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What did you do "IN" your garage today?

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bugnut

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jul 14, 2012
Messages
3,995
Location
Central Ohio
With the help of @Ultradog MN I was able to identify a missing spring on the Ford tractor received new one and installed today after smacking the back of my hand on the hard parts of the tractor in my first failed attempt. Fired up the tractor and it will hit and hold 2200rpms!! Then cleaned and swept. Then onto the Baja, it has been aligned but still acting squirrely when driving. Talked to my tire guru and he said lower air pressure more front end weight. So dropped fronts to 12psi, rears at 20 and added 180 lbs under the hood. Test drive shows it is way better, 65 on country roads was not wandering, highway testing coming up.
 

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PhantomEB

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 6, 2006
Messages
6,817
Location
Medicine Hat, AB, Canuckistan
The 2012 Ram3500 disabled until my TIPM comes back tomorrow refurbished, shop said full diagnostic done and everything works. Sure got my fingers crossed that everything or at least more than before works like new. Issues prior were no AC and back brake/turn signals/running lights very weak if at all.

so had to change out my O2 sensors on the daily driver on the back lane apron.

moved the bronco back 12-18 inches and put the spare 42” tire behind the back bumper as to mock up where it’s actually gonna sit in the shop once the spare tire carrier is built this winter at my buddies shop.

started final emptying of the beer fridge as that’s getting upgraded this month for more room to have alcoholic beer cans and non alcoholic bottles. But also room for the bbq sauces and camping condiments.
 

bmwrd0

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 7, 2010
Messages
5,507
Location
Beaver Fever Oregon
Yesterday, it was raining, so I went and checked out a steel yard that was closing to see if there was anything I needed, came home and took a nap, watched the Series, swapped out a tool chest.

Today, I will pack some thing up for shipping, stage the stuff going to the Restore, and wait out the rain. End the day watching the Series.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
10,007
Location
Far NE Oregon
Got everything down on the ground:

54880453252_fe7e41deb1_o.jpg

I got in early this AM and went out to the "garden shack" to get the Stihl Farm Boss and warm it up. No saw. I had to use my ancient (thirty-odd year-old) Stihl 017, which is long in the tooth and a bit crabby about being asked to do actual work--kinda' like myself.

Apparently, someone needed that saw more than I do.

It was picky work getting the big, heavy aspen down from the cables and trees it was hung in without doing any further damage. I pulled it off better than the P Power guy did. Broke two light bulbs on the strings, but no further damage to trees or shrubbery and no broken cables.

Most of the work was from ladders. I love dropping big, heavy chunks while standing on a ladder with a running saw. Keeps life interesting. I brought it down in large pieces as the poor little ol' saw was struggling with the cuts.

I'll clean up what's down when we find the company saw and I have someone with a pick-up here to haul off the brush. I got enough of the yard clear to let folks enjoy the fall weather today.

Then splice the cable the P Power guy broke, fix light strings and clean up the broken limbs from the trees that got hit.
 
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SMOKEYBEAR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
466
1st of two today.. wrapped up the butcher block table, final oil/ wax. Its all done except the stamp/branding. Waiting on a new stamp/ brand from Buckeye Engraving. Neat place to do business with... maybe it will interest ya'll too.


Final few pictures. It's not perfect, but I think it came out good enough.
 

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SMOKEYBEAR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
466
2nd of two today.
- Took a lunch break
-Snugged up my jock strap
- Started the front brakes on the F350 dually

I'm neither small nor physically weak..but this is quite the task. It's a solid workout. It all went pretty good, its just all heavy and the bolts are damn tight. The torque specs on the caliper bracket bolts are 295 Ft Lbs with thread locker, rotors weigh 40lbs...ect Two caliper pins were seized...explains how it was performing this past few weeks. Anyway, had to order new pins, you can see the corrosion results. I have everything clean and ready to go back together once the pins and boots get delivered. Start the back once the front is wrapped up. Pics no order..
 

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kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,609
Location
Upstate New York
Sounds more like a Water Heater than a Boiler.
It's called a boiler. They're separated into water or steam boilers.
Mine is a nice Burnham cast iron unit. It's about the size of a big under-counter trash compactor, or a mini-dishwasher. It's designed for the 190° hot water required for hydronic. The potable water heater is actually a big blue egg that runs on it's own zone off the boiler.
 

rharman

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 22, 2012
Messages
8,902
Location
SoCal
With the help of @Ultradog MN I was able to identify a missing spring on the Ford tractor received new one and installed today after smacking the back of my hand on the hard parts of the tractor in my first failed attempt. Fired up the tractor and it will hit and hold 2200rpms!! Then cleaned and swept. Then onto the Baja, it has been aligned but still acting squirrely when driving. Talked to my tire guru and he said lower air pressure more front end weight. So dropped fronts to 12psi, rears at 20 and added 180 lbs under the hood. Test drive shows it is way better, 65 on country roads was not wandering, highway testing coming up.

Do you think there will be some tweak that will eliminate the need to drive around with sand bags in your "frunk"?
 

Swanny1953

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jul 28, 2010
Messages
1,082
Location
Lucas, TX
Aired up tires on the ‘60 Corvette and took it for a drive. Also took the ‘51 Woodie out for exercise.
Custom plates for the Caddy came in, so put them on - but not before modifying so the reverse camera can see.
 

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Wrench-Polisher

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 29, 2025
Messages
313
Location
DEEP in the rusty rust of rust belt
MY garage is occupied. Used work warehouse/garage to install rear camber arms on my ford flex. Found out that my rear wheel bearing is very much shot.
Luckily I have a spare parts shelf at home.
Blow torch and logs of air hammer and more blow torch becasue rust belt.
Repalce the bearing and get the brakes ready for winter.
 

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Skyman

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2021
Messages
1,222
Location
Central Maryland
More work on a too-long-lasting project to convert this car from sidepipes that were added prior to my ownership, back to undercar exhaust. A friend came over today to help with bonding on the replacement fiberglass fender and QP extensions that had been amputated.

Absent:

1761532727671.jpeg


Back in black - to eventually be painted to match the body:

1761532764193.jpeg


Was amputated only on the fender on this side

1761532885948.jpeg


Back in black:

1761532932823.jpeg

More dressing and finish work remain on the extensions, but that'll happen soon.

After my friend left, I got busy straightening some of the rocker molding braces that had been bent out of the way to clear the sidepipes:

Left side started:

1761533052253.jpeg


One left to do when I knocked off for dinner:

1761533114578.jpeg


The other side's gonna be more challenging.

1761533187350.jpeg
 

LeonardY

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 16, 2011
Messages
5,092
Location
Southern California
Washed Big Beef today. Put it back in the garage. Notice some weird spots on the tail gate. Polished them out and waxed the back.

Pulled the Big Beef back into the garage.

Assembled the dust chute.
Sort of old version and new version.
1761534396524.png
Installed it on the chopsaw.
1761534447775.png
It clears and lets me cut thicker boards.
1761534516053.png
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
10,007
Location
Far NE Oregon
Got everything down on the ground:

54880453252_fe7e41deb1_o.jpg

I got in early this AM and went out to the "garden shack" to get the Stihl Farm Boss and warm it up. No saw. I had to use my ancient (thirty-odd year-old) Stihl 017, which is long in the tooth and a bit crabby about being asked to do actual work--kinda' like myself.

Apparently, someone needed that saw more than I do.

It was picky work getting the big, heavy aspen down from the cables and trees it was hung in without doing any further damage. I pulled it off better than the P Power guy did. Broke two light bulbs on the strings, but no further damage to trees or shrubbery and no broken cables.

Most of the work was from ladders. I love dropping big, heavy chunks while standing on a ladder with a running saw. Keeps life interesting. I brought it down in large pieces as the poor little ol' saw was struggling with the cuts.

I'll clean up what's down when we find the company saw and I have someone with a pick-up here to haul off the brush. I got enough of the yard clear to let folks enjoy the fall weather today.

Then splice the cable the P Power guy broke, fix light strings and clean up the broken limbs from the trees that got hit.
Just glad I got that much done in the beautiful fall weather, as it's dumping heavy, wet snow right now.
 

bugnut

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jul 14, 2012
Messages
3,995
Location
Central Ohio
@rharman This was just testing to see if it helped with the issue. Everything in and on the front end is new. Car lost weight with cutting and removing metal. So now I start removing lbs, moving the weight further forward and down. The old spare tire well is empty and I keep thinking if I need to add weight it will go in the spot. Plus a frame around and over the gas tank to add weight. Also plan to jack up the front and check everything again. Will as the guy who did the paint and body work to do likewise, another set of eyes.

Do you think there will be some tweak that will eliminate the need to drive around with sand bags in your "frunk"?
 

Real_PhillBert

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 22, 2017
Messages
157
Location
Fargo, ND
My new house and garage are still under construction, but we're far enough along that I finally got a chance to put my car in the new garage and get a feel for it.

The shallow stalls where my car is, are 28ft deep and the deeper stall is 38ft deep. I'm beyond excited for this space.

20251023-172434-1.jpg
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20251023-172450-1.jpg
20251023-172503-1.jpg
 

bustedcrawler

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 12, 2015
Messages
88
Location
Denver
One I had awhile ago, 93ish. 68 with 266 and 35s. Parts were hard to source back then, can't imagine what they're like now. Could have made some serious coin if I sold today vs back then.

I haven't noticed it being hard yet or even back then with my first scout. It's for sure not Chevy/Ford/Dodge easy however, know where to look and you can get a lot of parts and repop tin.

The market is soft now but you would have gotten a lot more coin now vs then. "Vintage" is the current rage. About 4 years ago I doubled my money on a Super Scout II project I bought and then sold. Never took it off the trailer.


I worked for a IH dealer in the early 70's having the problematic turbos removed was common I think there were only somewhere around 1000 made, it could also be a engine swap with a non turbo 152 or 198 .

I've heard that. I meant to look at the engine numbers to see if it's the OE block or was swapped. Got distracted trying to clean up the rats nest and jerry rigged wiring.


I'd be keen to follow along if you'd care to post details of the LS / NV4500 swap whenever you get around to it.

When the 4.3L in my C1500 finally wears out, I'd like to replace it with an LS. The truck has an NV4500.
For sure. I ordered my Quick Draw adapter bellhousing and slave cylinder. With that, you use a late model GM flywheel and clutch, and Quick Draw uses a mopar style slave cylinder that they sell.




Most of the weekend was chasing out horrible wiring issues and getting rid of all the **** the PO added. Cleaned out the interior a bit more, and got it cribbed up on blocks. Modified them to be 9" tall instead of 6" as they were. Mocks it up as a 3" lift on 40s.
20251025_173859.jpg
 

Skyman

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2021
Messages
1,222
Location
Central Maryland
The corvette and side pipes were a pair made in heaven.lol

I loved the look of the car with the sidepipes. And I loved driving it. For the first ten minutes. After that, it quickly devolved into auditory torture for my horribly messed-up hearing.

The car is now a pleasure to drive for hours. It sounds great, but not exhausting (intended).
 

racecougar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2021
Messages
5,180
Location
Missouri
Wrapped up the Saginaw power steering box rebuild, then started installing the front suspension and steering components into the '73 Mustang.

560047918_10101359123159303_1311780457533936150_n.jpg

571211559_10101360639814913_5975618502290927788_n.jpg571177720_10101360642878773_4469206278676558032_n.jpg

One slick trick to shrink the Teflon seals back down after you've stretched them into their grooves: wrap tightly with plastic, then with electrical tape, then snug a hose clamp down on it and let it sit for awhile. That trick made reassembly a cinch.

557720966_10101359123563493_6369829306924591697_n.jpg

After shrinking the Teflon seal.
571344833_10101359124840933_4428278355715252496_n.jpg
 

NUTTSGT

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
51,110
Location
Northern Central Ohio
My new house and garage are still under construction, but we're far enough along that I finally got a chance to put my car in the new garage and get a feel for it.

The shallow stalls where my car is, are 28ft deep and the deeper stall is 38ft deep. I'm beyond excited for this space.

20251023-172434-1.jpg
20251023-172422-1.jpg
20251023-172450-1.jpg
20251023-172503-1.jpg
Wow, a new home with a "REAL" attached garage.
 
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