oldironfarmer
Well-known member
Just enjoying the show. We hit 89 here today.

used these days for sitting on and drinking tea.



In Austin TX for the weekend & saw some old cars, need any projects? My cousin lives close to Circuit of the Americas. The guy next to them, likes Buicks, looks like. My cousin's husband has an old Farmall H tractor (narrow front track) he wants to sell. Wish I had more land & a use for one. He has 2 Ford combo front end loader-backhoes too.
Philip, none of my grandchildren were impressed with the PT Cruiser. A friend of mine bought one when they first came out and paid a premium price. He joined a club and had several modifications done to the car, including paint matched bumpers, ghost flames and custom wheels. He was a little upset when I bought mine for several thousand less.Philip, I don't trust plastic for support either but those really old StoreHorse plastic sawhorses have held up well. I don't recall their rating but I'm sure they didn't claim anything in excess of a half ton capacity for the pair.
In my youth I only had enough money to buy bottom-line tools to go with the bottom-line parts I bought. Nobody made plastic drive-on ramps but they did make split-pipe jackstands. Those are the ones I bought first. Working under the car I would hear creaking and was pretty sure it was the jackstands. I let those four flimsy jackstands go to a stranger for free with a warning -- a stack of wood next to the stands was my advice.
Over the years I have purchased eight I-beam jackstands similar to yours. My collection is mostly 3-ton units and my heaviest vehicle is just over two tons. I prefer to coat steel with epoxy primer rather than POR-15. Most paint won't stick to POR-15 and because it adhehres best to rust, it is likely to peel off clean steel. A pinhole can let moisture get behind the POR-15 and rust forming under it doesn't show until the steel crumbles (the POR-15 still looks great).
I've read quite a few articles on the horror of the PT Cruiser and they are all true. It's a horrible car only an idiot should own. They get terrible gas mileage, the turning radius of a 4x4 truck and have no redeeming qualities that I know of.
That said, I love ours. Most PT Cruisers are under-powered but the GT model, with its turbocharged engine is a lot better. The 2006 GT model goes zero to sixty in 6.7 seconds. If that sounds poor, my 1968 Pontiac GTO rated zero to sixty time was 6.4 seconds. Because my Cruiser is only a turbo-engined Touring model, it wasn't as fast as a GT when I got it. I made several modifications, including a cold air intake, free-flowing exhaust, composite intake manifold and a Stage I computer upgrade. When I re-programmed the computer for 93-octane with a Diablo tuner it ripped the stock engine mounts apart and sheared off the upper motor mount bolt. With ARP bolts and upgraded mounts the car spins the front tires when I floor it at 30 mph.
I was attracted to the PT Cruiser because it reminded me (a little) of the 1947 Ford Tudor we owned back in the early '60s.
I have a similar pair of jackstands I bought probably 45+ years ago. I can't recall the store, but I suspect it was Zayre's, Gold Triangle, or maybe Rose Auto Parts, here in south Florida. I used a piece of plywood under them, when I put weight on them and watched as the edges of the legs sank-into the asphalt. If I was using them to change a tire, I'd slip the wheel under the rocker panel, so that the failure of the jackstand wouldn't allow the vehicle to drop onto the ground. At some point, I scavenged some PT 4x4's to use for cribbing under the vehicle. I also would leave the jack under the vehicle, but with a very-light load on it. Redundancy for safety, I suppose. They sit unused, if I ever-see them getting rust, other-than surface deterioration, into recycling they go.
I went to look at the PT Cruiser when they were released. There was a vintage car show in Coconut Grove (Miami FL waterfront for you out-of-towners) and the Chrysler dealer had one for display. I like the look of them, and yes, it looks like a 1930's/'40's Ford to me, too. When I sat in the car, I thought it was comfortable.
Our oldest grandson who was not born upon the PT release, was attracted to the PT Cruiser, as a small child, and mommy and daddy rented one when they came for a visit, and the kid was very happy! I rented one on a trip somewhere, and I thought it was a perfectly-adequate ride. Not as-interesting as my '67 GTO convertible (long-gone), but a functional transport for four adults.
Have you looked at the green tarps, as they are a bit less conspicuous than the Smurf-blue ones?
Bob Heine said:
My packrat stash had an aluminum beam from the screen enclosure that was damaged in 2005.
Wiilll-maaaa!
Here in Broward County (Ft. Lauderdale FL area) entire trailer parks were destroyed by Hurricane Wilma. The degree of destruction here (Broward Co.) was greater-than Hurricane Andrew, which was supposed to make landfall directly at Broward County, but it took a sharp-turn south, and entered the state south of Miami instead. After Wilma, you would drive-by a former trailer park, and see just the steel frames sitting-there, and huge piles of debris everywhere. The local Boy Scout camp lost almost 90% of its tree canopy, along with the surrounding area. Trees which had weathered 100 years of storms were tipped-over with root balls maybe 20 ft. in diameter, and what had been perhaps 40 ft. canopies, just lying on their sides. Roads were impassable for days from the damage. I was lucky, the power was restored in a week.
Here's my side-of-the-road one-door hinged cabinet find, I tarted it-up some today. I added reinforcements on the rear wall of the cabinet, extending up to the top of the backsplash, if you would call it that. I added a Harbor Freight 18" magnetic tool strip, and a set of six Harbor Freight screwdrivers: three phillips, three slot-head. They got a companion 25 ft. tape to keep them company.
I also used more t-nuts threaded for machine screws on the sacrificial masonite cabinet top, holding it in-place to the 3/4" plywood beneath the masonite.
The two-foot tall chest of drawers for small hardware looks much-better being painted with oil-base rustoleum type paint.
"But wait, there's more! Buy the two cabinets, and at no additional charge, receive an electrical multi-meter for diagnosing your electrical problems. Simply-pay a slightly-reduced amount from the total of the two cabinets, purchased separately." It's one-way to make all those free Harbor Freight tools pay-off.
Bobby, you're not the only one pointing that out. In addition to the number of projects, each one takes me longer than in the good old days when I knocked one out in a weekend. You'd think I would get more done now that I have much longer weekends. I appreciate you taking time from your heirloom porch creations.Bob looks like you will have to live a longer life with all the projects you now have lined up.![]()
Steve, those look almost new!
Pete, my first set of sawhorses were also our picnic table legs and the picnic table was often my workbench.You mean sawhorses have other uses?
Pete
Seagoon, I'm guessing you haven't used chairs and end tables as sawhorses either.I've never found one![]()
Hubscrub66, you are not alone. I just threw out four plastic chairs when one of them fell apart when I moved it.Speaking of plastic, i was sitting in plastic folding chair in an outdoor wedding yesturday. I'm not a small guy it felt very sketchy. I told my wife with a half giggle i'm sitting light.![]()
Rick, because the sun is so strong in Florida, plastic loses strength quite quickly. Good to hear my mistake might prevent similar disasters.+1 about those plastic chairs - they always feel sketchy to me. I've had them tip over on me before, but that was due to soft ground under the legs.
Bob - I'm taking a lesson from your sawhorse experience. I use plastic ones for lightweight duty, just because they're so easy to fold and cart around. But I'm going to break out the wooden ones for storing plywood. Thanks for sharing, and I'm glad no T1-11 was hurt during the making of your public service announcement!
Philip, I missed my chance to own a Buick Sedanette fastback in the mid-60s. My wife's aunt owned a black one that she drove from Queens, New York to Acapulco, Mexico every winter. Once in Mexico she she would have the car polished and waxed with Blue Coral. The only gas she would put in that car was Amoco premium (aka white gas). A cousin in Virginia was a better beggar. He wrecked the car on the drive home.In Austin TX for the weekend & saw some old cars, need any projects? My cousin lives close to Circuit of the Americas. The guy next to them, likes Buicks, looks like. My cousin's husband has an old Farmall H tractor (narrow front track) he wants to sell. Wish I had more land & a use for one. He has 2 Ford combo front end loader-backhoes too.
+1Love that Buick!![]()
Kirk, if I did a time-lapse project record, you would feel a whole lot better. I spent almost 8 hours installing one section of fence framing.I'd really appreciate if you quit making me look like a lazy incompetent fool. Seriously, nice job.
Rian, those curves are, well, you know.....Love the Two door.
In fact, any of these, but those lines.......
Speaking of plastic, i was sitting in plastic folding chair in an outdoor wedding yesturday. I'm not a small guy it felt very sketchy. I told my wife with a half giggle i'm sitting light.![]()
+1 about those plastic chairs - they always feel sketchy to me. I've had them tip over on me before, but that was due to soft ground under the legs.
Bob - I'm taking a lesson from your sawhorse experience. I use plastic ones for lightweight duty, just because they're so easy to fold and cart around. But I'm going to break out the wooden ones for storing plywood. Thanks for sharing, and I'm glad no T1-11 was hurt during the making of your public service announcement!
Love that Buick!![]()
Love the Two door.
In fact, any of these, but those lines.......
Philip, I haven't been attack by a plastic chair yet but on two occasions the cloth on director chairs have given out and given me a quick gravity lesson.I once was at our son's party after law school (U of Florida) and was sitting in one of those plastic 'nesting' chairs.
Suddenly, with no warning, the leg collapsed, leaving sharp jagged long pieces. I fell-out of the chair, and as I did-so, the broken pieces filleted my lower leg with a scar I still carry to this day. If it was any deeper, I would have had to go to the ER for staples/sutures. The chair wasn't that-old, (no signs of sun-crazing, 'checkerboarding,' or other visible defects) it still had the manufacturer's label on it. You would think that my accident resulted in an actionable tort, I didn't pursue it. I don't use them (plastic chairs) anymore. I'm >200 lbs but I suspect the chairs should have been capable of supporting my avoirdupois.
The early 1950's Buick 2 dr has great lines, yes, I agree. I think those were the cars with a starter button on the floor, you had-to step-on it, like an old dimmer switch. Seeing the car from the side, the expansive sweep of the body line from the front fender, taking a 'dip,' and them the second curve over the rear wheelwell, is just a well-done contour. It cries-out for a two-tone paint treatment. Or in this case, any paint treatment.
The 'humpback' I believe is also a Buick, and it has those cool 'suicide doors.' The early 1960's Lincoln Continentals are the last cars I recall having those. I'm sure that sitting in the back, you feel like you're insulated from all the cares in the world, until The Purple Gang begins raking the car with Thompson submachine guns with the 'drum' magazines.
About your fence posts, I was told by a building dept. here in so. FL I had to use concrete around the fence posts, spacing to be 4 ft. o.c., for 6 ft tall stockade fencing and 2 ft deep, encased in 10" of concrete. I agree that leaving them bare in the ground instead of encased in concrete will help them to survive rot. Also, some-sort of a top-cap on the end grain of the post, above-ground, will help repel water which could accelerate post rot below-grade. With the end of the post encased in concrete, there's no-way for the water in the post to exit.
Drives, I could be a lot busier but I spend time here, reading about other people's business. You yourself have reached a milestone consolidating your off-site storage and managed to upgrade your showplace front yard.Bob: you are very busy that is for certain. I hope your tree chipper shows up again especially if you already paid them.
i'm building a fence too so wondering if you are just putting 4x4's in the ground, in cement or in brackets like i'm hoping to do?
best of luck with all that you do
Sifan, I remember those Pontiacs. When I was 18 or 19 I helped a friend at his Shell Station. Between the hidden gas doors and the starter buttons, you had to know a lot of tricks. The old man who did the major repairs was a big help. He showed me the many ways you could screw the customer, especially charging for new/rebuilt prices for generator/starter brushes and a coat of black paint. New lifters from a can of Marvel Mystery Oil and rebuilt carburetor from a spray bomb of Gumout. He did charge for drum turning and wheel cylinders when he just slapped in new brake shoes. At least he didn't trick people into new shocks with a squirt of oil (at least I never saw him do that).Mid 50's Pontiac had a kick starter under the accelerator, you pushed the accelerator to the floor and when the engine started you let off the gas. Remember as a kid, going to church, we watched when "old man Shepard" started his car. Mr. Shepard always got there real early and parked right outside the church front door. He was hard of hearing and his Pontiac hit some pretty good RPM's before Mr. Shepard heard it and let off the gas. Scared the daylights out of those visiting outside the front door.![]()


Steve, I did a search for Accoya and thought it might be available in Orlando. Turned out the lumber company doesn't stock it, just mentions it on their website.Bob,Accoya is the timber you need for fence posts, rot proof but not hurricane proof.
Great work in the garden
Steve![]()

Philip, I have a simple solution to the "spite fence." If anyone ever complains, I'll sell the fences to my neighbors for $1. Then I'm on the right side of the problem.The term for "good fence side towards the owner's property" in the planner's lexicon is, "spite fence." The city mentioned used-to have a prohibition of 'spite fences' in their code of ordinances. I'm too-lazy to search for it. In any event, if the city lets you 'get-away with it,' what difference does it make? Only to someone who knows how-to read and to interpret the code, and who then demands that the authority having jurisdiction enforce the written, 'as-adopted' code, if a neighbor erected a 'spite fence' and the city gave a final inspection approval. Three words ring-true: "comply with code!" All shall obey!
Reminds me of the Roddy Piper movie, "They Live."
Ric, I like the idea of a concrete fence but I'm about 40 years (or $40,000) past that level of effort. I'm pleased to be able to dig a post hole and plumb a wooden post.Too much work!. Never checked into wooden fence regs in my town but got tired of replacing wooden posts on 8' centers 24" deep, 6" holes with concrete, and built walls of 8x8x16 concrete block, 315'. 16"x6" footings with 4 1/2' rebar and filled columns with 5/8"every 4' with a center and top bond beam, also with 5/8" on a 6'-7' wall( yard slopes). Have 50' left to do but may have to farm it out as my back arthritis is getting worse. First part was cheap as my neighbor worked for a concrete erection company and everything was overages and leftovers( at least that was what he told me). lAlso, it amazes me( not really) how a pro can do in 3 hours what takes me 4 weekends to do and his looks perfect, but will probably cost 10 times as much as the first part! Too bad my neighbor moved away, lol.
Rick, I'm taking a bit of a break, taking time to buy some roses to smell.Hi Bob, hope you're making good progress with fence posts and T1-11 siding, and that everything else is going well for you and Liane.
Ric, I hear you. It has been raining a bit lately, which would be fine if I was just using pneumatic tools and if the rain wasn't accompanied by lightning. When it isn't raining, the sun is way too close for comfort. Went out the other day and looked up -- not a cloud in sight and my shirt burst into flame so I went back inside to put stuff away in the A/C.Good luck on the current projects, Bob, but take it easy. It's the hot season now!

Bobby, cement work is my nemesis. I did a monolithic slab for an 8'x12' shed in our last house and mixed the concrete in a plastic tub. I thought I bought enough cement but missed by two bags. Rushed to the store looking like a homeless person and when I returned, discovered I only needed one bag. The leftover bag turned into a solid block over the years.Bob nice job. Reading your post I realized I have 10 more bags to pour today and better get going before the sun comes up. Then I saw the umbrella and a light went on. Then I realized hooked to my cement mixer it would not be such a good idea. Then the light went pop! Time to fix the light. Bobby
Eugene, I had one of those neighbors and it made me want to respond in kind. When Liane shares her cup of gasoline I realize I'm not making things better and I just let it go. At least she goes out of her way to make the police welcome."I try to live by the "do unto others" code. "
I wish all of my neighbors did the same. I am definitely one to agree with this philosophy. Instead, my one neighbor feels it necessary to report town ordnance issues yet feels it necessary to pipe his basement water towards my yard. I'm so spiteful as a result that I want to install a spite cinder wall 18" deep to ensure most of his water goes down instead of towards my already sinking yard. I guess a spite burm might be just as effective. This same neighbor called the cops on my other neighbor at least 3-4 times. I have a feeling karma will return the favor sooner or later.
Have you considered using a free tarp from Harbor Freight strapped to some staked poles for shade? With some rope, I imagine you'd be able to get a sizable shade up with little effort and faster than wrestling a 10' tent.
Sent from my LG-H918 using The Garage Journal mobile app
Thank you y'sguy. It's pretty common here because it does let some of the wind blow thorough. I can buy pre-fab sections but the fence boards are only about 3/16" thick.Bob, nice work on the fence! I also very much like the style of it. I came very close to using that style on our new remodel home, and still wish I did. one doesn't see that style around as much anymore and fence guys are not keen on it. . I works for me though! Keep up the great work.
Rick, my retirement has spoiled me. The best sleep I get is that hour or two in the morning after the sun comes up. Getting up in the pre-dawn hours is an unpleasant flashback to having a job. This far south it's still warm at dawn. It was 82*F at 8:00 this morning and hit 90*F at noon. With the dew point at 73*F the "cooler" temperature doesn't feel that cool. Rather than work out in the sun, I trimmed some branches from the tree that overhangs the shed. The sweat stains only made it to mid-thigh.Bob, stopping to smell the roses is always a good idea. 1/2 Cup will definitely be missed.
I hear you about working outside in the heat. I finally decided to follow the lead of several GJ members and get out there at 6:30 am. That idea lasted for exactly one morning. I don't know how those guys do it - I guess when a project has to be done, they do what it takes to beat the heat.
Craig, I don't know if it will help but I bought an 18" long 11/16" Greenlee lineman's bit so I may be able to get past the roots. I switched from the chainsaw to a reciprocating saw when I got tired the other day. I was kneeling and tipped over into the roots. Lying on my side I whispered to the tree stump that I was coming to get it. Big mistake -- I was caught in a hole and had to do the turtle on its back routine to get out.Hey Bob, making progress on the fence. I don’t envy you at all dig around the roots. Trying to dig a hole where roots are just put me in a bad mood. I usually end up cussing them like they can hear me and at some point really go to town on them as if I was fighting someone, then I just hear the bastards laughing at me.
The recess for the lag bolt is the same way we mounted all the boards in the horse stalls and paddocks. That was in 2004, still hanging strong today.
Stay cool as you can!
Mike, I would rather have your fence but I appreciate the encouragement.Great progress on the fence Bob. It's coming along nicely.![]()
Brian, I don't know if I'm doing it right but it's how my method has evolved over the 22 years with this fence.Bob,
Nice job with the fence and lots of hints on how to get it done efficiently and consistently. Well played.
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Stewart, that gate looks like a perfect job for me. Oh, wait, you expect me to make a gate to fit that exact opening? I make the gate and then put in the posts. It's my "cut it again if it's too short" fitting strategy. This was going to be a 6-foot high gate on a 6-foot high fence.
Guster, my genetic makeup is 43% Sweden, 21% England, Wales and Northwestern Europe, 17% Germanic Europe, 13% Norway, 3% Ireland and Scotland and 3% Eastern Europe and Russia. No warm weather genes of any kind. I start to sweat when there is no frost.Nice progress Bob. I don't know how you do it though. I'd be a sweat puddle leaning against that fence post before getting the first paling up. I'm not bred for hot places.
I've also dug out enough tree roots to know it is a war of attrition. Where you have to be prepared to camp out and give it a little struggle until it eventually gives up or wait long enough for nature to take its course and soften it up a bit for you. That root mass looks like about a year's worth of entertainment!
I do like your collection of nailers though. The more I see them used to more I have to resist the urge of acquiring one or five. For now I will appreciate the art of the hand driven nail a while longer.
