I've many a time told friends that, if replacing something on a rig that comes in pairs--or fours--replace them all. Why the hell do you think only the one that failed got used?....
Today:
EARLY changed the left lo-beam on the DD toy. (2 months after changing the right... Buy those lamps in pairs guys!)
Stripping the white vinyl off the SS, it's taking a hot bath -one end at a time in SG in the USC and then comes off in sheets cold its a tiny piece at a time...
Not sure if its the heat, the SG, or the USC...but the center section will get some boiling water to see if heat alone was needed.. I know Hot tap water did nothing...
Otherwise avoiding the heat.

^^^^ this is good to know, have seen them and wonderedI love Cubitron Xtract disks.
That vinyl **** on SS... I've posted my feelings before. Unfortunately, soaking a 23' tall by 12' dia fermenter in SG in the ultrasonic isn't really an option. Same goes for kitchen appliances....


KwikFab for the win!I may have made one some 1-2 years ago![]()
Yesterday day in my Outdoor "garage" early check in and test and tune. Today 1s day of event. Car ran well until time to leave and head to the next track for racing on Wednesday. Emergency brake had a issue when we swapped out the slicks.. wrenching in the pits and on the road by 2.00 pm. Made it to Coos Bay oregon at 7.30 pm.Spent the day getting ready for next weeks 5 day, 5 tracks 800 mile drag and drive... wired up a two step, started loading the trailer including building some shelves, trays, hooks out of aluminum in the trailer. Fresh set of plugs in the car. Checked the car over etc... got the motorhome ready for the wife and son to follow to spend the night at each track...
An old Logan lathe?
Thought so. My project lathe (which I sold 90% finished) was also a Montgomery Wards lathe.Yes, sort of. It is a 1943 Montgomery Wards. Right around the time they just made Wards lathes before they came out with their own.

I wish that mine had the legs.Yep, same model basically. I have the original legs also, but the tray is from something else, so I am going with a piece of butcher block counter top to save space in my tiny shop.





Don't confuse need with greedHung some more signs I bought, that I don't need.
How long did you have to fast on the mountaintop?Welded more parts on to the Disc Sander Stand. Removed rivets from more pieces of repurposed bed frame. Determined the finished height of the Disc Sander Stand. Working without a clear vision of the finished product has slowed me up; but now I have acquired the vision.
Tomorrow I will move the stand to a level floor and cut the vertical parts to my designed height.
I don’t fast well, actually I think better on a full stomach.How long did you have to fast on the mountaintop?
Exactly why the repair bill for my wife's car jumped the other day. Needed 1 coil. But... It was on the rear bank so more labor to get to it. Had them do all 3 while they were there. Then, figured... Well, the front 3 are also 90k miles and 16 years old so do them as well.< snip >
I've many a time told friends that, if replacing something on a rig that comes in pairs--or fours--replace them all. Why the hell do you think only the one that failed got used?
< /snip >
Put the car in race trim for coosbay.. My class was second from the bottom today and they got close to running my class and then had two oil downs ( both lanes) track destroyed. Oiled from startline all the way down the track into the pits. Race canceled, put the car back into street trim and off the Woodburn race way. Hit my two check points, ( did the " mandatory " trailer burnouts) Got in at 7.00pm will be making double runs tomorrow to make up for coosbay https://www.facebook.com/redwoodrally https://www.facebook.com/reel/1447592549849699/Yesterday day in my Outdoor "garage" early check in and test and tune. Today 1s day of event. Car ran well until time to leave and head to the next track for racing on Wednesday. Emergency brake had a issue when we swapped out the slicks.. wrenching in the pits and on the road by 2.00 pm. Made it to Coos Bay oregon at 7.30 pm.
That flow switch looks like one for a pool chlorinator.


I've had the same one on my pool for 20 years. Mine is a Hayward. There's times that a brand name counts, and this is one of them. However, you would want to install it vertically. And you'd need a foot or more of straight pipe before it. And they're meant to run in clear water. A stream of **** or the wrong chemistry could possibly jam it in the closed position.I know nothing of pool chlorinators. Are these things known to be particularly failure prone?
I bought this one:
and in August installed it inline with my sump pump outlet flow. In testing it with a garden hose in the pit, it worked great. Pit fills up, pump kicks in, switch closes, alert fires and my phone pings to let me know. Great.
Early this morning was the first real rain storm to hit since I was there. Cameras confirm heavy rain, sump pump definitely pumping, and the alerts started hitting my phone. Mostly great.
The rain stopped a while ago, but I’m still getting alerts. Cameras confirm rain stopped, and the pump is not currently running, there’s no output flow from it, but I’m still getting alerts every minute (service throttled to one per minute).
I‘m thinking that the switch must be stuck closed. It’s a thousand miles away, so I can’t just bop over to have a look at it. But it seems like something that shouldn’t fail in less than a month from installation.
I can disable monitoring of the switch, but that would be sad. If these switches are known to be unreliable over that short a period of time, I’ll just chalk it up to an inexpensive lesson learned.
Magic mushroomsHow long did you have to fast on the mountaintop?
Does it have a moving float or is just a electronic water sensor that may need to dry out?I know nothing of pool chlorinators. Are these things known to be particularly failure prone?
I bought this one:
and in August installed it inline with my sump pump outlet flow. In testing it with a garden hose in the pit, it worked great. Pit fills up, pump kicks in, switch closes, alert fires and my phone pings to let me know. Great.
Early this morning was the first real rain storm to hit since I was there. Cameras confirm heavy rain, sump pump definitely pumping, and the alerts started hitting my phone. Mostly great.
The rain stopped a while ago, but I’m still getting alerts. Cameras confirm rain stopped, and the pump is not currently running, there’s no output flow from it, but I’m still getting alerts every minute (service throttled to one per minute).
I‘m thinking that the switch must be stuck closed. It’s a thousand miles away, so I can’t just bop over to have a look at it. But it seems like something that shouldn’t fail in less than a month from installation.
I can disable monitoring of the switch, but that would be sad. If these switches are known to be unreliable over that short a period of time, I’ll just chalk it up to an inexpensive lesson learned.
