XJSuperman
Well-known member
Indeed it is.It's very blue.
Indeed it is.It's very blue.
Almost bought a Magic Creeper when they came out. But I'm too cheap. Cardboard outside, Usually nothing in the shop, which I later regret. I have an old plastic creeper hanging on the wall.The only creeper I own, Amazon keeps me stocked up.![]()
I have a 50yo wooden Craftsman creeper, that I recently rewheeled. Indoors it's great. It rolls like **** in gravel. That's where the cardboard comes in.Almost bought a Magic Creeper when they came out. But I'm too cheap. Cardboard outside, Usually nothing in the shop, which I later regret. I have an old plastic creeper hanging on the wall.
Honestly anytime I attempted to work using a creeper I spend time fighting to get it into a position, only for it to move on me as I am trying to losen/tighten something.I have a 50yo wooden Craftsman creeper, that I recently rewheeled. Indoors it's great. It rolls like **** in gravel. That's where the cardboard comes in.
Exactly. Mine also gets stuck on a pebble on the shop floor, that's why it hangs on the wall in shame.Honestly anytime I attempted to work using a creeper I spend time fighting to get it into a position, only for it to move on me as I am trying to losen/tighten something.
An occasional sweep helps that immensely.Exactly. Mine also gets stuck on a pebble on the shop floor, that's why it hangs on the wall in shame.
A friend gave me a bunch of old yoga mats, they roll up and have a velcro tie to keep them tidy! I throw one or two down even in the gravel drive, they work great. Sometimes I even leave one rolled up to put under my head!Honestly anytime I attempted to work using a creeper I spend time fighting to get it into a position, only for it to move on me as I am trying to losen/tighten something.
Why I have not owned one in a long time, if the ground is wet a tarp goes on first, then followed by the cardboard.
Also sliding on the cardboard is a breeze, grab onto something and push/pull...
For gravel I have one of those exercise yoga mats, only kept for that specific use.
Absolutely! they are also easily disposable and replaceable. I've used them in the mountains as well.
I do like my plastic slide sheets for oil changes though; if you drip, it's an easy cleanup.
just pre-disastered. good to go now.I feel like that boats jinxed.
Thanks!That hurts to look at, it may have been enough to get me out of boating for a while.
My grandfather was a boat builder, I grew up around it. I know the work...You did a heck of a job on the repairs.
Yep, highly unlikely another oak tree will fall on it!just pre-disastered. good to go now.
Coolant replacement. Glad I did, looks like it had the incorrect regular green stuff. This car uses a coolant-oil heat exchanger for the trans, which is known to fail causing the trans to fill with coolant from corrosive/incorrect coolants. The heat exchanger is located under the intake manifold...and I can't imagine what a trans rebuild costs.....so we want to avoid that project.
First time using one of these Vac coolant refillers. Hopefully it pulled all the air out, with front mount rads I was a bit concerned. It did help prevent a mess.
Follow along here, with more details.
You are moving PDQ on that thing.A good bit of RAS reassembly.
I have had a good bit of uninterrupted time and a few days where the weather has come around. Work isn't causing me to work late either so I get a few hours each eve and full days on the weekends after I hit the gym.You are moving PDQ on that thing.
Thank you sir…Follow along here, with more details.
Dewalt MBF Radial Arm Saw- slow "restoration"
I came across a FREE.99 Dewalt radial arm saw. Its next on the list in the shop. It's in semi rough condition. I'm just beginning to take it down, clean, degrease and ext. It is complete, but will need some paint, power cord, cleaning and a blade. The bearings, new ones would be best I think...www.garagejournal.com



use some spray on footpowder to find leak areasIt was Mazda3 maintenance morning, due for both an oil and an ATF change. Used the QuickJack, both went well (had to take the , no mess.
However, I did see a bit of coolant on top of the AT and couldn't find the source. The exposed threads on one of the radiator hoses was green but I couldn't find any leak paths. I figure I'll just change all six hoses (rad, heater, oil cooler) since it's due for a coolant change soon anyway.
Also, the oil leak from somewhere seems to be getting worse. There's a bit of leakage on the back of the valve cover gasket, but I think the larger leak might be coming from the timing cover at the T-joint between it, the head, and the block; there's a TSB for that problem. Unfortunately it's not a minor job.
I also happened to find a TSB that explains why the stupid thing has always had a slow leak around the oil plug. I eventually went to a Fumoto valve but it's still leaking slightly...next oil change, I'm tempted to remove the Fumoto and throw some RTV around the edge of the drain before reinstallation.
Yay cars!
Exactly.The cardboard also pads against driveway rocks.
Good idea, thanks!use some spray on footpowder to find leak areas
That looks far better than any Craftsman tool I ever saw!Broke this down, packed it into my truck for the new owner. I did it a quite a few months back, maybe 6 or so. I posted it for sale with a plan to keep and use it while I restored one of my grandfathers, but it sold before I got to the one I use daily. I'm going to deliver it tomorrow. I was able to find all the proper depth stop nuts, so the make shift ones have been replaced with original hardware.
Did you have a schematic or did you troubleshoot by inspection and intuition?Took some work home. Switch mode power supply for the building elevators wasn't working.
Few new components and we're as good as new!
Hakko FR301 is a real game changer if you're doing a lot of desoldering.
