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What did you do "IN" your garage today?

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,584
Location
Upstate New York
I was trying to explain to a 30-something the other day how my control system for the brewery hot water works.

When I started explaining relay logic his eyes just glassed over... it's gotta use an Arduino or it just don't make sense.
That's like me explaining the electromechanical logic I designed for the dumbwaiter. You'd swear I was talking about alien tech.
 
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partsguy5768

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2024
Messages
347
Always wanted one of those. I’ve moved so many times that it would have been worth it for me to pay full price for a new one, but I’m a cheap ***. :badteeth:

That’s a winter job if I ever heard of one.
Well this ended up being cheap. 97.00 but the china unit appeared used so i called Amazon... they just took 30.00 off. Now 67.00
 

stihlcollector

Active member
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Messages
42
Location
Glen St Mary FL
I built this coffee table my senior year of high school wood shop in 1976, for my Mom. It had a big oval piece of glass in it, which my younger sister broke twice, and then years later my niece broke twice, so mom was done and it ended up in the shed. I brought it home with me when I closed out their house in Texas a few years ago, and since there isn't room in the house, and my wife really doesn't like it anyway, I made a wood top insert and decorated it with car license tags.
Tag Table 1.JPG
Tag Table 2.JPG
Now it is a display table in the chain saw area and it fits right in. (The wife is from Alabama so I had to include one for her!)
 

aaustins14

Active member
Joined
Dec 1, 2023
Messages
30
Location
Rochester, NY
Disclaimer: Non ‘in the garage’ post but relates to this thread.

I enjoy following along this thread and adding along when I have accomplished something in my shop or feel I have something somewhat useful to comment. Even if I’m not participating it is nice to have a thread that continues on like conversations with friends.

With that being said, I am very curious the age or position in life that y’all are.

I am a young man who has been blessed with a house with a 2 car garage + an attached 2car shop.

I’m just on the shy side of 30 years old, but it seems like age somewhat disappears on the forum and experience and life earned wisdom is what comes out.

Anyway I’m sure some of you could be my parents and probably grandparents. I won’t make the stretch and say great-grandparents but you never know.

Rant over. Good conversations with an age spread of probably 50? years.

-A
 

partsguy5768

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2024
Messages
347
Mm hm.

I guess for that price, as long as it works.
67.00? Good grief a good burger fries and drink is 15.00... just used it to unload 3/4 sheet of medite and rolled into the shop. It doesn't just work. It works just as it should. Smooth, quiet, rolls very nice, lifts at least 500lbs so far effortlessly. Not sure what else its supposed to do. I suppose a 21 year old fit chic in a bikini running it would make it better... but other then that not sure what would make it better in your book.
 

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Hooked

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 24, 2010
Messages
441
Location
League City, Texas
Thought I'd give a report on the recent expenditure I was obligated to spend as a result of the LoadHandler link a week or so back.
The good news is assembly was easy then I hauled and, easily, unloaded 3, 2-yard loads of mulch on Tuesday. Only took a couple minutes per load. Actually unloaded 4 but one was done manually off my trailer, left there from last week because it started raining.
The not-so-good news is the mounting brackets don't fit properly on the tailgate of my 1994 F350. The instructions say it should be 'snug' but it is very loose such that when pressure is applied the whole things drops down degrading the effectiveness of the thing. So, each load we had to spend time messing with the thing to get it 'rolling' correctly. With that going on the mat rolled up off center which mashed it up on one end.
I plan to call them to see if I did something wrong or there's just an inherent problem with my particular tailgate size.
 

zanyad

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 26, 2018
Messages
2,808
Location
NE Ohio
Is that a pantograph in the second picture?

Im not sure what your looking at but there is a lathe, drill press, Barker horizontal mill and a Bridgeport!

This thing that we're looking at the back of

1750896443115.png
Niget2002, I see the aforementioned Barker horizontal mill on a rolling table. It's got a swiveling milling vise on the table, a slab cutter in the spindle, and the overarm support above. The motor is hanging off the contraption at the bottom right, linked belt to the large pulley, V-belt (?) to the spindle pulley. Some major speed reduction going on there.
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,701
Location
Palm Coast Florida
67.00? Good grief a good burger fries and drink is 15.00... just used it to unload 3/4 sheet of medite and rolled into the shop. It doesn't just work. It works just as it should. Smooth, quiet, rolls very nice, lifts at least 500lbs so far effortlessly. Not sure what else its supposed to do. I suppose a 21 year old fit chic in a bikini running it would make it better... but other then that not sure what would make it better in your book.
You misunderstood my post. My point was normally I would return a used part, but yours works and was super affordable. Like you, in this case, I would have been happy with the purchase. :beer:
 

ObnoxiousFumes

Well-known member
Joined
May 22, 2023
Messages
1,505
Location
Southwest Sask
But I did try one hack that I saw on the tube of youse that worked. Had a helluva time seeing sat night. Headlight lenses totally fogged over.

Deep woods off, 25% deet, rinse with vinegar, perfecto. I have tried them all, bought the kits, but this is the best one. The cleanest I've ever got them. Now to see how long it lasts.
The problem is the UV protection layer gets removed, by sanding or whatever, and so they cloud up quite quickly again. The best way is sand them down and shoot a coat of good UV resistant clear on them.
 

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,584
Location
Upstate New York
The problem is the UV protection layer gets removed, by sanding or whatever, and so they cloud up quite quickly again. The best way is sand them down and shoot a coat of good UV resistant clear on them.
WipeNew provides a decent coating that doesn't cloud up, and doesn't require the paint gun. The Burg's headlights and dash are going on 10 years. The PT headlights are going on 6.
 

oldman_pottering

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2024
Messages
421
Location
Tinonee, NSW Australia
Disclaimer: Non ‘in the garage’ post but relates to this thread.

I enjoy following along this thread and adding along when I have accomplished something in my shop or feel I have something somewhat useful to comment. Even if I’m not participating it is nice to have a thread that continues on like conversations with friends.

With that being said, I am very curious the age or position in life that y’all are.

I am a young man who has been blessed with a house with a 2 car garage + an attached 2car shop.

I’m just on the shy side of 30 years old, but it seems like age somewhat disappears on the forum and experience and life earned wisdom is what comes out.

Anyway I’m sure some of you could be my parents and probably grandparents. I won’t make the stretch and say great-grandparents but you never know.

Rant over. Good conversations with an age spread of probably 50? years.

-A
I never had old age when I was young
 
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nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
32,008
Location
Coronado, CA
My Amazon order from yesterday arrived and after working with my fitness trainer and enjoying Lunch I center punched two holes drilled and tapped them for 10-32 and mounted the Switch Box on the bracket I welded yesterday.

The shadows began to get long and I decided to call it an afternoon.

The Part Time Office Manager has arrived and we will be going to work right away
 

CoogarXR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
6,863
Location
Ohio
It was only 900 degrees today instead of the 1000 it's been for the last several days, so I hung some led shop lights in the new garage. Two over the bench/toolboxes, one over the parts bins. I have one more to put on the other side of the garage, but I was sweating too hard, lol. I'll leave that for another day. At least I can see now.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,923
Location
Far NE Oregon
It was only 900 degrees today instead of the 1000 it's been for the last several days, so I hung some led shop lights in the new garage. Two over the bench/toolboxes, one over the parts bins. I have one more to put on the other side of the garage, but I was sweating too hard, lol. I'll leave that for another day. At least I can see now.
Standing on a ladder up in the rafters isn't really the best place to be on a hot afternoon.
 
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kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,584
Location
Upstate New York
It was only 900 degrees today instead of the 1000 it's been for the last several days, so I hung some led shop lights in the new garage. Two over the bench/toolboxes, one over the parts bins. I have one more to put on the other side of the garage, but I was sweating too hard, lol. I'll leave that for another day. At least I can see now.
Crapazon sells nifty headbands. I wear one in the blistering heat, so the burning sweat stays out of my eyes.
 

DGersic

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 12, 2017
Messages
6,349
Location
DeKalb, IL
Fenders back on:

IMG_7230.jpeg

Part of that was yesterday, finished today & got the wheels back on.


Last time I used the tank weed sprayer, it‘s leaking. Debugging it:

IMG_7231.jpeg


The leak is at the cover for the spring on the trigger valve. Looks like this little piece of rubber is no longer sealing.

IMG_7232.jpeg


I tried cutting a rubber seal. It helped, but still leaking. So I goobered up the threads with some silicon. We’ll see if that helps. If not, I guess HF can sell me another one.

IMG_7234.jpeg


Cleaned, flung, and put away stuff. Benches cleaned off.

IMG_7235.jpeg
 

TurnipTruck

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 28, 2005
Messages
1,579
Location
Southcentral Alaska
Today’s goal was to fix this thirty five year old floorjack.

I loaned it out to a friend twenty years ago who bent it somehow, so it had a pretty hefty parallelogram to the frame. I straightened it out no problem, but it would immediately fold over again under load. To fix THAT, I welded plate steel to the bottom. After the repair, and since I had several other jacks, this one became the outside jack because it wouldn’t sink in the gravel.
Recently (this century, I think), the handle started jamming or popping out due to all the dragging and tugging it has suffered, and I had had enough. I unscrewed the handle capture bolt and found its little dog point had been jaggedly sheared off. I needed to make a new step bolt.

Here is the old and the new:
IMG_5827.jpeg

And the channel in the handle that the dog point engages: Focus!
IMG_5828.jpeg

BUT. To get to this point, I had to find a 3 jaw chuck, since neither of the chucks on my prewar Atlas Babbitt lathe would hold a small hex reliably. WTH, is that a 2.5 inch 3jaw?
IMG_5825.jpeg

I found a local machinist had a surplus new-in-box imported 5” 3jaw, and eBay had a cast iron back plate that would adapt it to my 1.5”-8 headstock with a little machining and a little drilling.
IMG_5824.jpeg
Viola! Chips!


And now I know a little more about what tooling this abused antique lathe needs. Also, I won’t have to crawl under another precariously-supported truck because the handle pulled off again.
IMG_5829.jpeg

Dog. Point!
 

four.cycle

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
29,043
Location
Tacoma, Washington
My buddy came over earlier. He was going to start on the window crank on the Ranger, but we got distracted.
So he overhauled the garage door opener remote that's been giving me fits for two years.
Took a bit of imagination and about 30 trips out into the garage to find a tiny piece of wire, terminal, screw and nut, etc.
Seems to work just dandy now.
Then he fixed the window crank on the Ranger. He installed a new window regulator last week, but unfortunately the hole into which the screw that holds the crank handle to the regulator wasn't threaded, so I went down to Tacoma Screw this morning and bought a tap and a drill. So nice when I can roll the window up and down without a major hassle.
He was pretty happy with the "DuraTech" thin metric open ends, and the electrical connector pliers.
Yes, yes.... the photo is out of focus... but then so are we most of the time. ;)
 

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2001ZR2

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2018
Messages
416
Location
Kansas City
I got a job done on the driveway done before the thunderstorms started. Pulled the HVAC blower out of the 1997 Suburban. Cleaned the air box and heater core out. Got a lot of leaves and dirt out. Should help the air significantly. Parts from Rock Auto to fix A/C system schedule to arrive tomorrow.

Had done this once before but was able to use the Bauer Mirco detailing kit from HF this time to clear out the leaves and vacuum the fins.

Micro-Cleaning Accessory Kit for Wet/Dry Vacuums, 9-Piece https://share.google/ulwXnIGqhRHRPNQjs
 

red61cj5

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 31, 2016
Messages
3,752
Location
West Virginia
Pulled the bed off my son’s 14 f150 to do some rust mitigation before it gets out of control. My old 2005 still ran great but the rear frame got so bad it wasn’t safe anymore. This one’s gonna get power washed, POR-15’dIMG_1817.jpeg, then fluid filmed with bed off. Bed supports are the first to go on these trucks, these look bad but are actually salvageable.IMG_1816.jpeg
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,701
Location
Palm Coast Florida
Today’s goal was to fix this thirty five year old floorjack.

I loaned it out to a friend twenty years ago who bent it somehow, so it had a pretty hefty parallelogram to the frame. I straightened it out no problem, but it would immediately fold over again under load. To fix THAT, I welded plate steel to the bottom. After the repair, and since I had several other jacks, this one became the outside jack because it wouldn’t sink in the gravel.
Recently (this century, I think), the handle started jamming or popping out due to all the dragging and tugging it has suffered, and I had had enough. I unscrewed the handle capture bolt and found its little dog point had been jaggedly sheared off. I needed to make a new step bolt.

Here is the old and the new:
IMG_5827.jpeg

And the channel in the handle that the dog point engages: Focus!
IMG_5828.jpeg

BUT. To get to this point, I had to find a 3 jaw chuck, since neither of the chucks on my prewar Atlas Babbitt lathe would hold a small hex reliably. WTH, is that a 2.5 inch 3jaw?
IMG_5825.jpeg

I found a local machinist had a surplus new-in-box imported 5” 3jaw, and eBay had a cast iron back plate that would adapt it to my 1.5”-8 headstock with a little machining and a little drilling.
IMG_5824.jpeg
Viola! Chips!


And now I know a little more about what tooling this abused antique lathe needs. Also, I won’t have to crawl under another precariously-supported truck because the handle pulled off again.
IMG_5829.jpeg

Dog. Point!
I have that same jack, and probably just as old. I only have a 4 jaw chuck on my antique lathe, so I won’t haze you for buying a 3 jaw chuck instead of just getting a longer bolt.lol

How would a longer bolt have saved you from buying a 3 jaw chuck you ask? You chuck the threaded end of the longer bolt, You sacrifice the threads at the end of the longer bolt.

But let’s be honest, a 3 jaw is so much quicker for stuff like this. I’d probably use my lathe more often if I had a 3 jaw.
 

Skyman

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2021
Messages
1,208
Location
Central Maryland
My buddy came over earlier. He was going to start on the window crank on the Ranger, but we got distracted.
So he overhauled the garage door opener remote that's been giving me fits for two years.
Took a bit of imagination and about 30 trips out into the garage to find a tiny piece of wire, terminal, screw and nut, etc.
Seems to work just dandy now.
Then he fixed the window crank on the Ranger. He installed a new window regulator last week, but unfortunately the hole into which the screw that holds the crank handle to the regulator wasn't threaded, so I went down to Tacoma Screw this morning and bought a tap and a drill. So nice when I can roll the window up and down without a major hassle.
He was pretty happy with the "DuraTech" thin metric open ends, and the electrical connector pliers.
Yes, yes.... the photo is out of focus... but then so are we most of the time. ;)
Nicely done. I particularly like the clever soldering iron stand.
 

four.cycle

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2015
Messages
29,043
Location
Tacoma, Washington
Nicely done. I particularly like the clever soldering iron stand.
In 1981, right after I met this guy, we went over to one of my girlfriend's houses. She had a BIC lighter that wasn't working properly.
He disassembled it, reversed the flint, stretched the spring out a wee bit, re-attached the metal cap, and voila! Back in working order.
There's a reason this is the guy who does all the work on my vehicles. Doesn't matter what it is: he'll figure out how to fix it. He was ecstatic about fixing that remote - he loves a good challenge. The screw and nut at the top is the new "contact point" for the momentary switch - which is the part that was broken. (I had previously glued the unit back together multiple times and re-soldered the wires back onto the circuit board at least twice.)
 

rd65

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2017
Messages
2,796
Location
Granite Falls, WA
Fenders back on:

IMG_7230.jpeg

Part of that was yesterday, finished today & got the wheels back on.


Last time I used the tank weed sprayer, it‘s leaking. Debugging it:

IMG_7231.jpeg


The leak is at the cover for the spring on the trigger valve. Looks like this little piece of rubber is no longer sealing.

IMG_7232.jpeg


I tried cutting a rubber seal. It helped, but still leaking. So I goobered up the threads with some silicon. We’ll see if that helps. If not, I guess HF can sell me another one.

IMG_7234.jpeg


Cleaned, flung, and put away stuff. Benches cleaned off.

IMG_7235.jpeg
Nice door pulls on that upper cabinet. Dimmer switch pedal?
 
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