trijeff
Well-known member
Nice, real nice
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
Nice, real nice
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
That shear looks like it came straight from the manufacturer ready to do work.
Beverly B-2 During/After:
Not my work, but I thought this photo might belong in this thread. This looks to me like an old Johnson outboard that somebody worked on for lots of hours.
Seen in a store full of architectural antique reproductions in the Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan.
1 by don long, on Flickr
2019-08-17 17.25.13 by don long, on Flickr
2019-08-30 14.55.47 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-02 16.51.25 by don long, on Flickr
IMG_1918 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-02 14.32.06 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-02 14.36.20 by don long, on Flickr
0114 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.10 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-12 12.06.23 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-12 11.30.53 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-21 16.02.33 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-06 12.05.53 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.20.25 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.19.54 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.20.53 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.19 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.03 by don long, on FlickrFantastic work.Drives
I'll post up a few shots of the jack here cause I did some polishing on it
Before
1 by don long, on Flickr
I took the jack completely apart, cleaned each piece before sandblasting them so see what I had to work with
2019-08-17 17.25.13 by don long, on Flickr
2019-08-30 14.55.47 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-02 16.51.25 by don long, on Flickr
I polished the ends of all the shafts
IMG_1918 by don long, on Flickr
I needed to remove the roughness of the wheels before sending them to the chrome shop
Before
2019-09-02 14.32.06 by don long, on Flickr
After
2019-09-02 14.36.20 by don long, on Flickr
The info tag needed some help
0114 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.10 by don long, on Flickr
I polished the blackhawk logo on the top and sides of the jack before painting it
2019-09-12 12.06.23 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-12 11.30.53 by don long, on Flickr
2019-09-21 16.02.33 by don long, on Flickr
These are the parts that I polished to a 220 grit finish before sending them to the chrome shop for plating
2019-09-06 12.05.53 by don long, on Flickr
And yesterday I put the jack back together
2019-11-16 14.20.25 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.19.54 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.20.53 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.19 by don long, on Flickr
2019-11-16 14.21.03 by don long, on Flickr
I haven't painted the handle yet and I need to get some chrome screws for the cap and mount the info tag then the jack will get to go into the party garage.
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Thanks drivesitfar, mostly wire wheel on this one. Cleaned the threaded parts and knurled nut with a brass brush and wd40. Rubbed it with paste wax when I was finished but I'm interested in a better finish to keep these things from rusting again.Paul: care to share the method you did to take it from before to after cause you did a great job? evaporust, wire wheel, steel wool, or ???
also WELCOME TO GARAGE JOURNAL!!
ALL: in case some of you haven't seen Don Long's Blawkhawk floor jack thread i'm not sure he has time to post pics here, but here's the link that might give you all an eyeful.
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=430182
have a great day!!
However, if anybody knows how to clean up the white on the handles, I'm all ears. They are not supposed to be dingy tan, and it seems the guys on the chainsaw forums haven't found the secret yet either.
Try orange citrus degreaser (the hand cleaner stuff with fine grit in it). I haven't tried it on a Stihl yet, but I restore a lot of tools and I have tried pretty much every solvent out there, and I can tell you that orange citrus degreaser will get the discoloring out of most plastic and vinyl hand tool bodies. Surprising, I know, that stuff designed for use on human skin works better than ******** solvents at some stains.
Try orange citrus degreaser (the hand cleaner stuff with fine grit in it). I haven't tried it on a Stihl yet, but I restore a lot of tools and I have tried pretty much every solvent out there, and I can tell you that orange citrus degreaser will get the discoloring out of most plastic and vinyl hand tool bodies. Surprising, I know, that stuff designed for use on human skin works better than ******** solvents at some stains.
I believe Don can give 'American Restoration' some stiff competition!![]()
Try orange citrus degreaser (the hand cleaner stuff with fine grit in it). I haven't tried it on a Stihl yet, but I restore a lot of tools and I have tried pretty much every solvent out there, and I can tell you that orange citrus degreaser will get the discoloring out of most plastic and vinyl hand tool bodies. Surprising, I know, that stuff designed for use on human skin works better than ******** solvents at some stains.
I didn't have much luck with the hand cleaner, but I did however have good luck with LA's Totally Awesome degreaser and a magic eraser. I don't have pictures on hand, and although it still doesn't look new, it looks much better than it did.

Greetings, tool polishers. I just posted this thread:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=8285770&postcount=1 and it was suggested that I ask about cleaning these up here. I was planning to give them a soak in evaporust and then possibly use 0000 steel wool, but I'll wait to hear your suggestions first.
I know that they are not uncommon, and I am also considering lightly sanding and refinishing the outside of the oak box.
Thank you!
Pete,
Soak them in Evapo-rust, then if you have a buffing wheel, buff them to a polished finish and put a coat of oil on them and call it good![]()