Jayman17
Well-known member
How do you like the Milwaukee 90* angle grinder? That looks handy but I worry about cordless
grinders. Very nice outcome on the side rail step.
Jay
grinders. Very nice outcome on the side rail step.
Jay
You can come over and try it out if you want; I get tired of grinding my own welds.I've never paid attention to that M12 grinder, but I can see how that would be handy. I bought the M18 4.5" based on recommendations from GJ and it's been awesome; used it today even.
This is a really neat pic. I've been told there is actually a floor somewhere in my little garage, too! So glad I stumbled onto your project thread as I really enjoy building stuff myself, too.Found a picture of the garage before I started filling it up. This house actually has 5 garage spaces- my side is the 3- car, my wife has the 2-car that’s perpendicular to this one. She’s the one that wanted more garage/shop space; she was tired of me bitching about working around our cars in a (barely) two car garage. Originally this was all one space, but I put up a wall to keep my shop mess out of her side (and so I could add A/C to the shop side someday)![]()










I couldn't get past the shock that you found casters at HF with a 1/2" UNF threaded stem. They don't have that size in China!Well, no one took the bait and offered a guess as to what the rolling pipe contraption was for….








Scott I just finished reading your entire thread. I must say I'm a fan of your work! Glad to see you are working on the Deuce. A worthy project for sure!! You might find a bell housing mounted cross member to solve your bracing needs forward of the trans-mount.
On a different note, the next time you need to patina/rust a project, you might try muratic acid. It works well with no mixing to fuss with.

I do need to be more diligent about that- the original 32 rails are pretty rusted on the top; the boxing plates aren't too bad- but the tubing is new. I'll hit the joints with a wire brush in the die grinder before I do the finish welding. (unless Bearsfan decides he needs a working vacation away from the Indiana snow...)Great job on the frame Scott. I built several street rod chassis when I was building cars and actually quite enjoyed this phase of the build. Keep the pics coming.
If I could give one suggestion, that would be to clean off the mill scale on the tubing and any corrosion off the original frame and get to bright clean steel before welding. It really does create a better looking and more structurally sound fusion without that mill scale becoming liquid and mixed in the molten puddle. Just a suggestion.