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What did you do "IN" your garage today?

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SMOKEYBEAR

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
456
1 fender is off. Quite the task. The plan is to finish prepping the trailer on this side, I still have some fasteners to cut off flush and drill out, some light sanding, priming and paint. I'll do that to both sides while I wait on the delivery of the carpet. 3 bolts per side have the heads under the rubber no slip treads, so I gotta sort that out as well. My OCD is going to require new spacers, you can see them zip tied to their location. No 2 are alike. The carpet step I'd consider mostly easy.
 

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Motorman55

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2016
Messages
2,636
Location
South Jersey
First I drove over to the NJ Motor Vehicle and transfered the Title, Registered and picked up the new license plates forthe MGB. It all legal for the road now.

1) Cleaned and polished the original 15" diameter steering wheel. I'm replacing the smaller 13" diameter custom steering wheel that's currently in the MGB. Its nice looking but I like the looks and feel of a larger wheel. Much easier to steer, especially considering these old MG's don't have power steering.

1b) Removed the small 13" custom steering wheel. (got to use my 'Stinger' puller set) and installed the old 15" wheel. Went on-line and ordered a small replacement part to make the old horn work. Should have that by the end of the week.

2) Installed new rubber pads on the clutch/brake/throttle pedals. The old ones were brittle/hardened. Much better feel under foot.

3) Installed a full strip of velcro along the underside edge of a vertical section of the trunk rug that covers over the DUAL speakers to keep it from sliding down.
NOTE TO SELF...Build some speaker boxes to fit over the back of the Duals and then trim that carpet section around them.

4) Found the little knob that hangs down behind the dash and reset the trip odometer.

5) Installed the new license plates. Going to look around for some decent looking chrome license plate frames to put around them.

That's it for today.
 
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2001ZR2

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2018
Messages
411
Location
Kansas City
Located and used the hand truck I inherited from my father to bring the new 1000 pound lift table to the garage and assembled it. Bled the cylinder and resisted the thought of using my wife as weight to load test it.

So another day free from divorce proceedings

Edit spacing and omitted word
 
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rd65

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2017
Messages
2,779
Location
Granite Falls, WA
Not in the shop, but just outside. Now that I have water to the shop, I washed the doors. Eight years of dust and grime, took a bit more elbow grease than planned but it is done. And of course, now the gutters look like hell, that will be a project for another day.
 

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BreeStephany

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
May 19, 2012
Messages
851
Location
Oregon
Lately I've been bouncing between a few projects, a few I just started on a few weeks ago and one that has been at a standstill for over 2 years.

This weekend I spent some time in the garage making some pretty decent progress on restoring a 'orange label' Skil 107 10" wormdrive saw that I started stripping down 2+ years ago back in Montana and am finally getting reassembled here in Oregon.

1000014709.jpg

When I get some downtime I need to stop by the hardware store and pick up a new Skil 95104L replacement cord whip and wait for a Eurton order of new brushes and brush caps to arrive and will have the saw back to running order.

I am in the process of tracking down someone to hopefully make some 'reproduction' nameplates.

1000014671.jpg
The guard nameplate I think I could restore with a little filler to fill in the deeper scratches and wouldn't be that difficult, but I think the other plate would be quite an investment of time to get it back to 'original' condition.
 
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larry4406

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2006
Messages
19,325
Location
Northern Virginia
Lately I've been bouncing between a few projects, a few I just started on a few weeks ago and one that has been at a standstill for over 2 years.

This weekend I spent some time in the garage making some pretty decent progress on restoring a 'orange label' Skil 107 10" wormdrive saw that I started stripping down 2+ years ago back in Montana and am finally getting reassembled here in Oregon.

1000014709.jpg

When I get some downtime I need to stop by the hardware store and pick up a new Skil 95104L replacement cord whip and wait for a Eurton order of new brushes and brush caps to arrive and will have the saw back to running order.

I am in the process of tracking down someone to hopefully make some 'reproduction' nameplates.

1000014671.jpg
The guard nameplate I think I could restore with a little filler to fill in the deeper scratches and wouldn't be that difficult, but I think the other plate would be quite an investment of time to get it back to 'original' condition.
"I am in the process of tracking down someone to hopefully make some 'reproduction' nameplates."

Sounds like a job for @mattblast
 

rzims

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 25, 2006
Messages
457
Location
Grass Valley, CA
First I drove over to the NJ Motor Vehicle and transfered the Title, Registered and picked up the new license plates forthe MGB. It all legal for the road now.

1) Cleaned and polished the original 15" diameter steering wheel. I'm replacing the smaller 13" diameter custom steering wheel that's currently in the MGB. Its nice looking but I like the looks and feel of a larger wheel. Much easier to steer, especially considering these old MG's don't have power steering.

1b) Removed the small 13" custom steering wheel. (got to use my 'Stinger' puller set) and installed the old 15" wheel. Went on-line and ordered a small replacement part to make the old horn work. Should have that by the end of the week.

2) Installed new rubber pads on the clutch/brake/throttle pedals. The old ones were brittle/hardened. Much better feel under foot.

3) Installed a full strip of velcro along the underside edge of a vertical section of the trunk rug that covers over the DUAL speakers to keep it from sliding down.
NOTE TO SELF...Build some speaker boxes to fit over the back of the Duals and then trim that carpet section around them.

4) Found the little knob that hangs down behind the dash and reset the trip odometer.

5) Installed the new license plates. Going to look around for some decent looking chrome license plate frames to put around them.

That's it for today.
Would love to see pics....
 

cannuck

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
4,641
Location
Rural SK
Started the week off with a call from #1 son-in-law asking to use outer shop for summer rubber swap on the V70. He was raised in a mechanically adverse family so when we started more than 2 decades back he adopted a "mature" C2 (Audi 5000 avant) and started learning and doing maintenance and repair. He now takes great pride in especially keeping his V70 on the road at well over 300k kms. We usually have grandsons with us for changeover but this was one of those flashback times when there was just the 2 of us. Brought his own impact and inflator and did all of the brake inspections, wheel swaps, corrosion protection stuff with me pretty much passing tools. This was the last one for the season, but next year will include adding a car from storage to the fleet as #1 grandson gets his learner's license this year. Kid is already quite able to do most maintenance and minor repairs from his time in shop and on farm. Problem is: we want him to drive mom's 99 Golf while he has his eyes on my '92 Golf Country.
 

Jay__Dub

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 19, 2024
Messages
1,256
Location
Cold Country, Canada
Well, the old penetrating oil in dead cylinders must have freed up the valves on Fergie. Finally got it running, and moved over to it's summer home on the other side of the yard. I know the rings are bad, it's still smoking like it used to, but the compression is good enough for now, and I drained some oil, and topped up with about 30% guesstimate of Lucas to see if I can stretch it out a while.

I want to pay that new car off this year before embarking on any more significant purchases.

I don't do debt. Debt is prison.
 

zanyad

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 26, 2018
Messages
2,791
Location
NE Ohio
This weekend I spent some time in the garage making some pretty decent progress on restoring a 'orange label' Skil 107 10" wormdrive saw that I started stripping down 2+ years ago back in Montana and am finally getting reassembled here in Oregon.
Link in your post is broken. You want this: https://www.garagejournal.com/forum...her-skil-resto-skil-107.535813/#post-11610770
I am in the process of tracking down someone to hopefully make some 'reproduction' nameplates.

"I am in the process of tracking down someone to hopefully make some 'reproduction' nameplates."

Sounds like a job for @mattblast
Larry4406 is exactly right. Here's Matt's thread.
 

rzims

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 25, 2006
Messages
457
Location
Grass Valley, CA
Quick pass with the trim router to round over the edges of the seat and back boards. Then got the first coat of sealer on them.its clear, but I like how it darkened the slats...I've used this sealer on previous outdoor items and been pretty happy with the results
 

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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,848
Location
Far NE Oregon
I put on my ditch boots this AM and beat the Reed Canary Grass in the ditch into submission.

55250134522_530b7dc3cf_o.jpg

This is a stop-gap measure until I have time to get in there with a shovel and dig out the roots. This nasty introduced grass will completely take over and block creeks and ditches. It will fill in a pond in a few years to where it can be mowed.

It took one and a half batteries to get through that thick, three-foot-tall weed. I think that accidentally hitting the water with the strings--which will **** the trimmer head right down--uses a LOT of juice.

Now for lunch, then sharpen the mower blade and get back to the weekly mowing schedule.
 
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BreeStephany

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
May 19, 2012
Messages
851
Location
Oregon

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,267
Location
The Badlands
You don't have one? It grabs stuff when you squeeze a trigger and lets you pick things off shelves or the ground without having to climb or bend. Back in the day they were called Italian Fanny Pinchers.

Ah, never heard them called that. New Kay term! Nope, I don't have one; I have like five or six..

One by the garbage cans because I have a corner lot and everyone (especially the passing HS students) think its a dump. Another on the other side of the house, because seem of the little bastards lob it over the fence. One in my van for camp sites. two in the garage; one of those near the man door for house use 'cause, ya know, Cats... Probably at least one more I forgot about..'

They are really cheap at estate sales.

I want a really long one for the van for the beer and soda cans a-holes toss in the dirt roads that way I can do it from the window...

Either that or a barbed nail on a stick...


ES Grabber  Straps 4 in Crescent, chopped 5-8 tru-fit.jpg

E2 grabber 2.jpg


Now here is one that would really be a fanny pincher:

Grabbers.jpg


Originally used for grabbing tissue samples - I'll leave the rest to your imagination... 🙄 I got it or grabbing stuff out of lantern founts...

Grabbers 2.jpg
 

pancholasvegas

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 6, 2017
Messages
251
Put some time in yesterday and today -

Having trouble fitting the tailgate, I opted to try and fix the oblong shape that should be round on the tailgate mount. I welded up some rod with a large ball bearing on the end of it, as a makeshift pipe expander to try to help.

It worked, kind of. I now know that these trucks have a bushing in the tailgate - and I know now it needs replaced alongside the other repairs.

IMG_4480.jpeg

Started off bracing each side to proportions to prep for insertion of the floor center.

IMG_4482.jpeg

This was the just the start. We had quite the operation on, as we kept working things into place. It had all my straps on it at one point.

Once the floor was mounted up, the floor was plug welded to the wheel wells and the filler panels (black pieces). The filler pieces are plug welded to the side panels.


Next we began fitting the rollpan.

IMG_4499.jpeg

With the rollpan measured and scribed, I trimmed it up and started tacking with the TIG. Ran out of time for the day, but I should be able to fuse this piece together in the next day or so. Then I’ll be able to epoxy the piece and plug weld to the body, and we can fill in the final floor section.

IMG_4500.jpeg
 

GrayFlattop

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2018
Messages
1,050
Location
Chicago
Put up a few small shelves in the front part of the garage. Now the media for the vibratory tumbler is up off the floor and I no longer have to step over it. There is enough room left over for a few bottles and cans of cleaning supplies as well as my stock of glue boards.

Then I made another mess of aluminum chips with a router and swept up said mess. Finished up by filling several hanging baskets with some colorful annuals.
 

nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
31,969
Location
Coronado, CA
Prepared 4 free Harbor Freight buckets for container gardening.
I will be mounting them in a wooden frame.
Tomorrow, Tuesday, I plan to go to the nursery that has been purchasing the planter boxes I made and buying plants for my new garden.
They have supported me by buying my boxes; it only seems like the Right Thing to Do by buying my plants from them.
completed the assembly of my new bucket garden. the nursury that had bought planter.boxes was closed, I.will be some of the money i made from them plants
 

bugnut

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jul 14, 2012
Messages
3,925
Location
Central Ohio
Dr appointment and Costco trip not much time in the shop. Neighbor stopped over and we discussed ideas about front fender and chain guard on the trike. A beer was opened, then another neighbor stopped over and another beer, and another, we now have a quorum and another beer. Not much actual activity got accomplished but caught up on the neighborhood doings!
 

jblnut

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 17, 2015
Messages
7,046
Location
In the Middle of MN
Sidewall repair. No more leaking so it should be good to 150+MPH or more.
IMG_6370.jpeg

It’s a gauge wheel on a field cultivator so it’ll see 6.5MPH max. These things get the snot beat out of them so we’ll see how long this one lasts. They usually get punctures from stubble so I toss the absolute shittiest tires on that fit and if they go flat oh well, finish the day out and try again tomorrow lol.
IMG_6371.jpeg
 

gearhead1960

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 21, 2019
Messages
1,854
Location
Manassas, VA, a small blot in history
Sidewall repair. No more leaking so it should be good to 150+MPH or more.
IMG_6370.jpeg

It’s a gauge wheel on a field cultivator so it’ll see 6.5MPH max. These things get the snot beat out of them so we’ll see how long this one lasts. They usually get punctures from stubble so I toss the absolute shittiest tires on that fit and if they go flat oh well, finish the day out and try again tomorrow lol.
IMG_6371.jpeg
Why don’t you fill them with foam?
 

Jgaz

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 16, 2016
Messages
1,677
Location
AZ
Got a slightly cupped and twisted piece of walnut shimmed and secured on the sled to run it thru the planer. I‘ve got about a 1/4” of material to play with.
IMG_6337.jpeg
This is the start of another run of boxes using up less than perfect material that is “in stock”
I either use it or put it in the burn barrel.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,848
Location
Far NE Oregon
Mow, mow, mow the grass...

55253852196_71bfc680a3_o.jpg

Two weeks growth in an unirrigated area of the yard. So thick I had to use the lowest speed and take half-passes. That's done for the week.

Two of these arrived yesterday:

55253852206_eaec8375cb_o.jpg

Installed one on the Brick:

55253852191_d6945755f8_o.jpg

I installed it as close to the center of the rig as possible so it would be less visible... but too much ground clearance. I'll have helpful strangers walking up to tell me "Dude, there's something dragging under your car".

They're supposed to be non-sparking anti-static grounding straps, but according to the label, they're anti-ground straps, so maybe they'll take a little weight off the rig.

Hoping that takes care of getting shocked every time I get out of the rig. One more to go for the Toy.
 
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