HEEP
Well-known member
I say clear powder coat on this. That will show the true quality craftmanship. Well done Mike, as always.
I say clear powder coat on this. That will show the true quality craftmanship. Well done Mike, as always.


Maybe I missed it, what did you do (or plan to do) to seal up the floor after cutting out the spare tire well?




Interesting. How does the tool work?
As always Mike![]()
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Too bad you're not down this way. This weekend is our big annual dodge even at Pomona. You'd have dug some of the builds that are going to be here.
Thanks Cam.
Are you going to miss those events when you leave CA or is there just as active of a scene in AZ where you are going?
Probably not. I've been heavily involved with this scene since the very beginning. This is how I became involved with dodge corporate not inclusive doing this all over the country and making a ton of friends. It's really the one time a year my buddies come from far and wide to attend. However there is a big crowd out of the Phoenix basin that get together regularly and I know a bunch of them, so I'm walking right into my extended family. Last week the wife said "ahhh you're gonna be lonely". To which I said (not thinking this out). Hun I'll be fine, I've got a bunch of buds out there........wrong answer![]()
Btw, I'm gone as of Wednesday.
Glad to hear it is all working out. They evidently met your requests huh......

Sorry we haven't talked. Ya they came to the table with everything I asked for two weeks ago today so at that point it became a .......I'm outta here![]()
A little change of direction tonight. I took a break from my son’s WJ bumper to try and abate a slight belt chirp in the belt train on my Jeep. Upon initial startup I’d get some belt chirp until the belt warmed a bit in which it would then reside.
Visual inspection wasn’t revealing anything so I broke out the Dayco laser tool.
My A/C compressor was ever-so slightly out of alignment. I was able to loosen the fasteners just enough to use a small pry bar to tweak the compressor enough to bring it into alignment without having to remove the stretch belt. That did the trick and it is now chirp free.
Upon inspecting the rest of the accessory drive I also noticed on my main serpentine belt that the belt was riding a bit to the outside edge of the upper idler. Upon inspection after releasing the tension and slipping the belt off I could move the idler pulley radially which told me the spacer was undersized.
I decided to machine a new spacer to a tighter tolerance and remove the play and hold the idler pulley more precisely to keep the belt in the middle of the pulley vs letting it walk outward slightly.
Measuring the pulley to get the correct dimensions.
Machining the new spacer.
After all that I forgot to take a picture of the final product and installed but it much more solidly supporting the idler allowing the belt to run in the middle of the pulley.
I think I may still machine a new pulley in the near future with a snap ring retaining the bearing for easy bearing replacement. I machined one similar on my old Ford 460 that I had a Vortex supercharger on many years ago and it turned out great and then just carried a spare 6303 bearing in my toolbox.
Thanks for looking.
Great tool, I have the Gates version....
Nice. It's something that I'm glad I don't have to use very often but when it is needed it works great to find that last little bit of variance in the belt train.
Matt, the two gold pieces on the bench are the laser alignment tools. They are intended to be used on bare metal pulleys. They each have a magnet on the underside in which to affix themselves to the pulley, usually the crankshaft for the laser and then whichever one you are trying to align with the receiver portion. On the laser one there is a small lever on the underside that when it stick to the pulley it turns the red laser on and then you aim it towards the receiver portion. You want to make certain that both are in the same groove on the pulleys to ensure you are in line.
Well congratulations are in order. Good luck with the move my friend.
















Hey Mike, very nice work as usual, love those welds.
Where does the license plate go? Looks like you covered it up.
David
Mike, talk to us about the 3M paper you're using?
We don’t need no stinkin’ plates! Lol.
Beautiful work Mike. You sure you don’t want an SL to work on?
Sent from my iPhone using The Garage Journal mobile app

Mike I try to stay current with your thread but if I miss a few days it can some times take a few pages of reading to catch up.
The bumper is really nice but the carrier you built for it brings it to a whole new level.
4 pages back there was a picture of the bumper sitting on your welding table, in the background I see 2 milling machines. Have I been that far out of touch or did you sneak a new machine in the shop when nobody was looking?
Man that rear bumper and spare tire carrier are so nice. Nice than anything you could buy.
Do you mind sharing a closeup of your locks ( Closed and Open )?
How does the open lock engage?



Does that floor plate flex at all?











Agreed!I love the 6 jaws for stuff like this.

That's excellent! I love the 6 jaws for stuff like this.
Ryan
Agreed!
Nice lathe work on the pulley Mike! Very nice!
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Great job on the pulley Mike. A few years ago I had to make my own pulleys for a stand alone blower drive system I designed and sold. I now despise making pulleys![]()
Kick *** job on the pulley Mike!
Pulley is really nice. You make / made it look so easy.
