niget2002
Well-known member
Took stock of some materials to see what I needed to buy to build a foam cutter.
Nichrome wire. Everything else is from the scrap rack.Took stock of some materials to see what I needed to buy to build a foam cutter.
Close. Nichrome wire, bolts, and some wing nuts. Wing nuts are purely for convenience. Bolts because the bolts I have are the wrong length for the size I want to use. I just don't keep #8 bolts 2" long in stock :/ I'll have a few left over for future projects.Nichrome wire. Everything else is from the scrap rack.
I have few of them:
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The two on the left are Coleman 500s, the right are 500As. The 500As are custom paint jobs.
Next time, maybe use the shop vacuum trick. Have someone hold the shop vac nozzle on the oil fill spout while the vac is running remove the plug and then shut the vac off just long enough to drain the oil amount you need and then turn it back on and install the plug. Then check the oil level and top off if needed with the oil you captured.Well, I learned that no matter how many times you see the same answer on the internet to a question, that doesn’t mean it’s right. Maybe my search terms weren’t 100% correct, but everything I saw said the the oil capacity was 2 quarts for the mule we have. Found out today that wasn’t true as the oil was about 4” over the full line on the dipstick. Tried to pump it out through the top with no luck so I tried loosening to drain plug just enough that it would slowly drain some out. That didn’t work either as it didn’t let anything out until the plug was completely out. Ran to town and got 2 more quarts of oil and put the proper 1.1 quarts in it.
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Left to right, they're a B (late half of the year) '47, B '51 and two Jan. '55. I'd have to look it up, but early '60s would be about the most recent manufacture. The burner on these is cast iron, unlike any of the newer Coleman stoves. They're big, with a base dia of 10".that's great ! are they older styles ? I've never seen a burner with that sort of top on it
Left to right, they're a B (late half of the year) '47, B '51 and two Jan. '55. I'd have to look it up, but early '60s would be about the most recent manufacture. The burner on these is cast iron, unlike any of the newer Coleman stoves.
I don't know if these were ever made or sold in OZ--Coleman did have a plant there.
I thought about trying that, but wasn’t sure if it would work. Tried using a suction pump with a long tube down the filler hole but it stopped before getting to any oil.Next time, maybe use the shop vacuum trick. Have someone hold the shop vac nozzle on the oil fill spout while the vac is running remove the plug and then shut the vac off just long enough to drain the oil amount you need and then turn it back on and install the plug. Then check the oil level and top off if needed with the oil you captured.
I need to do that to our new Stihl battery blower. The damned safety switch assumes my thumb is 6" long.Does my living room count?
I finally removed the safety switch on my M12 Hatchet. It was such a pain to use
(crotch shot deleted)
Decided to dive into insulating and drywalling the garage. First time ever doing both. ***** but cheaper than hiring someone else to do it, lol
What in the hell?
I would burn that garage down!What part has you tricked, bested, outplayed, backstabbed, and quite possibly bamboozled?
I would burn that garage down!



If I can get to a middle ground, I’ll go with that.
More testing required…..
Like how? Make strong coffee and use it instead of vinegar? Or put coffee grounds in the vinegar?Try strong coffee instead of tea.
How are you using the tea? Same approach.Like how? Make strong coffee and use it instead of vinegar? Or put coffee grounds in the vinegar?
In tea bags. Maybe a dumb question, but I have never seen coffee in bags. But also never looked.How are you using the tea? Same approach.
They make or made instant coffee in tea bags. A buddy used them up hunting.In tea bags. Maybe a dumb question, but I have never seen coffee in bags. But also never looked.
That vise. Man, how do you deal with all of that brutal northeast Oregon rust?Yesterday, I ruined the patina on this old (early '40s) vise:
This AM, I performed thoracic surgery on a Rinnai C199 commercial-grade on-demand water heater:
It needed a valve and aorta transplant and some neurological work:
The "aorta" I had to replace:
Glad I caught that before the aneurysm failed and did any damage.
Back to work:
and ready to heat water to make beer. The setpoint readout should say 185.
I think I'll work on the vise some more once the sun moves behind the warehouse so I can grind outside in the shade. The jaws need some serious re-profiling before she's a user.
Things left outside will rust... eventually. I once asked at a yard sale if they had any old Coleman stuff. The old fellow running the show said yep, there's a tree full of old lanterns out back--if you see anything you want, bring it up. I picked five lanterns from the tree (I guess they really do grow there). Of the five, four became runners. The fifth was rotted out from the inside due to really bad fuel.That vise. Man, how do you deal with all of that brutal northeast Oregon rust?
Around here, we call that one a gopher snake. Looks full-grown. Harmless but looks a lot like a rattler.
If it stays around, you'll have no mice at all. Likely more effective than a cat.......
Bonus: They eat other snakes--including the nasty types. We used to bring 'em home and toss into the attic to control packrats.Around here, we call that one a gopher snake. Looks full-grown. Harmless but looks a lot like a rattler.
If it stays around, you'll have no mice at all. Likely more effective than a cat.......
While we did have a zip code when my bride and I bought our first house in 1979, the post office at the time almost always figured out how to deliver the mail. My best man was back in the army for his last year of service and didn’t know our address. Back then, calling from Germany would have been insanely expensive for an E4. So he wrote us a letter with our names. For the address, he simply put: “the run-down house on the corner of xxxx street or xxxx avenue, where the hippies used to live- the one that used to have an American flag for curtains in the second floor window over the front door”. He didn’t have the street name correct, but had the city and zip correct. We received the letter 3 days after he posted it in Germany.If you addressed a letter to Kay McCampbell, RD#1, New York. I would get it, and often did.
30-odd years ago, I received a package addressed to my name, Wallowa County, OR. It was delivered to me at the coffee house I used to frequent. The package was from an old GF and contained a box of breakfast cereal we once enjoyed together--Peanut Butter Capt'n Crunch.If you addressed a letter to Kay McCampbell, RD#1, New York. I would get it, and often did.
