Spent the day organizing which I have been doing okay with the last several years. But I think I need to get rid of more stuff. Just have too much, its wearing on me. Did get a new shifter boot and console reinstalled in my 85 Mustang.
How old is the Volvo?Pulled the car out of the garage.
As predicted, the Lady of the Garden wanted to go to Costco.
Service light went on in the Volvo. Check engine light came on the way to Costco.
Spent another $200 to add to the $100 earlier this week...
Put the car back in the garage.


2002 C70 convertibleHow old is the Volvo?
That may be the "small, very fast thing" I saw in the garage Monday evening
I saw hundreds of lizards the past 6 days. Possibly more hat the quail on the lowlander road getting up there, in the farmed/ranched foothills... The fire in the NF from 4-5 years back is recovering nicely, but the heat makes deer hunting an excursive in futility. Even up high where it should have been 70's for the daily highs was well into the 80's One day only didn't make it there, but came close... Better than the Western side of the NF where on was high 90s to 104...
Good time with my son, though. Got to do more of this stuff.
Please take a picture.Costco had these lights on sale in the store, $20 for a box of 2. Gave me an idea. Took them home, disassembled them, and cut the metal housings into 2 halves each to make light baffles. Bent them into the right shape and attached them to the inside surface of the runways on the 4 post lift with magnets, and set the bulbs inside the baffles, with the board/cord in the middle. I now have 8' of bright lights on both sides of the runways, lighting up the bottom end of the project car, and with baffles so they don't shine in my eyes.
How much to fix it? Replacement is about $1-2K a month, so if it eats a payment or more every month, then it's probably time. But, if it's only soaking you a few grand a year, then it's a keeper.2002 C70 convertible
I have great mechanic but I'm just tired of the cost of repairs.
Bought it new.
Not sure. I’ll let you know when I get it in to my mechanic.How much to fix it? Replacement is about $1-2K a month, so if it eats a payment or more every month, then it's probably time. But, if it's only soaking you a few grand a year, then it's a keeper.
That's a bit personal, I went inside to checkIs your tip clean?
I'm guilty of not checking these things I must admit, I always grab it and go. This welder was gifted to me from my SIL when he upgraded his machine and I've not done any checking over of the machine (yeah, I'm a slackass). I really should get inside the machine and give it a once over and maybe add a bit of sponge at the rollers have you have done KayHe could also have bad roller tension, worn/wrong rollers,
Excellent to know I'm not alone and there is a reasonYa, I've heard it before. The wire will stick for a second and burn back to the tip
I was wondering how the hunting went. Season starts here, mid October. But it is too warm as well. If you get something you better get it dressed and cooled down asap.
One of my favorite daily drivers was a Formula 350. Loved that car.
That Dingo looks pretty good in that picture. I was expecting to see a clapped out total rust bucket based on your prior descriptions.
That's a job for a man with a strong back and a weak mind as my dad would say.At the advice and approval of my Plumber, I hired a foundation firm to cut, then break up a trench in my building/garage/office. Spent all week cleaning up the dust then hauling off debris, now starting the grade process for over 70 feet of sewer line and new water lines to two future restrooms for my future office build. Saved abou $3500 by hauling it off myself but man is this a workout. I guess I will chalk it up to good exercise.
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Just cause it's old and I beat it, doesn't means I don't take care of it. It's just come due for several major and minor services all at the same time.That Dingo looks pretty good in that picture. I was expecting to see a clapped out total rust bucket based on your prior descriptions.
I can see that as a handy machine. We had one on the job site for about a week and I used it some. Took a while to get used to standing up on the back while controlling it.
That would be even more awkward. I'll stick with walking. It gets me a little exercise, and on the long haul days, a lot.Kay, how have you, of all people, not have a home made air ride suspension platform? lol
That's exactly the way I figure it. I tell my kids, "The least expensive car is the one you own."How much to fix it? Replacement is about $1-2K a month, so if it eats a payment or more every month, then it's probably time. But, if it's only soaking you a few grand a year, then it's a keeper.
Base on your experience, how easy is it to control the dingo in tight places?Just cause it's old and I beat it, doesn't means I don't take care of it. It's just come due for several major and minor services all at the same time.
The Dingo gets run almost every day. Not for as long as it used to. Standing on the back is for chumps. You're better to walk it. I made the platform for mine, $10 vs $500, and I only use it when I need a counterweight. Standing on it beats you, and defeats the excellence of the TX control system. The big Dingos are made to stand on, different controls n all, and IMNSHO they ****.
Depends on the Dingo. The big, 1000 and up, are pretty big. Nearly skidsteer size. Mine is a TX413. The smallest. Less than 3 feet wide, maybe 8 feet long with the bucket.Base on your experience, how easy is it to control the dingo in tight places?
I got a project that requires a lot of digging in a basement type setting that's roughly 5-6ft tall, but the doorway opening is 50' wide and 5ft tall. I thought about renting a dingo for the day to dig out the basement area and also do some landscaping. I need to dig out 1-3ft of dirt in the basement depending on where I am in the basement so anything to help speed up the process without all of the hard labor is what I'm after. But my concern is getting the dingo in and out of the opening without hitting the wall with the bucket. I know the ride on/walk behind mowers are touchy for me to operate and I wouldn't be comfortable using one in a tight space.
Warning: This is offroading and dangerous. Exposing the internals exposes the 120v bare metal contacts. Just don't to it unless you want to burn down your garage and end up dead!Please take a picture.
Did something similar using LED's years ago on my 4-post. It's nice flicking a switch and illuminating the whole underside of the car you're working on, isn't it?Warning: This is offroading and dangerous. Exposing the internals exposes the 120v bare metal contacts. Just don't to it unless you want to burn down your garage and end up dead!
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Looks really good. It's a great accomplishment!
I agree and that's what I've always done. I'm really just feeling defeated right now. So many things going on and at the same time not.That's exactly the way I figure it. I tell my kids, "The least expensive car is the one you own."
Now that is a thing of beauty. Congrats.
That looks beautiful!Finished my kayak
