madison069
Well-known member
Ok, just checked their website. Are these USA made or something? Just curious since their price is a little up there compared to my typical paint markers I buy.
Shifter looks nice and factory! Nice that the physical part of the project wasn’t too complicated. I like those paint pens, might have to look into a set of them.
I have a yellow paint pens that still worked and I know it’s 10+ years old. I’ll take a look at the brand and let you know what it is.Thanks. I don't have an opinion on the Rev Lock paint pens yet, but I have been quite disappointed in some I've tried in the past.
I've tried Markal, Sharpie, Dykem and Milwaukee and none of them have really impressed me long term. I've read some good reviews on these from Rev Lock so we'll see.
I have a yellow paint pens that still worked and I know it’s 10+ years old. I’ll take a look at the brand and let you know what it is.
I may have to try those. I mark up a 300' fiberglass tape to indicate intervals and a regular sharpie bleeds off way too quickly.Because of your experience with paint pen, I decided to get some new ones as I use them to mark on engines and so on. I can start marking my bolts too.
I found them sold by the singles here,
We order from that company for work so I know it’s a good website.
I got one of each color but orange is not in stock so I’ll see how long it takes for me to get my order.
Because of your experience with paint pen, I decided to get some new ones as I use them to mark on engines and so on. I can start marking my bolts too.
I found them sold by the singles here,
We order from that company for work so I know it’s a good website.
I got one of each color but orange is not in stock so I’ll see how long it takes for me to get my order.
I don’t use it often, mostly writing dates or notes on the engine filters and such. So I’m not sure how long it would last in a continuous use. But as mentioned, it sits on my bench for its random use and usually works after shake and push.I may have to try those. I mark up a 300' fiberglass tape to indicate intervals and a regular sharpie bleeds off way too quickly.
I don’t use it often, mostly writing dates or notes on the engine filters and such. So I’m not sure how long it would last in a continuous use. But as mentioned, it sits on my bench for its random use and usually works after shake and push.
For the random tip failure, they do sell replacement tips for the pens I listed.Sometimes it is several times a week I reach for a paint pen and then I won't use a paint pen for a couple to three weeks, so unfortunately, I've thrown away some that have dried up once the initial tip gets soaked. I don't mark every fastener that I tighten, but I do apply some Torque Seal or Rev Lock to fasteners such as brake and suspension once they are torqued to spec. I use paint pens for writing dates/miles on filters as you do Cody, but also when critical fasteners are torqued, I will put a dot on the head of the fasteners to let me know they have been torqued. Especially things like rockers when running an overhead or the heads of ring gear or flywheel bolts each get a dot confirming they've been torqued.
The milwaukee paint pen was a joke. Didnt work out of the package. I had an elmers paint marker I bought at Walmart almost 20 years ago that worked for probably 15 yrs before it died. I like the viz torque paint I have been using the last year or so. Makes it very obvious for me what I have torqued.










How loud is your coach with that muffler? On my 98 International S/O truck with the DT466 I just removed the muffler and replaced it with a straight pipe. The truck had twin 8” stacks that went to the top of the box so it wasn’t obnoxiously loud, kinda was cool cuz it announced my arrival! And the best part was I actually picked up 1 mpg!
Mine ended up with a real low rumble. The funnest thing was I’d sometimes have to drive thru downtown Flagstaff and my truck would set off all the car alarms! Too cool!

Mike, don’t know if you saw this, but BenchMark Abrasives is doing their Free 10 pack promo again. I believe you’ve given them good reviews before, so I went ahead and ordered the 4-1/2” mix 10 pack. Only had to pay $10.00 for shipping so $1.00 a disk is definitely a “Good Deal”! Thanks!
Here you go spending other people's money again!Mike, don’t know if you saw this, but BenchMark Abrasives is doing their Free 10 pack promo again. I believe you’ve given them good reviews before, so I went ahead and ordered the 4-1/2” mix 10 pack. Only had to pay $10.00 for shipping so $1.00 a disk is definitely a “Good Deal”! Thanks!


















Exhaust is coming along nicely Mike! Glad you found the welds on the battery box. For sure don't want those failing! My BIL has a mostly failed battery tray on his Super C. Pain to get to to fix.

Ya Mike, that was a blessing in disguise for sure. I’ll go as far to say it was actually your lucky day.
A unlucky day would have been you dropped the battery package in the middle of nowhere, destroying them all, causing a catastrophic short in the electrical system taking out controllers and burning up a bunch of wiring plus one of them bouncing up into the air hitting a buss load of nuns sending them off a cliff….
Now that would’ve been a bad day![]()
RIGHT!, that's what I'm saying.Thanks Cam. Yeah, the image that went through my head was pretty much how you described it. Plus add in the worst section of road with no shoulder to pull off on AND a torrential thunderstorm. I imagined Highway 89 between Page and Tuba City, AZ in a downpour.![]()
Yep, exactly right Mike! And I did go back and hit it with a small weld.Thanks Keith. I thought of you and your recent experience with the exhaust on your HR Scepter as I was disassembling the exhaust and removing it from the coach the other night. If memory serves you had a clamp lose tension and the exhaust tipped or turned slightly, correct? And I had made mention of adding a small tack weld in addition to a clamp? When I was removing the clamps and seeing my small 1/2" or so length tack welds and nothing had moved in ~95k miles and 19 years, I think I gave you sound advice.
As for the battery box, it is mainly the back panel, but it is up where it connects to the chassis, so I am glad I discovered it when I did and it shouldn't be too bad to repair on my coach, especially before the exhaust goes back in.
You can always do what most do and wail “Why me?!” and be pissed off. Or you can ask “Why me?” and then know that it’s because you have the skill and experience to handle it and you and your loved ones benefit from you being you!
I am willing to bet that in your position at work, when something like this happens unexpectedly, you are extremely calm and lay out a precise plan of attack to resolve the issue, but when it’s your own stuff your passion and desire to be ahead of these things gets you going down a bad path of self doubt.
That is something that I have struggled with in my life. Thank you for pointing it out and explaining your new view of setbacks, I am going to try to look at them also as an opportunity, not a barrier to success!
Mike your story about re-framing problems with gratitude reminds me of one of my favorite stories about my Grandma, who was 94 years old at the time. My wife and I were in the depths of helping my mother-in-law downsize from her mold-infested McMansion after she was unexpectedly widowed. After a few months of non-stop problems, obstacles and never ending labor, we were telling my Grandma the cliff notes of all we were going through/putting up with/sacrificing to get my MIL's life back on track after years of her poor choices. We finished up our pity party and before responding my Grandma paused, gathered her thoughts and said "Well, isn't it wonderful that you're able to help".
Shifting the focus away from the problem and towards the fact that we were alive, able-bodied and capable of meeting the challenges completely filled in the rut of negativity we were stuck in. That one sentence she spoke changed my life.
Thanks for jogging my memory, and much respect for the re-framing you did!
Yep, exactly right Mike! And I did go back and hit it with a small weld.
I must say though, it hit me pretty hard how much I have to learn on welding because your welds are WAY better than what I did, plus I'm guessing it didn't take you nearly as long as my one weld did. I think the one weld I did on mine around the whole pipe took me well over an hour, maybe longer because I had to stop and start so much. Then again, I did do 10 pie cuts, so maybe I'm not that far off.

Living in Page for almost 30 years and the last 10 of them driving that road twice weekly in my Snap-On rig I know it almost like the back of my hand. Although I would have to take a sledgehammer to my hand and mangle it into a twisted broken shattered pile of flesh for it to start resembling that stretch of highway! We all call it the Rapids because it’s rougher than the ones in the Grand Canyon just a few miles to west of that road. Thankfully the AZDOT has added a bunch of passing lanes and closed off the open range areas so it’s not as deadly as it once was. But you still have to definitely be an aware driver and watch out for any and all hazards, with #1 being the road itself!I imagined Highway 89 between Page and Tuba City, AZ in a downpour.![]()
I can relate to the mental challenges you are describing. I grew up in the 80's and 90's when they had gotten rid of the automotive programs at our schools because everyone should go to college. I went to college, wore a suit and tie to work for twenty years, but always loved working on cars. Six years ago I decided to be a mechanic for a living and I have never been happier. BUT, for the first two or three years there was a constant whisper in the back of my mind that I was somehow an underachiever or slacker for working on cars for a living. On top of that, I also had some imposter syndrome because I did not go to tech school and get formal training like so many other guys in my profession.I think many of you that grew up in the 70's and 80's, especially in High School, can relate to the welding and automotive classes offered in the public school system back then and the type of kids that took those classes.