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What did you do "IN" your garage today?

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Magnum440d100

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 2, 2018
Messages
3,581
Location
Indiana
A few years back, the passenger door on the Lincoln would shimmy, for lack of a better word.

Never got around to fixing it, as I parked it.

Anyway, finally got around to fixing it.

Door striker missing the plastic cushion IMG_4286.jpeg

Found some decent ones on the evilBay and put them on, no pics of them installed for some reason. I know I took them, but my phone has not been saving pics. IMG_4288.jpeg


Then on to fixing my grampas “fixes”. One of them being bare wires from electrical diagnosis. Yeah. IMG_4293.jpeg


This is on the passenger side cornering lamp.

I found a NOS one on the ‘bay, and ordered it. Reason for NOS is because the used ones I found were in the same condition as mine (lense wise). IMG_4291.jpeg

IMG_4294.jpeg

That’s it for now. Gotta make a supplies run.

More tomorrow lmao
 

CoogarXR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
6,871
Location
Ohio
Bought a big 'ol bag of long construction screws at a yard sale for $1. I thought they were all the same length, but there were 3 different sizes and some were zinc plated and some weren't. So I dumped the bag on my workbench and sorted them, lol. Still an excellent deal. Especially since I was about to go buy some long screws. Now I won't have to.
 

cannuck

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
4,660
Location
Rural SK
loaded my 75 ton iron worker with swivel base (6400 lbs) onto my little beavertail deck trailer (2 x 3500 axles) sinking rear bumper almost to ground. Came into yard on farm this morning and it was leaning badly to one side - flat tire. Picked corner up with crane, pulled off the wheel and took it home to shop to fix leak. Grandson found a 1 1/4 drywall screw (NONE of those in my shop!) in tread, so put in a plug and took it back to trailer. Ran all 4 up to 60 (pushing tire load limit badly - but only 5 mile trip to unload). Put forklift on charger. I bought this 3,000 lb. Toyota ride on for a few hundred bux at auction since didn't run). got it to salvage forks for my 1440V M-F, but battery is good, everything mechanical works but electronics and electrics on control side NFG. Not sure I want to wreck it.
 

Boilerhouse

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2012
Messages
1,321
Location
Muskoka
Finally finished the inside doors that I built for the cottage - poplar stiles and rails, birch ply panels, and poplar trim pieces, made with an ogee then a cove bit on the router to add a bit of bling. 2-door layout.jpeg3-ready for glue and clamps.jpeg5-trim pc.jpeg7-ready for paint and install.jpeg The doors will be painted after they have been hung and trimmed (if necessary) to fit the frames.
 

Nick Rivers

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2024
Messages
261
Location
USA
  • Worked on a Sloan Flushmate 501B pressure lower supply. No longer made separately, now you have to buy the whole tank that includes the identical lower supply regulator. $167 instead of $30 for the replacement part.... tank and regulator should be here Sunday morning
  • Fixed a Toro lawnmower front drive wheel
  • Hung a 36" tool rack up for motorcycle gear, helmets and cargo straps
  • Installed an 8" diameter 2" wide fiber wheel on my grinder
  • Cleaned out a Rigid shop vac to use for water extraction (see first item on this list)
  • Put away all the tools from a rear brake line replacement on my old F-150 - job completed this last Thursday
  • Clean up some surgical instruments and lubricated the box joints
  • Charged the spare 12VDC battery to run a HF hoist
 

DGersic

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2017
Messages
6,383
Location
DeKalb, IL
Driving home today, in the rain, my driver side wiper transmission decided to spontaneously self disassemble.

So tonight I removed the transmission and completed disassembly and cleaning the parts.

IMG_4998.jpeg

The upper shaft is pressed in to the small chain driven wheel. I reassembled it, and was able to pull the shaft out by hand, so the press fit is no longer sufficient. I don’t see any cracks or damage in the wheel piece, so I think it’s just wear.

Trying to find somewhere local-ish to buy some Loctite 660 or 680. All I can find is blue and red thread locker. So it will have to wait for Monday.
 

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,624
Location
Upstate New York
Driving home today, in the rain, my driver side wiper transmission decided to spontaneously self disassemble.

So tonight I removed the transmission and completed disassembly and cleaning the parts.

IMG_4998.jpeg

The upper shaft is pressed in to the small chain driven wheel. I reassembled it, and was able to pull the shaft out by hand, so the press fit is no longer sufficient. I don’t see any cracks or damage in the wheel piece, so I think it’s just wear.

Trying to find somewhere local-ish to buy some Loctite 660 or 680. All I can find is blue and red thread locker. So it will have to wait for Monday.
Grainger will probably be your friend here. It's where I got them last. The big CRAPA regional warehouse used to carry them, but they've been out of stock for maybe a year.
 

LWB

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2019
Messages
1,263
Location
ON, Canada
Tore it down!

We bought the place knowing full well it was a POS. It was the worst construction I have ever seen and only a few years old. It barely held itself up never mind a snow load and leaked like a sieve.

Good news is I have a large pile of salvaged lumber and roofing material to work with. There's another 12' x 22' building that is around 100 years old that will be perfect for a woodshop and a barn (19' x 22') out back that will be for everything else, automotive included.
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,854
Location
Palm Coast Florida
Tore it down!

We bought the place knowing full well it was a POS. It was the worst construction I have ever seen and only a few years old. It barely held itself up never mind a snow load and leaked like a sieve.

Good news is I have a large pile of salvaged lumber and roofing material to work with. There's another 12' x 22' building that is around 100 years old that will be perfect for a woodshop and a barn (19' x 22') out back that will be for everything else, automotive included.
I forgot what thread I was in while I was reading your post, had to go to the top of the page to remind myself. This made your post funny to me.lol
 
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niget2002

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
11,253
Location
Josephine, TX
Put the rv fridge back together. Set the fridge and freezer settings and turned it on. 4 hours later, went and checked on it.

1000002768.jpg


Temps are looking much better. I adjusted the fridge temp again so it's not quite so cold and we'll see how the min/max looks in a few days. One person recommended running it a week and pulling the plate in the freezer to see if the coil is freezing up or if the auto defrost is working, so I'll do that too.
 

niget2002

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
11,253
Location
Josephine, TX
Finally made a decision on where to put the footpegs on the kayak. I've been going back and forth in my mind all week while on vacation. Hopefully I chose well. There's no changing it at this point. The instructions had measurements that I hadn't considered, so I took those into account too.

1000002770.jpg
 

oldman_pottering

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2024
Messages
421
Location
Tinonee, NSW Australia
wasn't actually today, last weekend to be exact. the plastic corrugated sheets in my carport are old and brittle and a recent hailstorm killed them, got the remaining one done last Sunday. it's a fart of a job with the pitch of the roof being steep and me being as agile as a brick but I park my ute underneath the damaged sheet so I can use a ladder on the back of it and unscrew the majority of it from underneath, then I tie the extension ladder to the side of my ute and then lay another smaller ladder down on the roofing sheets giving me steps that I can climb, a bit of a workaround but its all done now

PS, I tried inserting the images into the post but errors occurred, is there a file size limit ? Seems attaching them didn't work either
 

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Bessy

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 18, 2012
Messages
995
Location
Ontario, Canada
It really doesn't seem like it, but I did get a burst of energy and tackled some cleanup in the shop today. I shifted my main workbench over ~9" so it's basically butted right up to the welding/grinding table, then I screwed it into the studs, and put all the heavy bench tools in one place, either on or under that bench. It won't stay that way, but for now it gets a lot of the tripping hazards out of the way.

I'm toying with the idea of building a rolling cart for the miter saw, that will **** up against the end of the 6' bench that it currently sits on, so that it's even with the bench top. This way I'll have 13ish feet to the left of the blade. The saw has to be mobile however because the staircase to the attic comes down just to the left end of the bench, so the saw can't remain there permanently.

More slow organizing and planning to go before I make any big purchases of materials, I guess.
 

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,330
Location
The Badlands
Made side support extenders for the sofa table, (new sofa is taller) and anchored it to the wall this time (recliner sofa is further off the wall)

That seemed to be a most of the day sucker... (two trips for "Parts" but I havn't bled on it yet...

I still need to put the workmate and miter saw away, and we can finally put stuff back into and on top of the table (top stuff needs to wait for the big mirror to go up and over about 6" each)
 

vwpieces

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2020
Messages
5,925
Location
Hills, PA
Cut and ground a new glass mirror for a kinda rare and pricey car mirror. For my 1963 VW Notchback.
Modified an old pliers to bend rim a bit. Tried glass cutting and breaking... Failed 2x and went wet saw to rough it. Wet saw chipped it up good. But made it large enough to grind, grind, grind and then some more grinding to size. Little water on the central machinery 4x36 belt sander and 120 grit belt.

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And done.
20240609_194007.jpg
 

Crazyjake8493

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 26, 2014
Messages
3,977
Location
Upstate NY
Since I got my truck, both the 12V outlet and cigarette lighter were constant power and I wanted an ignition-controlled outlet to plug in my bluetooth transmitter for podcasts and music. Removed the cigarette lighter and ran wire to a fuse tap so I have a 12V outlet that's only on while the key is in the ignition - how I wanted it originally. It's also in a more convenient spot than the constant 12V outlet.
 

LWB

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2019
Messages
1,263
Location
ON, Canada
I forgot what thread I was in while I was reading your post, had to go to the top of the page to remind myself. This made your post funny to me.lol

It is funny. I mean look at this **** lol

garage.jpg

WTF is this? A 4 x 4 on a deck block holding up a piecemealed beam? This thing had like a 1-2 pitch. EVEYTHING was wrong. It must have taken forever to build this ****.

garage 1.jpg

This giant post ought to carry the load. It sat on asphalt and wasn't even fastened :cool:

My wife and I are laughing are asses off right now just looking at this pic.
 

MikeOxard

Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2024
Messages
10
i searched before posting, and didn't find a thread like this soooo.......


today, i cleaned up some junk that was in my way. i replaced a bad light fixture, fixed up a tiller, and cleaned up a few things.

how bout you?
Worked on the electrical system of the old Harley Davidson three wheel golf cart..
 

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Magnum440d100

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 2, 2018
Messages
3,581
Location
Indiana
Parts finally arrived a few days ago for the Simplicity zero turn.

So I pulled the deck IMG_4302.jpeg

Yup. That’s a problem IMG_4303.jpeg

Dunno why the failure, but the parts diagram shows a bar connecting the pulleys up top, with a belt guide bar down the side. I’m guessing the bar up top keeps the pulleys from “spreading” under the spring tension. So I whipped something up right quick. I don’t always get to use my drill press. But sure glad I have it!IMG_4306.jpeg

New hardware installed. I ordered a new pulley as well, but what showed up was a 6” pulley with a 1/2” ID bearing. I needed a 4” pulley with a 3/8” ID bearing. So I had to reuse the original NOISEY one. Dammit. But it “works”. IMG_4307.jpeg

Sharpened the worn out blades as well. Previous owner of this machine was NOT kind to them lmao IMG_4305.jpeg


Mowed my 2 acres with it, then lost 2 lug nuts on the left rear wheel. Now I need to replace 4 studs, and a rim. Dammit. Whatever.
 

Magnum440d100

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 2, 2018
Messages
3,581
Location
Indiana
Started tearing out this transmission from the sons truck.
IMG_3523.jpeg

image.jpg
Then it was supper time. Then it wasn’t supper time anymore!!
IMG_0359.jpeg
Glass everywhere!! Had to throw the whole works out!! I was so looking forward to these bad boys!!

Depending on how hungry I was, I might have risked it..lol



Not the same as glass, but way back when, my mom threw our steaks into the gravel road out front of the house. She was in one of her “moods”.

It was late, we were hungry, and money was tight.

My step dad washed them, and cooked them.

Tasted just fine.

I’m glad those days are in the past lmao.
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,854
Location
Palm Coast Florida
Not the same as glass, but way back when, my mom threw our steaks into the gravel road out front of the house. She was in one of her “moods”.

It was late, we were hungry, and money was tight.

My step dad washed them, and cooked them.

Tasted just fine.

I’m glad those days are in the past lmao.
Yup, a quick rinse would have been good enough for me when I was young hungry and budget minded.lol

And now that I think about it, a hot water rinse to get the glass off probably would be what I would have done with the cooked steaks.

It would just seem wrong to waste them.lol
 
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