nadogail
Well-known member
Spent the afternoon dealing with a sheet of 3 mil plastic that I am converting into two 18" X 96" panels.
Thanks for the advise. It's a B&S Vanguard with a Mikuni carb.Dont know why they put the drain up the side of the float bowl, doesnt do much good when you can drain with the bowl bolt. Loosen up a bit and push the bowl up to drain the fuel. If that is a honda engine check your sediment bowl - separate from the float bowl. If I am just running unit dry-ish, when it starts dying, add some choke to keep it running until it has pulled all the fuel it can from bowl.
This one gave me a laugh, just imagining Miss BareThighs feeling like she'd just got skin grafts after going over the bumps n lumps on that bike.




This one gave me a laugh, just imagining Miss BareThighs feeling like she'd just got skin grafts after going over the bumps n lumps on that bike.





my pick axe to break the ground. I then realized how neglectful I have been towards my every day garden tools. Shame on me. After an hour of sanding and boiled linseed application, I will sleep better tonight.



Sometimes this works. Kinda depends on the alloy.Jumped into another antique furniture restore for my better half. She’s more than capable to execute sanding and refinishing w/ her special treatments. This one is a late 1800’s drop leaf table that has been severely neglected. $5.00 yard sale. Swing out legs support the double 2’ wide drop leafs.
Never seen a 2’ wide 5/4 piece of cherry that wasn’t joined. Well here they are. Those trunks don’t exist anymore. Out of 6 brass leg wheels, one was missing. Went so far as to run a metal detector over the ground where we bought it! No luck.
Ended up recreating one out of scrap steel for the frame, cut the wheel material out of an old 3 way brass coupling. Wheel hub was interesting. Two weather proof electrical box screw in plugs were modified. They were the same thread as the ID threads of the brass coupling. I think this is the first time I’ve seen threads from an electrical device match anything else.
Left to do is patina the brass, tried salt & vinegar, no go.![]()


@Roger M Is that a 67 Mustang? Check out these teach yourself to mig weld videos I found on You Tube. Hope they help you out. I taught myself to mig weld when I got my 69 Mustang 20 years ago so I could do the sheet metal replacement that was needed.

It's not hard. Imagine a caulk gun for welding. Even old ladies with tremors can melt **** together.

Factory air, nice. My 67 Mustangs had bags for washer fluid, didn't know Courgars had tanks. Nice old school license plate too. You're just down the road from me.



Nice, I have a 67 also. I used to have those exact same wheels the first time I redid the car. I am about to start going through it again now that I have a large enough garage to do it right this time. I have had the car stored for nearly 40 years.
That mercury head cap on the washer reservoir is a pretty rare part especially if the little plastic strap is intact.I learned a bit about Holley carburetors this afternoon, watching YouTube. I was able to cure some stumbling with some accelerator pump adjustments and moving the position of the little plastic cam, along with a float adjustment. Surprised to have a significantly better running 289.
On to find a transmission leak next, and then learn to weld a floor pan in...
If anyone wants to point me in the right direction of 'learn to mig weld in three easy steps', I am all ears/eyes.![]()

Fiddled with charging the boat batteries some more today. The trolling motor battery is definitely dead, but the battery for the motor seems to be taking a charge. Since I had to buy a new battery for the trolling motor, I just went ahead and bought a new one for the motor as well. Don't want to get stuck on the water with a dead battery.Plugged in the battery chargers for the boat and trolling motor batteries. Took apart the trolling motor to clean and check for internal damage after it collided with a pier post, no loose wires or obvious issues.
Then took one of the gas lift brackets off the Mustang and replaced the pitted and worn ball stud with a new 316 SS ball stud. The new stud had threads and larger base than the old one, so I chucked it in the drill press and used a grinder to remove the hex base and reduce the diameter down to 1/4", then cut off the remaining threads and TIG welded into the original bracket hole.
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Ziploc baggies work well, too.Cleaning up new to me tools and putting them away.
I finally got a good system for using the USC and different cleaning/derusting chemicals without making the USC filthy. I'm using repurposed sanitizing wipe containers (tall and big enough for most things) and using those in plain water in the tank. It's working out well
