JEFFREYWisconsin
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2021
- Messages
- 380
I haven't decided to limit launches to purely defensive yet.Better make sure you have your insurance updated to include defensive missile launches.
I haven't decided to limit launches to purely defensive yet.Better make sure you have your insurance updated to include defensive missile launches.
I wonder if a heat gun would soften it up?The kitchen manager asked me this AM if I wanted an easy, fifteen-minute job....
On my **** list, right next to the idiots who invent new, unneeded and unasked-for fasteners, is the person who invented this "protective" wrap for stainless:
LATER THAT DAY:
There are three of those.
It gets a little easier from here on out. The green aerosol sprayer is acetone. I spray it around the edges of the wrap and anywhere there is visible damage. It seems to seep under the film and somewhat loosen the grip.
CONSIDERABLY LATER THAT DAY:
An hour and fifteen minutes for a fifteen minute job. Not bad.
IKEA is purely amateur hour when it comes to assembling flat-pack furniture.
Use drones.Got a cellular 5k wifi router for the shop/garage and as a backup for the house in case our cable modern ever goes down.
Now I can start to put a couple of cameras out there as I get the place set up.
I will also have the cameras connected to small missile launchers which can take out thieves, burglars or other unsavories remotely.
Ok, just the cameras for now...
Kind of--but it also makes the plastic film softer and easier to tear. For the stuff that sat outside for a year, it was solvents (acetone, mostly), plastic scrapers and heat gun--and a 55 gallon barrel of elbow grease.I wonder if a heat gun would soften it up?
McMaster Carr is two days out (minimum), twenty bucks in shipping, and the set screws aren't stainless! Been there, done that.6462lk16
McMaster Carr is your friend
They're collars for mounting stuff to 1/2" SS rod--not threaded. Two will be welded to a narrow plate; two are just retainers.Nice work.. What are them locking nuts you making for?
That was my first thought.I wonder if a heat gun would soften it up?
Ahh!outside for a year










Same deal for the roofing. It got glued to the ground with a snow, leaves, ice mix, and stayed there until the rain stopped in late June. It took me all summer. I don't envy you stripping all that ****. I don't have the patience for it anymore.Imagine having to peel that protective wrap off a 12' dia X 28' tall fermenter that's been sitting outside in the sun for a year. That took about a week. Imagine just how much stainless steel wrapped in that **** there is in a brewery and commercial kitchen.
That was my thought when I tried to peel the roofing. But it peeled the Kynar color coat off the galvalume with the plastic sheeting. I wound up waiting till cooler weather to do the big peel.I wonder if a heat gun would soften it up?
Damn. here it’s order before 9:00 and it’s delivered by 1:00.McMaster Carr is two days out (minimum), twenty bucks in shipping, and the set screws aren't stainless! Been there, done that.
It took me longer to set up the tools than it did to make four of these. These are purely for anchoring stuff to round rods, so don't need to be perfect or balanced.
Next is to weld two of those to some 1/2" SS angle for mounting a 1/2" copper tube with hose clamps. I speaks Bubba jest fine, thanks.
Local courier service. Or I could drive 20 minutes and pick up in will-call.Damn. here it’s order before 9:00 and it’s delivered by 1:00.
Living far from nowhere is great--but has some drawbacks. Thankfully one large one--toourons--starts tapering off after next weekend. But there is no such thing as "next day delivery" and I have to try to convince some of our vendors not to waste money on it. UPS or USPS ground is often the same.Damn. here it’s order before 9:00 and it’s delivered by 1:00.
Peeling the stuff off is a LOT easier when it's fresh and undamaged. I think. Not sure I've ever seen any that wasn't abused.Peeling that sticky backing is pretty quick and easy if/when the shop is warm.
At my last job I was a welder doing MIG and TIG on stainless, so many of the stainless steel parts on our pallets would have that backing still on it even after being laser cut.
Just have to find that edge, but a heatgun helps a ton in those areas where you're pulling up and it's not pulling away from the steel.
I'm not laughing at you, I'm laughing with you. Honest.Same deal for the roofing. It got glued to the ground with a snow, leaves, ice mix, and stayed there until the rain stopped in late June. It took me all summer. I don't envy you stripping all that ****. I don't have the patience for it anymore.
I guess I’m spoiled. When I was working we would be ordering from them daily. Or 2-3 times a day. We bought enough at the plant, we did receive a discount.Living far from nowhere is great--but has some drawbacks. Thankfully one large one--toourons--starts tapering off after next weekend. But there is no such thing as "next day delivery" and I have to try to convince some of our vendors not to waste money on it. UPS or USPS ground is often the same.
Peeling the stuff off is a LOT easier when it's fresh and undamaged. I think. Not sure I've ever seen any that wasn't abused.
As for a warm shop, it's been in the nineties the last few days. Warm enough for me.
Peeling the stuff off is a LOT easier when it's fresh and undamaged. I think. Not sure I've ever seen any that wasn't abused.
As for a warm shop, it's been in the nineties the last few days. Warm enough for me.
You might be a redneck if....You're telling me, it was over 102 today and I just redid an entire outdoor grill
Tending to the sunburn behind my neck...
Amazon felt bad when their expedited delivery took a week, so they dialed me up to next day for the next shipment, for free. Still a week. I'm never in a hurry. I grew up with weekly mail delivery.But there is no such thing as "next day delivery" and I have to try to convince some of our vendors not to waste money on it. UPS or USPS ground is often the same.
You might be a redneck if....
Useless fact o' the day: Redneck comes from the Boer war. The Boers, who spoke Afrikaans, a Dutch dialect, referred to the Brits as rooinek due to the red scarves they traditionally wore.
Or so I heard....
I’m rarely in a hurry, but Amazon offers early AM, next day delivery choose between 4:00 AM - 8:00 AM or 7:00 AM - 8:00 AM. Part of me doesn’t mind making them jump through hoops. I think they use their warehouse staff to deliver on their way home, their usual trucks / vans are not making those first deliveries. Obviously we’re in a larger, denser market, but their service levels have been pretty good.Amazon felt bad when their expedited delivery took a week, so they dialed me up to next day for the next shipment, for free. Still a week. I'm never in a hurry. I grew up with weekly mail delivery.
I did "hear" it from reading British histories of the Boer wars (yes, plural). And it makes sense, as the basic facts all align.That's an age-old myth!
But yeah I heard that one before.
Yeah my shade is quite a bit more brown lol
Don't let me owning two Corvettes fool you into thinking I'm a jorts and New Balance wearing fella![]()
^^^^^this is the constant battle I have with ........................umm, everyoneit's sometimes hard to explain something that only exists in my head.
It's the same here in LA. Chicago and LA are the two locations for McMaster.I guess I’m spoiled. When I was working we would be ordering from them daily. Or 2-3 times a day. We bought enough at the plant, we did receive a discount.
Driving there isn’t exactly scenic. Or not as scenic as the PNW.
I remember everything that I ordered from the back of the comic book to six weeks to deliver. I also remember sending cash because I didn't want my parents to know that I ordered the 1000 piece army man set. When it arrived, there was a note in the box that said I shouldn't send cash.I grew up with weekly mail delivery.











Imagine having to peel the Styrofoam insulation off a glass coke bottle as a 4-year-old kid and then for them to switch to the plastic label on those new plastic bottles! The struggle was real!Imagine having to peel that protective wrap off a 12' dia X 28' tall fermenter that's been sitting outside in the sun for a year. That took about a week. Imagine just how much stainless steel wrapped in that **** there is in a brewery and commercial kitchen.
Be very careful welding in your garage. Two years ago, my neighbor was welding and went in the house for lunch and came out to a full flame. He lost a bunch plus a totally restored 57 chevy. He wished it to be his house other than the car and the time he put into it. And dirty rags, I always hang outside a few days.Sometimes, I do free work (even if it's harder fixing than it is to replace with something new).
My cousin stopped, just having arrived yesterday evening with his grill (lives 3-4 hours away).
I offered to fix it when I was at his house a few months ago, suggesting to simply buy the steel I provide. My initial plan was to use some steel plate I keep on hand for paying jobs, and buying square tube to make a completely new assembly and simply re-use the grilling portion.
Due to unforseen circumstances (wife needed emergency dental visit), put me on a time crunch to do all the work today.
Grill was fully rusted, angle was actually re-used scrap from old bed frames (previous owner), the half barrel bottom was completely rusted through, and it was completely out of square in every direction.
I didn't snap a before picture, but this was after I cut out the rusted sides, as well as cutting down the top of the angle iron width in half.
(the other scrap was thrown in the bed of his truck lol this was the second bunch of scrap)
Since I cut the short-length cross members off, I opted to replace them with some in-line with the length-wise cross members.
I also didn't like the bare angle iron used for the other end of the grill, so I welded nuts on some square cut outs and welded those to the ends to provide adjustable feet
Here I've got the first two panels welded up to the frame, before I gather more measurements for cutting the remaining panels.
So in the end, he got a larger (deeper) box for wood/charcoal, adjustable feet, reinforced frame, a wider top to allow the grilling surface to sit farther in, the top frame gusseted, and lastly some "stops" I welded in on the inside of the square tube to prevent the grill from going down and hitting the charcoal.
The old material was really thin gauge metal, so I went up a gauge thicker as well as having provided additional pre-cut panels to place within the setup itself.
It's already on its way back home to get hit with a wire wheel and some high-temp paint.
Keep in mind, it was rusted for quite some time and my cousin owned and used it (almost daily) for a good +12 years.
Glad to give it another chance at life even though it would've been faster and easier to have welded a new frame, fully square.![]()
