Except for Renegade Hybrids, who made their bones making V-6 and V-8 swap kits for 914's and 911's! To hear their customers complain, they still do what they used to do, bellhousing adapters and other bits, now for Boxster/Cayman and 911 -- and as for your particular wiring harness problems, hey,
you figure it out!* That being said, video of LS V-8's in Boxster/Cayman that I've seen look
insaaaaane.(2)
______
* OK, one specific mechanic's complaints.
(2)
@Squankum, I have always loved the conversion kit concept. The ones that captured my interest in the 1950s were from JC Whitney and Speedway Motors and they would mail you the parts after you filled out the order form in their catalog, enclosed a check and mailed it to them.
I was a fan of the 1957-62
77 Sunset Strip TV show because of Kookie's T-bucket. Norm Grabowski's car was a 1924 Model T with a Cadillac engine in it. I remember reading car magazine articles as a kid, showing do-it-yourself Cadillac swaps with builders welding up engine mounts and cutting steel plate transmission adapters from cardboard templates. There were Oldsmobile and Buick nailhead swap kits as well.
I was a teenage father in 1962 and lusted for a Chevy II with a V8 engine. Before they offered it as an option, GM offered a factory V8 swap kit (
https://www.motortrend.com/how-to/chevy-ii-v-8-engine-swap-history/).
A lot of custom stuff was do-it-yourself back then. Rod & Custom showed how to drill out the rivets in a stock wheel rim, flip the rim to the other side and weld it back together, followed by a trip to one of the thousands of chrome shops to create the iconic Chrome Reverse Wheel Rim. By 1971 they could be purchased anywhere. I put a set of 14x7s on my GTO (I recall the cheap Baby Moons I bought started pitting the day I installed them). The rear is lifted a little because I kept some pressure in the Air Lift air bags (for towing the boat)
Hi Bob, it's been a while since I chimed in on your thread, but when I read that your attempts to repair the Samsung icemaker failed, I felt a bit better as I had similar results, but I also recalled that you made a comment when the transmission failed on your Cadillac "if money solves a problem, your don't have a problem" or words to that effect, I took that advice and sent my Samsung refrigerator to the dump and bought a new Kitchenaid refrigerator. My blood pressure has returned to normal....
Thanks for your words of wisdom!
Hi
Gil, welcome back and thanks for stopping by and posting. I hate chest and bottom freezers because they require digging up the lost treasures in the bottom (I could swear we have a package of sausages in there). I hate refrigerator door ice makers even more and our Samsung French door R/F has both strikes against it. When the icemaker stopped working, Liane went in the garage and got ice from our ancient GE ice maker cube. After I fixed the Samsung ice maker the first time, Liane continued to get her ice from the garage. If you don't use the icemaker and stir up the ice cubes, the icemaker compartment thaws enough to melt the cubes together into a bucket-size block of ice so nothing comes out the door. Next step in the process is the block of ice frosts up so you can't remove the bucket without a forced defrost session. I solved the problem with a small injection of money, replacing the old GE icemaker cube with a new Flurida icemaker cube. Every time I open the left door, the Samsung refrigerator reminds me of the failure.
Hi Bob. I definitely like the Travertine stone. I’m guessing it stands the test of time was it done with the original build. How is it bedded, glue, mortar, sand? Any cracking, easy to replace?
I did something similar to your archway. Took out an offset doorway and moved it over and enlarged for the archway for better passage between kitchen and dining room. Gave both rooms a little more of a feeling of space. Actually took the new wood moulding and made a curved one to match the rest of the room. Took a form and 2 pieces of moulding cut thin strips and glued it around a form similar to the shape of the new opening. Kind of cool but most people have no idea what is involved.
I’d take a pic but I’m out at the lake.
My surveillance amounts to door bell cameras at home and lake. Have some surveillance cameras at the lake but while operational not to the spec they are capable of. I guess a job for once the weather turns in the fall.
Hope all is going well for you and your family.
Hi
Emil. When we bought the house in 1996, the pool patio was stamped concrete that looked like flagstones. It was cracked in several places and it was oddly slippery when wet. Our previous home had an epoxied Chattahoochee pebble surface (popular in the 1970s).

The old man who took care of our patio at the last house put down the same stuff over this patio. Fourteen years later (2010) it was looking pretty sad and the cracks in the concrete were telegraphing through the Chattahoochee.

The old man was either dead or moved away and the idea of mixing 5-gallon buckets of expensive epoxy didn't excite me. Neither did ripping it up. We hemmed and hawed and finally broke down when the pool needed a fresh coat of Diamond Brite plaster. The oldest son in the family that had done our previous home gave us an estimate for the pool refinishing and his younger brother gave us an estimate for Travertine tiles with no brick edging. He had to cut off all the bullnose bricks and the new pool finish got new ceramic tile at the top to hide the remains of the bricks. Watching the process made me tired.

A truck dropped off some tile...

...and some sand and mortar mix. The tile at doorways and the edge of the pool got mortared in place and the field tiles were set in a bed of sand. Final step was to sweep fine sand into all the joints.

The pool finishing crew took over. I had already emptied the pool so they could acid etch the old pool finish. They set the new waterline tiles, troweled on a scratch coat and troweled on a coat of blue Diamond Brite plaster. They worked really fast and I didn't take photos while they were working.

With the dyed blue plaster, the water looks more natural blue.

While they were finishing the pool I cut down the three screen doors to clear the additional thickness. Took the base off each, miter cut each side, trimmed the sheet metal panels and re-assembled. Pretty simple with a miter saw and carbide blade. That weird oval orange thing is the hot tub I donated to the pool crew. It was a small two-person one that we hadn't used in years. Not sure why but probably because the novelty wore off. We used the in-ground one I installed in extended patio in the previous house.
The whole project came in just under $12,000 (2014 money).
Your archway project sounds a lot more complicated than mine. I was careful cutting the metal studs and drywall so finishing was metal stud blocking, couple of layers of 1/4" drywall in the curves, some flexible corner edging on the curves and the usual mudding. The hard part was the floor. When the base of the wall came out there was a gap in the tile. I patched it but Liane wanted something warmer so I chiseled up all the tile, ripped out the pink berber carpet and installed 900 square feet of Pergo while Liane was on a week-long Canadian hen fest.
I'm not a huge fan of security systems but put up some cameras when a car parked across the street was broken into. I can't be sure it was a break-in because the house was rented to a Florida Atlantic University fraternity and they didn't seem to be too careful with their parents' fancy gifts.