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Above 1200 Sq/FT Restored 1930's Auto Shop

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.
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BB767

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When I tore mine apart, the lifting arm had a threaded rod on each end as part of the whole unit.( main pivot point) that rod doesn't turn. It is part of the casting. I took the large nuts off the side, and slid it out. One side of the lifting support arms comes off (at the saddle end) which allows the jack to come apart. the other end of the lifting support arm was still riveted ( I guess thats what you would call it) and stayed with the jack side. Now the other jack side I couldn't seperate the lifting arm and support arm from the side, which made it alot more difficult to clean up. Major pinching finger moments. I can't see where a grease fitting in that hole in the lift arm goes to anyplace. I didn't notice any holes in the main pivot point rods. Maybe I over looked that. I just greased up the rods when I put them back together. It definately would have been easier if it had nuts to take off instead of those rivets. I will have to see if I can get a fitting in there and pump some grease and see where it goes. Thanks again for all the input you guys provided. much appreciated - Breeze

P.S. I have always known (zerks) as grease fittings - I will in the future try to refer to them as zerks

Hey, some people refer to it as the "cockpit" and others the "flight deck" as long as we all know what's being referenced that's all that matters. Try a little low pressure air to see where it's coming out perhaps. Also make sure it's been cleaned out well. Old grease can harden and plug up the passage way.

I think we've :deadhorse for a while now don't you? :) I'm going to get some day 1 photos on here and get back to the root of the thread.


Thomas
 
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BB767

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Here are a few more pictures my daughter took at the property from day 1 or week 1 as the case may be.

CarDoorBW-Sm1.jpg

CoconutSm1.jpg

You'd have to ask her why she thought a picture of a coconut out there would be a good thing. This is just as she found it. In the background is the tool shed and car door and lawn tractor from the picture above..

SpokesSm1.jpg

This was the planter I tried so hard to find a new home for and failed :sad: All compete with good sheet metal...........

Corpse12Sm1.jpg

Corpse6Sm1.jpg

CashOnlySm1.jpg

ManualsSm1.jpg

InsideTheGarageSm1.jpg

Thomas
 

Call me the Breeze

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Thomas, I forgot to mention how impressed I was to see this thread and can't imagine the amount of work it took just to clean the place out. It truly is amazing and you should be proud of the work you've done. It is such a great place, and must be very rewarding for you just to stop and look at all the progress. I am sure I am not the only one who wants to see more. History is so important, and you have a neat time capsule there. I have a feeling the old owner would be happy to know you've kept it alive although he probably can't understand why it is so neat and clean LOL! Keep them coming. we are all anxious to see more.
 

hobbitss

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Here are a few more pictures my daughter took at the property from day 1 or week 1 as the case may be.

Corpse12Sm1.jpg


Thomas

Slight spelling error there...

It is Spelled PAHTY, similar to Pahk the Cah in Hahvahd Yahd and go to the Bah foh a Beeh....
If you are in some parts of Maine you need to look out for hungry Beahs... :bounce:

Dug wants to know where the old tools are hiding.............
 
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BB767

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Slight spelling error there...

It is Spelled PAHTY, similar to Pahk the Cah in Hahvahd Yahd and go to the Bah foh a Beeh....
If you are in some parts of Maine you need to look out for hungry Beahs... :bounce:

Dug wants to know where the old tools are hiding.............

"DD" my Darling Daughter was almost crying from laughing so hard when she first saw that car back in 2005. I'll forward your reply and I'm sure she'll enjoy your whit, thanks.

The tools are just a few feet away along with.......

CarburatorSm6.jpg


Those are mostly carburetors on the shelves

CarburatorSm5.jpg


CarburatorSm4.jpg


CarburatorSm3.jpg


Bendix Aviation Corp.

CarburatorSm2.jpg




CarburatorSm1.jpg


YManifoldSm2.jpg


That's an aftermarket dual carb intake for a flat head V8 if I'm not mistaken. Made from an alloy, maybe Aluminum?

YMainfoldsSm1.jpg


Here's a better look. AL JERAULD on the side. There is also some writing cast into the "V" I can get if someone would like that information. Look familiar to anyone? :dunno:


Thomas
 

hobbitss

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"DD" my Darling Daughter was almost crying from laughing so hard when she first saw that car back in 2005. I'll forward your reply and I'm sure she'll enjoy your whit, thanks.

The tools are just a few feet away along with.......

CarburatorSm6.jpg


Those are mostly carburetors on the shelves

CarburatorSm5.jpg


CarburatorSm4.jpg


CarburatorSm3.jpg


Bendix Aviation Corp.

CarburatorSm2.jpg




CarburatorSm1.jpg


YManifoldSm2.jpg


That's an aftermarket dual carb intake for a flat head V8 if I'm not mistaken. Made from an alloy, maybe Aluminum?

YMainfoldsSm1.jpg


Here's a better look. AL JERAULD on the side. There is also some writing cast into the "V" I can get if someone would like that information. Look familiar to anyone? :dunno:


Thomas

Just after you posted those photos, dozens of monitors got knocked over when motor heads from all over attempted to reach out and grab the carburetor of their dreams....:drool:

How many 4 barrel units buried in there???
Interesting High Rise Manifold, it would be nice to know the theory behind it's design...

How many of us still read "FI" as Fuel Injected and not Forced Induction as seems to be the meaning these days??...
 

Lump

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That Quadrajet is probably Chevy or Cadillac, based on the 90 degree fuel line inlet shape (most other GM's entered the front of the carb housing from straight in front). It appears to be from the proper vintage to be a potential muscle car carb...although millions MORE 327 and 350 medium-performance passenger cars were fitted with them, than were big blocks, etc. So the odds are not great. But it would be cool to read the code stamped vertically on the driver's side, and find out it was originally installed on something like a big block Chevy with manual transmission. Some of those cores are worth over a grand now, to some folks... :thumbup:
 

Arlen

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Just Googled Al Jerauld quickly and it appears they were a speed shop in the San Diego area (National City).

Looking again at the picture that is the information that is in the V of the manifold!

NATL CITY
CALIF
 
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BB767

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Just Googled Al Jerauld quickly and it appears they were a speed shop in the San Diego area (National City).

Looking again at the picture that is the information that is in the V of the manifold!

NATL CITY
CALIF

Nicley done Arlen, thanks. :thumbup:

Thomas
 

RAZORBACK

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Thats a nice carb adaptor!
Also impressive work on that old Auto Shop, I LOVE it!!!

 

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Dutch 1960

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Jerauld's Mufflers is still in business as a muffler shop in National City. The shop was rebuilt in about 1980 into a modern facility. Until then, it was a small ramshackle place in which most of the muffler work was done on ancient outdoor lifts in an empty lot beside the shop. The shop itself reminded me of the "before" shots of your place there. Scads of parts, including magnetoes, camshafts, spark plugs, and lots of flathead parts, all in their original boxes. Stacks of old shop manuals. Pictures of race cars on the walls. Rather disorganized, but nothing like your place. The pictures suggest that Jerauld's had done a lot of work on speed run cars (Bonneville/El Mirage SCTA type stuff) in the '50's or so. This was in the '70's. All but the race car pictures disappeared after the shop rebuild.

There may not be a lot of theory behind that manifold. Simply a way to mount 2 carbs in the place made for 1. Remember, there was a lot of "trial and error" hot rod engineering in the '40's and '50's.

On another subject, I have an offer in on an old house with a big detached barn of a garage on 2 and a half flat acres up in the mountains. The widowed old lady needs to come down the hill to live with her family now. The barn is empty, unlike yours, but I have plenty of my own cool stuff I've been stacking up over the years. Much of the inspiration comes from this site. Thanks!
 

webbs2jzgte

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you should sell all that stuff to a dang museum you have the smithsonian museum of old car parts or had lol.
 
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BB767

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you should sell all that stuff to a dang museum you have the smithsonian museum of old car parts or had lol.

Oh I still have almost all of it. As I start to finally clean out the last buildings more parts are starting to surface.....

Carb1Sm.jpg


This is an extremely old updraft carburetor....

CarbSm2.jpg


I think it was one of the first when they started to figure this principle out. I don't have the information from the data plate in my notes. I'll have to get that when I go back out there....


CarbSm3.jpg


The body is completely made of brass or maybe bronze I believe :dunno:

SparkPlugSm1.jpg


An old spark plug before ceramic was used. The electrode is just a piece of round wire. It's the type you take apart to clean.

Hubcaps1sm-1.jpg


Just a few of the shelves and shelves of hubcaps.....

Thomas
 
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BB767

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Jerauld's Mufflers is still in business as a muffler shop in National City. The shop was rebuilt in about 1980 into a modern facility. Until then, it was a small ramshackle place in which most of the muffler work was done on ancient outdoor lifts in an empty lot beside the shop. The shop itself reminded me of the "before" shots of your place there. Scads of parts, including magnetoes, camshafts, spark plugs, and lots of flathead parts, all in their original boxes. Stacks of old shop manuals. Pictures of race cars on the walls. Rather disorganized, but nothing like your place. The pictures suggest that Jerauld's had done a lot of work on speed run cars (Bonneville/El Mirage SCTA type stuff) in the '50's or so. This was in the '70's. All but the race car pictures disappeared after the shop rebuild.

There may not be a lot of theory behind that manifold. Simply a way to mount 2 carbs in the place made for 1. Remember, there was a lot of "trial and error" hot rod engineering in the '40's and '50's.


On another subject, I have an offer in on an old house with a big detached barn of a garage on 2 and a half flat acres up in the mountains. The widowed old lady needs to come down the hill to live with her family now. The barn is empty, unlike yours, but I have plenty of my own cool stuff I've been stacking up over the years. Much of the inspiration comes from this site. Thanks!

You are most welcome Dutch, keep us posted with pictures of your " stuff"!! :D

Thomas
 

kbeitz

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Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow .....

It took me a few days to read it all... I feel I found a new home...
I've spent the last few years on mytractorforum.com and that was my home...
But this post kicks ****... You will be seeing much more of me on this forum...
I will be posting my stories here for a while...
Looking at this link I think you-all will think I might fit in...

http://www.mytractorforum.com/showthread.php?t=97466&highlight=pile+junk+tractor

WWW.Beitz.net

I cried when you said you took the two engine tractor to the junkyard...
 
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markviii

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Tom about cried, too, every time he had to dispose of something. Be assured that things didn't leave the property without a very thorough search for a new home other than the local scrap dealer. All of this was before GJ. Hindsight is always 20/20, but who knows if it would have actually found a home even then. Rest assured that we tried to "recycle" as much as we could.

Chris
 

wats56

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Mike, by now you must know this is THE place for lurkers! All are welcome.:thumbup:

The thing about that manifold is that most of the fasteners on it are safety wired just as we do on aircraft and race cars. That I think would eliminate a forge. I'm also trained and certified as an aircraft power plant mechanic and it looks like nothing from any old aircraft that I'm familiar with would use so I don't think it's for an aircraft engine. It may never be resolved. :dunno:

I promise to keep adding information here as time allows. I'm out there every day I'm home but right now with the weather breaking I'm doing much yard work out there. Rainy days and nights I'm doing inside work. Got all the stumps ground up from the storm last week, spent a day turning a large pile of brush into mulch, grade work around the barn footings and have started to prepare for the planting of 35 trees out there so not real interesting for you guys I'm afraid. I enjoy the work and it's all part of the shop project but not real dynamic.

Thomas

Hi Tom , a lurker from Wyoming , About that manifold could it be something off a propane or natural gas engine, at a place i used to work there was a big v-8 propane burner mostly all aluminum, an industrial engine of some kind. Keep up the good work , and thank you for your dedication.
 
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BB767

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WHAT is that signal generator tuning thing in front of the VOMs on the right? Is this where the son did his electronics fix it business?

Adam

Adam that is a condenser tester......

CondenserTestSm1-1.jpg


The others are just.......

MetersSm1.jpg


Dwell, tach meters. Love the large scale for my failing eyes!! :(

Thomas
 
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BB767

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Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow Wow .....

It took me a few days to read it all... I feel I found a new home...
I've spent the last few years on mytractorforum.com and that was my home...
But this post kicks ****... You will be seeing much more of me on this forum...
I will be posting my stories here for a while...
Looking at this link I think you-all will think I might fit in...

http://www.mytractorforum.com/showthread.php?t=97466&highlight=pile+junk+tractor

WWW.Beitz.net

I cried when you said you took the two engine tractor to the junkyard...

Looked at your creation and OK, ya, you'll fit right in here nooo problem. :D

Welcome.

Thomas
 
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BB767

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That really is beautiful, It also looks like it would have been alot of fun restoring.

Well yes, it was and still is fun doing the restoration out there. Summer makes it harder for me to post pictures as I'm so involved in good weather activities. Stick around from time to time for updates. It looks like it's finally drying out enough so we can consider moving the honey house and 2 car garage. Stand by to stand by! :thumbup:

Thomas
 
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BB767

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That Bendix aircraft carb would clean up like new with a swift soda blast & be a perfect display piece...Probably off some old Duster..

No doubt.........:wtf:


BTW there's a Chrysler small block V8 in the tool shed ( all I've done to date is note it's there, complete and waiting) I expect the Bendix came from it don't you?

Thomas
 
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BB767

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Hi Tom , a lurker from Wyoming , About that manifold could it be something off a propane or natural gas engine, at a place i used to work there was a big v-8 propane burner mostly all aluminum, an industrial engine of some kind. Keep up the good work , and thank you for your dedication.

wats56 I'm going to be out there for the next couple of days and by golly I'm going to actually look that thing over and see if I can shed some light on this. It's just such an odd duck of a piece that doesn't seem to relate to anything. But then I thought the same about the Bendix aviation carburetor but Rick solved that one for me!

As you know, we like all you lurkers here.

Thomas
 

Lou's Garage

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Adam that is a condenser tester......

CondenserTestSm1-1.jpg


Used for testing early "can" style electrolytic capacitors (formerly known as condensers) as used in radio and TV circuits. Actually, if working, it could be used for testing just about any capacitor. Knowing the background, it was probably used in the auto radio repair shop. It could also be used for testing automotive ignition condensers or noise suppressors but not designed for that.

"Alter Ego" Lou
(aka Amateur Radio Operator NY4F)
 
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BB767

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Adam that is a condenser tester......

CondenserTestSm1-1.jpg


Used for testing early "can" style electrolytic capacitors (formerly known as condensers) as used in radio and TV circuits. Actually, if working, it could be used for testing just about any capacitor. Knowing the background, it was probably used in the auto radio repair shop. It could also be used for testing automotive ignition condensers or noise suppressors but not designed for that.

"Alter Ego" Lou
(aka Amateur Radio Operator NY4F)

Lou, thank you for that information. Note it is a "Heathkit" unit (which I have not cleaned up yet, it's shown "as found") which used to be electronic equipment built at home from a kit with all parts supplied by Heathkit. I always assumed it was used only to check automotive type condensers but from your reply I now believe it was used by the one son who did radio repair.

Signsm-2.jpg


I'll bet he built the unit for use in that business.

OutSdieCleanUpsm3.jpg


Those repairs were performed in this trailer which had several car radios stacked on shelves when I cleaned it out and removed the structure.

There was a dedicated automotive condenser tester that looks from the 50's which was in the shop. I'll post pictures of that unit. As I recall it's about 8" W X 12" T and 4" Deep. I don't remember the manufacture, maybe Sun? :dunno: There are other old auto related electronic pieces of equipment like 40's or 50's battery chargers and the like which I was going to post all as a group. Perhaps I'll do them all together.


Thomas
 

Ram

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GardenTactorsm.jpg


Here's a home made garden tractor. Study it and you'll a single cylinder engine, driving 2 three speed transmissions hooked together and chain drive for the final drive. Wire spooked wheel on one side and a solid steel wheel on the other. He just used whatever he had! This was a hard one to give up it was so unusual but I had enough unusual stuff I had to draw the line some where. It got scraped sad to say. Totally rusted up and I had no time. Didn't really know what to do with it frankly.

Thomas

You don't have any more photos of the home made tractor do you? That is cool too.

Really like the job you have done with the shop.
 
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BB767

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You don't have any more photos of the home made tractor do you? That is cool too.

Really like the job you have done with the shop.

As I remember I do have at least two more that when I get home I'll post. At the time of the clean up I was going through so much material out there that I didn't spend too much time documenting items I was going to recycle. That tractor showed much ingenuity I thought.

Thomas
 

xlor8

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.....xlor8 from east Tennessee checking in .I have spent many hours over the past few months reading every word of your post. Looking at some of the pics I would have backed a truck up to it and loaded it all up and hauled it to the dump,then you see a neat peace and say i got to check that out. Really enjoyed .

thanks xlor8.....
 
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BB767

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.....xlor8 from east Tennessee checking in .I have spent many hours over the past few months reading every word of your post. Looking at some of the pics I would have backed a truck up to it and loaded it all up and hauled it to the dump,then you see a neat peace and say i got to check that out. Really enjoyed .

thanks xlor8.....

Thanks xlor8 for taking the time to read it all. That is no small undertaking anymore! Check in from time to time as there is more to be had here.

Thomas
 

ratman2

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Man does this thread bring back some good memories:

From the early 1950's to about 1983ish my grandfather was the head mechanic for the Fairfield Lumber and Supply company in Fairfield, CT. He was EXACTLY like Mr. Johnson was, very old school, did awesome work, and fixed anything and everything from small engines to Mack semi tractors and heavy equipment and also all of the lumber shop tools. At one point he even did a full restoration on a mobile crane truck. He got such a reputation that Mack truck found out about it and he won several awards for excellence from Mack.
Also like Mr. Johnson he saved every scrap part and every piece of metal you could find. He had drawers in his office that were FULL of screws, bolts, nuts, fittings, gears, and anything and everything else you can possibly imagine. He was HUGE on PM on ALL the equipment. So much so that the word got around again and when FL&S would go to sell a truck or piece of equipment people would come to buy it from hours away when there were much closer sources of used equipment because they knew full well that FL&S used equipment was in TOP condition. I got to see the shop and office a few times when I was little. He left there in 1983 and sadly 95% of the tools and equipment that he used has been lost for good :(. The guy that replaced him filled 2 30 cubic yard dumpsters with my grandpa's parts stash and metal stash alone :(
 
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BB767

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Man does this thread bring back some good memories:

From the early 1950's to about 1983ish my grandfather was the head mechanic for the Fairfield Lumber and Supply company in Fairfield, CT. He was EXACTLY like Mr. Johnson was, very old school, did awesome work, and fixed anything and everything from small engines to Mack semi tractors and heavy equipment and also all of the lumber shop tools. At one point he even did a full restoration on a mobile crane truck. He got such a reputation that Mack truck found out about it and he won several awards for excellence from Mack.
Also like Mr. Johnson he saved every scrap part and every piece of metal you could find. He had drawers in his office that were FULL of screws, bolts, nuts, fittings, gears, and anything and everything else you can possibly imagine. He was HUGE on PM on ALL the equipment. So much so that the word got around again and when FL&S would go to sell a truck or piece of equipment people would come to buy it from hours away when there were much closer sources of used equipment because they knew full well that FL&S used equipment was in TOP condition. I got to see the shop and office a few times when I was little. He left there in 1983 and sadly 95% of the tools and equipment that he used has been lost for good :(. The guy that replaced him filled 2 30 cubic yard dumpsters with my grandpa's parts stash and metal stash alone :(

Nice story and sad at the same time. People who don't know any better often just throw wonderful vintage items away. I think it was a real eye opener in my town for people to witness the rebirth of my old shop. Everyone and I mean everyone who heard I bought the place thought for sure I would just tear it down and replace it with something new. It has shown what possibilities are out there.

I'm pretty certain that anyone who lived through the depression in the 1930's were forever changed in how they conducted their lives. Men like your grandfather and Mr Johnson saved scrap because they knew what it was like to not have anything and trained themselves to make do with what little they did have.

Thanks for taking a moment to share your memories with us. :thumbup:

Thomas
 

hobbitss

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The cabinet housing the lift controls and fluid reservoir was pretty banged up to say the least. Everything "worked" but not as well as it could have. Also visually it needed help.

LiftContrlMid1sm1.jpg


The access door is hinged with a piano hinge on the right side and is held shut on the left side with fasteners. You can see the tabs (3) on the open door that these fasteners went through. Also the control lever inserts through a hole in the door. That hole was torn open as you can see, which allowed the door to be opened without removing the control lever. It's easy to see how the electric motor was positioned over the hydraulic pump. There is no pneumatic air involved in it's operation.


LiftControl2sm.jpg


The control has now been rewired and a new switch installed. New wiring was run all the way to the circuit panel. The control lever was repaired as the end inserting into the housing was damaged and had been jury rigged to work after a fashion. It was a press fit to a roll pin originally and it is that way once more as seen .

LiftContrl3sm.jpg


Electrically all the control lever does is energize the switch which turns on the pump motor. To lower the lift when the lever is reversed it mechanically opens a valve in the pump which allows the fluid to return back into the reservoir. Also note the access door has been removed. To do the necessary repair work on it using a bench was quite helpful. The only way to remove it meant the welds holding it on had to be ground off and then re welded back on.

LiftRmFloor2sm.jpg


LiftRmFloor1sm.jpg


Here we were trying the floor tile. 1 Foot square or 2? Straight or diagonal?

LiftRmWallCabsm.jpg



LiftControlCabMid1sm.jpg


I've looked and I don't have any pictures of the repaired door prior to its installation. This is the best I could find with it in primer.

IMG_0084-sm.jpg


RotaryCab1sm.jpg



The reservoir filler cap has the Rotary logo on it. Hard to photograph chrome, it just reflects back at the camera! The seam down the middle shows where the reservoir is, taking up the back haft of the cabinet. You can also see the piano hinge and the welds which were ground off to remove the door.

RotaryCab2sm.jpg


This is how the door was originally attached. The piano hinge was just spot welded down the side of the cabinet. They were installed back just where the originals had been. Same number, same place, same length.

RotaryCab3sm.jpg


RotaryCab4sm.jpg


RotaryCab5sm.jpg


This is the left side. The fasteners I used were ones I fabricated. I used stainless steel bolts, the heads cut off, the shanks then threaded and capped on both ends with stainless washers and acorn nuts. All the stainless was polished to near chrome finish.

RoatryCab6sm.jpg


RotaryCab7sm.jpg


Another look at the cap.


RotaryCab8sm.jpg



The latest patent date on the data plate is July 8,1928. The brass plate and screws were polished and gloss clear coated.

LiftControlsm.jpg


As mentioned earlier Rotary just knows it was manufactured before 1935.......... sometime.

Thomas

I had to go wayyyyyy back and dig around to find these images...
While doing some digging around the internet looking for manufacturing sources for the various 4 post lifts available these days, I found the following page which states that Rotary (now owned by Dover) first invented the automotive hydraulic lift in 1925... You would think that they would be extremely interested in documenting one of their earliest products in full working order...

For some reason this sounds familiar, so if some one else mentioned it I didn't see the post to reread it.. :bowdown:

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Vehicle Service Group



Vehicle Service Group
Global Headquarters
2700 Lanier Drive
Madison, Indiana
USA
http://www.vsgdover.com


Vehicle Service Group (VSG) is made up of two leading global companies, Rotary Lift® (light and heavy-duty vehicle service and residential storage lifts), and Chief™ Automotive Technologies (vehicle frame straightening machines and computerized frame measuring systems. The conjoining of these two significant businesses has positioned VSG as an even stronger, dynamic and diverse leader in the vehicle service industry. In addition to Rotary and Chief, the VSG family of lift brands also includes Forward Lift®, Direct Lift®, Hanmecson®, Revolution®, Blitz® and nogra®. With global headquarters in Madison, Indiana USA, Vehicle Service Group also has regional business operation centers and ISO 9001-certified manufacturing facilities on three continents: North America, Europe and Asia. To help maintain its leadership position, the organization uses channel partner and end-user customer feedback in developing the products designed to make vehicle service and repair processes more efficient and produce greater revenue. VSG is also focused on better understanding trends and technologies which will impact the way next generation vehicles need to be serviced and repaired. This initiative validates the importance of having an aggressive research and product development program. In the shadow of the first automotive hydraulic lift invented by Rotary’s founder in 1925, The VSG organization embraces the same philosophy and vision that launched the vehicle lift industry. The company’s goal is to provide its global customers superior, unmatched levels of product innovation, quality manufacturing, reliable service and ongoing support.
Locations

Madison, Indiana (Global Headquarters and North & South American Operations Center)
Braunlingen, Germany (Europe & Africa Operations Center)
Haimen, China (Asian Operations Center)

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Last edited:

Steve V.

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2007
Messages
367
Location
Texas
I've been watching this thread since the beginning. All I can say is WOW. I love to see old things reused in this throw away world we live in. This whole shop is amazing! I know you've probably mentioned it before but what brand of floor tiles are those?

:bowdown::bowdown::bowdown:

Steve
 
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