OP












Progress is good. Lift will be up and in use soon enough. At least you have a tractor, and one with a FEL, to move those heavy beams. Be safe...
Me, I would piss away a bunch of time on rust removal and painting that would have no effect on lift use other than delaying it.![]()
Rattlesnake. I fight that urge every time i do a project. I WANT stuff to look like new, but be old and vintage. I can't help restoring nearly everything. It takes an enormous chunk of willpower not to strip everything and paint it. The struggle is real.

Bulletpruf, my stories never end like that, clearly you are doing something wrong.![]()
Bulletpruf, that's a good outcome, if a little long. Mine don't work that well usually.
I threw a coat of primer and paint on the cross beams, started looking at hardware and found some issues. End rollers were worn, i picked up steel this morning and made my own. New bolts on those too. Two of the torsion springs were broken on one end, and they can't be broken and be safe. So i went in search of those, and nowhere to be found. I guess i'm making my own. It's not hard, just a pain to wait for a mcmaster order to show up. So in the meantime, i'll get the chain rollers rebuilt and installed and get the cross beams inside ready to go in. I'm supposed to be self isolating for a "medical procedure" on monday morning, so i'm probably not going anywhere tomorrow. I think i'll probably pull the ramps out of the weeds and do whatever those need tomorrow. I don't think i'm painting them though. Even if they are ugly puke yellow.
Pics in a min.
Trust me, it wasn't a happy ending. I ended up selling it for $80k -- it was an original Ram Air IV/M21/4.33/manual steering and brakes/dog dish hubcap car -- so it had that going for it. But it was too damn nice to drive.
Anyway, at $80K, I took a BEATING.
I'm waiting to see pics of one of the Fairlanes on the lift...




Rattlesnake. I fight that urge every time i do a project. I WANT stuff to look like new, but be old and vintage. I can't help restoring nearly everything. It takes an enormous chunk of willpower not to strip everything and paint it. The struggle is real.