Personally, I enjoy mowing my lawn, I enjoy the time to be with my thoughts and make something look beautiful. With the white ****, it's merely clearing it off the concrete and doesn't look "beautiful" by any stretch of the word and maybe more importantly is that I can juggle my schedule and agenda around lawn mowing whereas snow removal I am at mother nature's beckoning call.And speaking of driving in it. I’ve lived in it before plus traveled all over this country during winter so I know what I’m doing. But last night the wife and I decided to go out and she was driving her new ride. What never occurred to me until this white knuckle experience is she’s never driven in snow and icy conditions. And after several times of reaching for an oh **** handle that doesn’t exist decided she needed to learn a thing or two. So we swung into an empty parking lot that was completely iced up from the previous nights snow n melt n refreeze and I told her step on it and see how your car handles.
Well apparently her instincts to let off the gas before it gets totally bisserk are a litttlllle bit slower then mine. Thank god that car has enough brains not to allow itself to collect the trash enclosure that was rapidly approaching.
the moral of this story being I’ll be taking her out this evening for some more practice and how to handle the ice ⛸
Also, I'm frustrated at the ones passing everyone on the freeway and they only have a small section cleared on the driver's window and maybe the windshield. Those are the ones I want to see piled up off the side of the road but unfortunately, they usually take someone else out with them.I've driven in this stuff since I was about 12 out on the lakes. First car was an 85 mercury marquis rear wheel drive so i had good learning experience from the start. Grandpa took me into parking lots in his oldsmobile when he was teaching me how to drive and had me do doughnuts to learn. Had about 2 hours of **** roads last weekend around madison pulling a trailer and so many idiots flying by with phone in their hand. Was foggy and visability was very low. Crazy how many accidents there are nowadays. Not sure if it's just me or if it's because of social media making things more public but it sure seems like there are WAY more accidents now then there were 20 years ago. Especially the big multi vehicle ones. I live right off i80 in iowa and half an inch of snow and there are cars and trucks everywhere in the ditches. The safety cables are all tore up in the winter. Maybe it's just me but sure seems like a lot more accidents out there these days.
Mike thanks for taking the time to post the photos of your small engine tools. I am amazed at the level of tools you’ve acquired. I think of them as investments, they always seem to pay me back by not hiring someone to do the work I do. The snow looks beautiful. I enjoy looking at it and a few snowflakes a year are fine. I really don’t want anything more though.
I too am blessed with a wife that understands my need (some may call it an obsession) for good tools. I earn a living with tools and they better work as hard as I do. She has supported me and we both get to reap the benefits.Thanks for continuing to follow along and glad you enjoyed those pictures. Some of those tools haven't been used much in the past few years but in the day they were heavily used as I insisted on having the correct tools to do the jobs properly. My wonderful wife was also very supportive in the fact that when I needed a specific tool to do a job she didn't put up a fuss about it. It was a joint effort through and through even though she wasn't the one behind the wrench.
I too am blessed with a wife that understands my need (some may call it an obsession) for good tools. I earn a living with tools and they better work as hard as I do. She has supported me and we both get to reap the benefits.
Hey Mike, is it too late to install a heated driveway system, haha.
Wouldn't that be nice, flip a switch and 2 hrs later the driveway is clear of snow, or an app that you can turn on the driveway heaters from work and it's clear when you arrive home.
BTW Mike, thanks for keeping up the posts, whenever I need a boost of motivation to get out to my shop or to tackle some stuff around my house, I link to your forum page and read your latest posts, it always motivates me to get off my **** and take on a few items on my "List"
David.
Mike, I spent a week in the Washington DC area in the January 1996 blizzard. Every TV station had wall-to-wall coverage and 90% of the vehicles in the ditches were AWD or 4WD SUVs and Pickups. Drove from my motel to the office every day that week and I was the only one there. My two-wheel-drive rental plowed its way into the parking lot in the morning and back to the motel at night. Sometimes I had to make two or three attempts to get rolling but never got stuck. Did have to buy a $3 snow shovel to open a hole in the drifts at the motel.
There were flip phones back then but very few people drove around looking at them -- they just glued the open phone to the side of their face. These days, driving in snow in places that rarely see it is a suicide mission.





Yeah, I shouldn't complain Cam. I was getting tired of the triple digit heat we had here this year breaking multiple records as far as overall days above a 100 degrees as well as consecutive days over 90 and 100-degrees.
I just hate having to deal with the **** at work and I worry about my wife and kids driving in it, or maybe more specifically the way many people are driving these days and my family being on the roads with them is what worries me. I can see myself mellowing a bit after retirement as far as snow but it's hard to enjoy these days. My neighbor stopped me at the mailbox yesterday and said "it sure beats mowing the lawn". Well I COMPLETELY disagreed.Personally, I enjoy mowing my lawn, I enjoy the time to be with my thoughts and make something look beautiful. With the white ****, it's merely clearing it off the concrete and doesn't look "beautiful" by any stretch of the word and maybe more importantly is that I can juggle my schedule and agenda around lawn mowing whereas snow removal I am at mother nature's beckoning call.
Oh well, maybe at least with all this **** falling from the sky we'll be out of our drought situation next year. Although in my mind I don't think the local government will ever admit that even if there were rivers flowing in the streets right past city hall. Once they introduce a policy and put behaviors and procedure in place to enforce them, they sure as hell will never go back and say this is no longer a concern, even when it isn't. Doing away with policies and government simply do not belong in the same sentence.![]()
I hear ya on this one. Driving in just about any amount of snow doesn’t phase me anymore, I get in my truck and trudge to work without thinking twice. My wife, on the other hand, has extreme anxiety about driving in it. And her anxiety becomes mine. Any distance and any amount of snow does not give her the warm and fuzzies. Since covid, she works from home 3 days per week now, and if it snows, she just plain doesn’t have to go in. So, if the kids have school I just bring them in and get to work a little late, and everyone is happy.
Good stuff! That is exactly the kind of stuff I want to do once I retire and slow down a bit!Friday night after arriving home I thought I'd knock out a small aerosol tray for my new Sunex tool cart. I have been looking for either a MAC or Matco aerosol tray to keep with the whole "vintage" theme of my tool cart but one was not to be had, even from either tool supplier. Even if so, I doubt I'd pay the $75 or so for one. That being said, I dug through some sheet metal and grabbed a piece of 19-gauge P&O in which to made my tray out of.
I copied the measurements of the MAC one on my Snap-on tool cart with the exception that I would make the back just a little taller so the aerosol cans could be just below the handle when sitting in the tray rather than at or slightly above the handle on my Snap-on cart.
After deburring the edges I made the first bend. The Di-Acro pan brake sure makes nice bends and I sure enjoy the few times I get to use it.
Making the second bend for the front or short side.
Wiped down and sanded with some 180-grit on the DA.
Mocked up for size and mounting comparison.
Next I measured, marked, cut and bent up the two end caps.
End caps mocked up.
Deburring and adding a very slight radius to the corners.
Saturday morning my son was bringing his wife's Subaru over to address an issue with the struts so I thought I'd roll the cover back a little on the Camaro and toss the charger on for a few hours at low amperage. It's been a couple of weeks since we drove the car and although I'm sure I will put a new battery in it in the spring, I want to get through the winter months with the battery in the event we are able to take it for a drive or 10 on nice weekend days.
Stay tuned for the completion of the tray and Saturday's work.
Ground here was white this morning here but only heavy frost.Arrived home last night and had to remove about 3.5"-4" of snow from the side and backyard. I shoveled about 2" from the drive in front of my attached garage before work yesterday so I only had about 1.5-2 inches to throw there as it continued snowing much of the day yesterday.
This is standing at the back door of the house garage looking towards the shop after bumping the temperature up in the shop and bringing some parts into the shop, hence the footprints.
Another shot from the back of the house garage.
After clearing the front drive and one throw in the back yard.
After the second and third throw from the back yard and it started snowing again.
As I closed up the shop for the night we had another skiff of snow.
I shoveled another inch of snow off the main drive this morning before work and as I was leaving it started snowing again, huge flakes today so I'm sure it will be a repeat of last night when I arrive home this evening.
I was at least able to get a couple of hours in the shop working last night so that was nice.
Good stuff! That is exactly the kind of stuff I want to do once I retire and slow down a bit!
That is how I would have liked to do it but my issue is way too many HUGE projects! Like a dozen that are all 1000+ hours each at a minimum. I have recently attempted to sell a few but zero luck. Few of current projects are well on the way but they all need paint. The painter is so lazy and seldom shows up . . Probably because he was seldom paid and lost $ on each. I do hope next year I will finally be able to do a few jobs for pay. It's been years since I had a job that paid.Thanks Randy, but I'm kind of looking at things in the opposite order. I feel that by spending the time now to get the shop organized for proficient work flow will allow me to work on things and bring in money once I retire.
That is how I would have liked to do it but my issue is way too many HUGE projects! Like a dozen that are all 1000+ hours each at a minimum. I have recently attempted to sell a few but zero luck. Few of current projects are well on the way but they all need paint. The painter is so lazy and seldom shows up . . Probably because he was seldom paid and lost $ on each. I do hope next year I will finally be able to do a few jobs for pay. It's been years since I had a job that paid.
I wasn't paying attention and old age got here too fast. I did not plan for retirement a total failure on me. My "retirement plan" now is actually all these trucks. If I do not finish them I simply have zero retirement. Not much left to pay on house but that will not help for cash just less to pay out.I still have the hot rod blood running through my veins and would like to build one or five more before I'm done, but at this point I don't want to pull money out of the bank but rather keep dumping it in for retirement. Once I retire my plan is to do the side jobs to bankroll the hot rod builds and maybe even with a grandchild about that time. My thinking is that way I won't have to touch as much of our principal retirement funds and will have more time to wrench, doing what I enjoy.
I wasn't paying attention and old age got here too fast. I did not plan for retirement a total failure on me. My "retirement plan" now is actually all these trucks. If I do not finish them I simply have zero retirement. Not much left to pay on house but that will not help for cash just less to pay out.
I was doing ok until my health took major nose dive 10yrs ago. Now everything takes 10x longer to do.I think I was one of the fortunate ones who looked deep into my life about 16 years ago and realized that building cars and racing was not going to net me the results I wanted for my family. I was at a precipice and needed to decide if I was going to take the next step in racing, which would have been a BIG step financially, or just say the hell with it and get out before I got in any deeper. It was a very hard decision but looking back now I think it was the right decision. I had many friends that I was racing and working with building cars at the time and although I've lost touch with many of them, the ones that I am still in contact with are not any better off than they were back then, worse actually.
I was doing ok until my health took major nose dive 10yrs ago. Now everything takes 10x longer to do.
Good for you! Really enjoy following along.






I was just talking with my wife this morning that I noticed the battery in the Dakota is from 2018, and with the frigid temps we've had lately and the several days it's been sitting outside without starting, today will be a good test to see if it's still any good.
Something I've been thinking of, and I apologize if you've shown it before, but could I request a photo sample of the content of one of your service records books you keep on your vehicles? I'd like to do the same, and I know it's not rocket science, but I'd like to get it started on the right foot by following your lead.
Again, I'm over here jealous of your snowfall and total accumulation...I was also curious about your morning schedule, do you always get up early enough year round, or do you set your alarm earlier in the winter in the case of an emergency morning driveway snow removal?
Thank you for the detailed response. I'm looking forward to seeing the record book images. I really like the detail of adding in part numbers if you need a replacement down the road, it's virtually impossible to trust parts houses these days (at least the one's I deal with here).Austin, I would be happy to snap a picture of my record book(s). The ones in the vehicles are just a small pocket size wire bound notebook with key information in the cover and then dates and miles for each task as accomplished after that. For receipts and other literature or information I keep a file specific to each vehicle in my filing cabinet in the shop. The exception would be for our coach which all receipts and information are kept in one of those expanding files in a cupboard in the coach. For my Jeep, I actually have a separate folder just for the receipts and information pertaining to the LS swap and then the main one is for everything else Jeep. I actually also started a new (second) small notepad that stays in the Jeep when I did the LS swap as the first one was nearly full being 8+ years and 90k miles at the time of the swap. My records are nothing special and I am sure there are many who use an excel type spreadsheet and much more organized than mine, as mine are just hand written and contain mileage, dates and then specifics as to what was actually done. Whether it be a full LOF service, a battery replacement, transfer case service or wiper blades, I try to keep all part numbers along with dates and miles to determine lifespan of parts and when I need a part # I can browse back through the notebook.
I am certain the battery replacement was a bit premature in the wife's car as it is not uncommon for batteries to last more than 5 years but seeing as how she travels so far daily and away from my immediate attention if there is a problem, I opt to over-maintain her car so she feels safe and has less to worry about, which means I have less to worry about. Just adds to the overall cost of maintenance and therefore cost of ownership a bit but I feel it is a good tradeoff for reliability.
As for snow removal in the mornings, I generally set our alarm about 45-minutes earlier for mornings where we are projected for snow. This gives me about half an hour to clear the main drive plus it adds a little bit of cushion for my morning commute. I just clear the main driveway in front of the attached 3-car garage in the mornings as well as the front steps leading up to the door and my sidewalks. The downside to having a corner lot is I have nearly 400 linear feet of sidewalk in addition to the driveway. Then once arriving home I will attack the side driveway leading back through my gates to the backyard as well as the backyard between the house and the shop.
I was just talking with my wife this morning that I noticed the battery in the Dakota is from 2018, and with the frigid temps we've had lately and the several days it's been sitting outside without starting, today will be a good test to see if it's still any good.
Something I've been thinking of, and I apologize if you've shown it before, but could I request a photo sample of the content of one of your service records books you keep on your vehicles? I'd like to do the same, and I know it's not rocket science, but I'd like to get it started on the right foot by following your lead.
Again, I'm over here jealous of your snowfall and total accumulation...I was also curious about your morning schedule, do you always get up early enough year round, or do you set your alarm earlier in the winter in the case of an emergency morning driveway snow removal?







Thank you very much Mike, I really appreciate you taking the time and effort to produce this information for me! There's nothing at all to be ashamed of with how you've chosen to keep your records, in fact, it makes a lot of sense. I certainly appreciate computers and use them every day, but some things are just better analog. I think of this both in regards to your records books as well as the FSM's and other literature that you refer to in your posts. It's a fairly trivial procedure to pull out your records books and take down your service notes and then replace the book when done. Logging the same info into a spreadsheet is a more involved process that I don't see as being much, if any value added. Ease of use trumps hyper organization in this case I believe.
When it comes to manuals and other shop literature, I do still prefer paper copies as well. There's something about the ease of navigation that a book allows that a webpage or computer document just can't match. Navigation aside, the ability to highlight, bookmark, and jot down notes as you say are all things that are valuable when working in the shop. A note on the FSM's that you recently taught me about, I think I'm going to invest in a set for my Dakota. Using the Haynes manual recently definitely left a lot to be desired, lacking specifics and even clear instruction.
Again, thank you for sharing. I've now got this information tucked away so I can soon implement it. On a final note, I should have known that you would use that all caps engineering script handwriting that I'm so fond of! My messy scrawl is of course now second nature, but I should really retrain myself to write similarly.
There is currently a comprehensive FSM collection for my Dakota on Ebay that appears to be in good used condition. I don't know how to verify for certain that it's a complete collection, but it would be much more info than my Haynes manual provides anyway.Thanks for your comments Austin and glad I was of some help with the Factory Service Manuals.
As for my handwriting, I didn't realize there was an actual term for printing in all caps. I've just done it most of my life so it's all I know. In grade school they made us print properly as well as learning cursive but once I hit Jr. High and High School it was all caps for me. I think I picked it up from a science teacher in Jr. High actually. LOVED seeing his handwriting on the black board. Yes, BLACK board, not a white board or dry erase boards that are all used nowadays.Actually for those rare times when I am writing something down for someone, such as a passcode or something that is case sensitive, I actually have to stop and think about the letters whereas when I'm writing normally I just habitually print in all caps. I also very seldom write in cursive although there are a few times. I can just print faster than writing in cursive so I go that route.
I can tell you that as I've aged, especially over the past decade or so my handwriting has gotten worse. My son found one of my notebooks from High School and commented on my handwriting back then.
What I also find interesting is that my son prints in all caps as well. When he was over to the shop last weekend and writing in his notebook for his wife's Subaru, I noted that he was still using all caps. Not sure where he got that from.![]()





































