Jim greengo
Well-known member
My dad always said something along the lines of: a blacksmith will make a tool,to make a tool,to make a part.
Posted these in the 'show us your new tools' thread earlier but figure they fit here just as well. I turned a couple $10 one gal sprayers, 1/4ID tubing, and a couple 3/8 PEX ball valves into a couple oil transfer pumps, one to be dedicated for transmission fluid and the other for gear oil. I also bent some stainless pipe I had scavenged from something at some point and a couple end caps from an assortment for ends that should let me hang the business end in a fill plug instead of me having to hold the hose in place while I pump 12 qts or more in a transmission. The Motive and other pumps like it that I was copycatting do tend to also have a pressure gauge which I contemplated adding too but didn't really see the point or benefit for the added cost. Those commercially available versions tend to sell for $80 and up each. I was able to make both of these for less than half that.
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Are the internals of the system ok for petroleum based products? We've had a few repurposed projects in the past that melted down internally.
Good question, and the best answer I have for it at this point is time will tell.
Obviously I've voided the warranty. Worth the gamble IMHO. BTW this isn't my grand idea. This sort of hack has been discussed in forum posts and shown in many YT vids for at least 5 or more years now. I mighta put my own touch on it with the curved tube ends and caps but that's about it. I've not read or heard from anyone about the long term use of it.
As far as 'petroleum based products' I'm only using synthetic fluids in them if that matters. Toyota WS ATF and Valvoline SynPower 75-W90 and they worked fine so far. I could tell the gear oil was definitely a bit thicker and slower to push through it than it was ever designed for but it worked fine and was a WAAAAAY better experience than the stupid little auto parts store pump I used last time. (Edit: That pump cost as much or more than either of these and it went straight in the garbage the same day I bought it)
The box and 'Use and Care Guides' inside both bottles do say they're safe for "most solvents and oil-based products", but also say you should clean and rinse thoroughly after each use, which I'm not going to do. I'm not mixing fluids in them ever. I've labeled and stored the leftovers in the sprayers until next time. They both also have similar warnings against putting anything with acetone, "strong" solvents, "strong" acids or "strong" bases, bleach, epsom salts, vinegar, or citrus based cleaners, but I didn't see anything about synthetic trans fluid or synthetic gear oil. lol
do you happen to have a parts list you kept?Pressure brake bleeder made from a garden sprayer. Works very well. Used an old Vacula to catch the fluid coming out, but anything will work. Just add the master cylinder adapter to fit your vehicle.
The plumbing parts are arranged in a circle to balance it. If the valve, regulator, gauge, fittings were on one side, it would tip over.
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I take it #450 is load limit not empty weight?
1 drawer can handle up to #450I take it #450 is load limit not empty weight?
...nice looking rig, btw.
Post pics of the air bearing slide you're going to need if you load every drawer to 450#1 drawer can handle up to #45
That turned out awesome.

I didn't fab this rotisserie, but I'm refurbing it before using it on my 77 pinto.very nice..





Off the top of my head...do you happen to have a parts list you kept


While incredibly clever and potentially cheaper, motive power makes these off the shelf:do you happen to have a parts list you kept?
www.motiveproducts.com
My parents had one of these, hated it.I posted this over in the "Things that piss you off" thread
1) The brilliant people at Kohler who designed the cold side faucet handles that turn the opposite way of the hot side
2) The stupid people who, when the cold side doesn't turn on by turning counter clockwise, don't try gently turning it the other way, but twist it hard enough to turn the whole valve in the counter and pinch off the hose.
I have one of these faucets in a designer drawered cabinet where the only access to the bottom of the sink is though the drawer slot (~8"). I could barely touch the 1 1/4" retaining nut on the underside of the faucet and hand tight wasn't solving the problem. There was no way to reach it or enough room to get a wrench on it. The water line that feeds the valve comes off the side so a socket was out of the question.
This was my solution:
On a 10" extension, I could finally get the nut tight enough to prevent stupid people from twisting it lose.





