Grant, ya can’t mix pissedoffedness stuff with rockstar stuff. We only got one choice of emoji’s.
Thats screwed you got burned like that. I really hope that pos popped a bunch of those laxatives in one shot and mom has locked him out of the basement.
And everything else, well as usual![]()
Thanks guys! At last I feel that I had the last laugh with the car prowler. I put another pill bottle on there again for next time. Eventually they will learn or maybe they won’t but at least I know they be having a ****** day.Bummer about the break-in.
Excellent work on that fixture!

Even looked up on the Fox site to see if they had another version of the tooling. Nada.










I thought about that but this would have been at the top of a long section so a bit difficult to hold it up in the air and properly supported it.For a 45⁰ surface, you could have supported the workpiece with a v-block and held it in the vise instead of nodding the head over. That may have helped with the chip removal, too.

























Thanks. I’ve learned a hell of a lot from these forums. So hopefully I can pass some knowledge along as wellWow, looks like open heart surgery to me. Very impressed with your knowledge and skills.
Yes. I’ve had a few guys send them in for that already. I’m actually in the process of having custom seals made for them, but the supplier has to make molds / tooling first.Have you considered Blueprinting these motors before they need rebuilding? Installing better bearings and adding more grease into the critical areas before damage is done? Back when I was riding dirt bikes the first thing you did on a new one was a full tear down and then reassembly with grease and suspension fluids!


Thanks! After fighting like hell to have any time with him and still not getting 50/50 (despite not even having a parking ticket in my name) I’ve got zero respect for our legal system.As a child of divorce (mother married 4 times, father 4 times) I know the challenges that you face intimately. My mother blamed everything on my “worthless” father, my father just tried his best. Guess who I had a better relationship with. I will say that your son, like I did, just see everything as just what it is, it is his normal. As I get older and look back on both of my parents I cannot even imagine them being friends, let alone as loving partners. Your son is very lucky to have you as a father.



While they don't make them exactly, there are "ready to solder" PCB kits out there. And an even bigger skill is diagnosing an existing issue (like what you do with bikes). So finding an old Heathkit, downloading the manual, and then having him measure the resistors/capacitors/etc, desolder and then put it back together working correctly may be an even better overall thing. Some of those are dirt cheap, all the way up to crazy expensive (usually around music amps). I know I have half a dozen of them that were under $30-40 each (O-scope, capacitor tester, freq generator, voltmeter, etc).Do they still make those Heath kits?
I’d like to start him with more analog stuff. Ideally something electromechanical. I got him a subscription to these Crunchlabs kits that he absolutely loves and he’s learned a ton from. The next series they have is their Hackpacks so I think that will be a nice stepping stone before doing an Arduino kit. Plus I’ll need to learn some of the coding etc myself as we go.While I've never done these...I understand the Arduino stuff is pretty cool...see here.
I’d love to find something for him to tear down and reverse engineer. I was about his age when my dad brought this electrical mechanical device home from work for me to take apart. Can’t remember for sure but I think it was an early electric typewriter. I loved it. Pretty sure I was about the same age when he had me wire up some circuits too. Just gotta find the right thing. Complicated enough to be interesting but easy enough for him to see success and cheap enough I don’t mind him making mistakes and then having him learn to fix those mistakes. I got a drill press restoration project I want to get to, but that might be a bit too big and heavy for him.While they don't make them exactly, there are "ready to solder" PCB kits out there. And an even bigger skill is diagnosing an existing issue (like what you do with bikes). So finding an old Heathkit, downloading the manual, and then having him measure the resistors/capacitors/etc, desolder and then put it back together working correctly may be an even better overall thing. Some of those are dirt cheap, all the way up to crazy expensive (usually around music amps). I know I have half a dozen of them that were under $30-40 each (O-scope, capacitor tester, freq generator, voltmeter, etc).
And he will have to learn a bit about the "Why" as he figures out diagnostics (like daisy-chaining resistors in serial vs parallel, and what that does to the measuring).
Those look way cool.... reminds me of a modern erector set.... but wow they are quite proud of them with those prices!He might be a bit young, but with your coaching a beginner robot kit from ServoCity might be worth considering. Build per instructions, tear down and rebuild. with your own designs, repeat, adding components as you go.
You might see if your school system has FIRST robotics teams. I‘m a mentor with the HS team and it combines mechanical and programming skills.Those look way cool.... reminds me of a modern erector set.... but wow they are quite proud of them with those prices!
That’s cool! He’s in an after school Lego and robotics club right now 1 day a week, but being it’s at the elementary school (he’s in 3rd grade), it’s very basic. Not sure if it’s affiliated with the First program or not.You might see if your school system has FIRST robotics teams. I‘m a mentor with the HS team and it combines mechanical and programming skills.
FIRST | For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology
Leading youth-serving nonprofit advancing STEM education. Explore FIRST robotics programs for kids of all ages, in schools & communities around the world.www.firstinspires.org
One thing to consider is that it may be hard to get on a team, depending on how competitive your area may be. Our kids need to make a commitment and have some skills before they join, so if this is something that Stian may want to do, it’s not a bad idea to have a plan on how to get there.
Here is a championship match from last season:




I’m most likely going to pick his next bike up new. Between my industry connections and needing to find what equates to an adult bike in kid size there just isn’t a lot out there used. Plus I really don’t want him around the polyurethane paints. Too many health risks to subject a young growing person to.An 8 year old with machinist experience should be a shoo-in for a robotics club. I don’t think I could pound a nail straight @ 7 years let alone run a Bridgeport mill! If you do get your son a new bike I think it would be exciting for him to even paint it like he watched you paint all your projects. To have a basic knowledge of finish paint and how to do it correctly will probably teach him to be fearless in all tasks!










Mind if I pick your brain on how you use the silca presta valve chuck with this set up? I have an analog gauge milton inflator and i currently use what is a supposed to be a lock on schrader chuck to hold the threads of the presta chuck but it always leaks. Just like an infomercial, I keep thinking there has got to be a better way!
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Sorry for the delay... been busy trying to get a new shop space sorted. See bellow.Mind if I pick your brain on how you use the silca presta valve chuck with this set up? I have an analog gauge milton inflator and i currently use what is a supposed to be a lock on schrader chuck to hold the threads of the presta chuck but it always leaks. Just like an infomercial, I keep thinking there has got to be a better way!
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This, exactly. I bought these ones off of Amazon. They aren't perfect, but they are cheap and they work. Some good thread sealant helps too.I'd get a schrader to 1/4" adapter. Looks like they're mostly for the HVAC industry but should work.

The machine is significantly more of a financial commitment than the property is. And it’s big enough that once I install it I will be very motivated to not move it.That’s quite a ski machine, which makes me wonder how much it costs? Looks very cool!
Sorry for the delay... been busy trying to get a new shop space sorted. See bellow.
This, exactly. I bought these ones off of Amazon. They aren't perfect, but they are cheap and they work. Some good thread sealant helps too.
To be honest, I'm not a fan of that Silca valve. The lever is difficult to operate around the spokes. The prestacylce one works way better. Just push it on and its good to go.
I think you will start to see more and more of them as more shops invest in automation. Montana and Reichman also make automated machines. Reichman also makes a smaller one that might solve my floor weight issue too.Sunday River put in one of those ski tuning machines a few years ago. Pretty fun to see it in action.




