. Attachment 2047714 And the SWB hauling it's first load before it runs :lol: Attachment 2047715 The pile of lumber from the racks in the shed side. I will build a rack in the little garage to move all that. It is a PIA but I need to use most of it on the house. Moving and storing is cheaper than buying |
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Quote:
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
This morning I fixed the drive through electric gate again after somebody apparently tried to drive under it with too tall of a vehicle :rolleyes:
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
Doggone census takers!
|
Re: What did you do today not on your truck...
I don’t blame you for wanting to leave Tim, the area has changed so much over the last 20 years. I left in 2013 and although I miss family and the mountains I really don’t miss much else. Every time I come home and go even a little ways East I don’t recognize much of it at all anymore. I’m like my space from other people, that’s getting hard to find in that immediate area. Dad is getting his place ready to sell as well. He’s got 2 years left before he retires and plans to sell the house and rent for a little bit before he leaves for good.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:02 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2025 67-72chevytrucks.com