I would love to see it and your shop some day...maybe in the fall when I can hit some farm auctions in your area.My pleasure Rich. So when are you driving over to see it in person??
Thomas
I would love to see it and your shop some day...maybe in the fall when I can hit some farm auctions in your area.My pleasure Rich. So when are you driving over to see it in person??
Thomas


Tom,
It is simply a thank you to you and your family for sharing your adventures with all of us here.
Thanks to you.
The GTX followed one of the sons home where it remains today in much the same condition, still a restoration in process.
Thomas

Is that one of those 'restorations' that are more 'store' than 'restore'?![]()

Is that one of those 'restorations' that are more 'store' than 'restore'?![]()
Got to remember that one.![]()
I didn't want the same fate to befall the shop restoration which is why I pushed so hard to see it through from beginning to end. Thomas -
As always, just a phenomenal attention to detail and workmanship. I'm in awe of your talents.
That being said and at the risk of being a know-it-all jerk, as your attention to detail includes clocking the screws in the things you build and uses acorn nuts for aesthetic appearance, you might double check that Plymouth GTX in that early lift picture. That rear view looks more like a '70 GTX (narrow elongated style tail light) than a '69 GTX (larger more square style tail light). It might help test takers in the future.

Re: the post lift. Can you not fill the pitting with something like JB weld, sand and polish to a smooth surface?
I know you could sputter brass on it and file absolutely flat vertically wise.
That's what I was told by numerous firms nationwide that have done repair work on posts like this. The biggest hurtle was getting it clean enough so it, or anything else for that matter, would adhere properly. I was advised to try it as is and if it was a problem then address it. Like I said, it really works just fine. It's in a spot where the lift is normally in transit and not stationary. If it was in an area where the lift spent any appreciable time, it wouldn't hold pressure there well because hydraulic fluid would leak around the damaged area. The only down side is as the cylinder moves by the seals there, a very, very small amount of fluid seeps past the seals. In four years of operation I've been measuring the fluid level in the reservoir and I haven't found any measurable loss of fluid. In my opinion it's more a cosmetic than an operational problem. So I've learned to just live with it. It's patina and I'm positive Elroy would not only understand but approve. it really works just fine.
Elroy;1623868 said:...OH I got it. Rip the cylinder out of the ground, have the chrome stripped off at a platter with a big enough tank. Have the cylinder center-less ground to remove the pits. Returned it to the platter for fresh hard chrome then go back to the grinder to have it brought into size...
Hmm a nice stainless exhaust fan from the home store should be just about right for your welding table. They even come with a light and three speeds.
Nuts aka Doug
Thomas,
Regarding the 8mm movies, if there are that many of them and you can get them on a DVD, I bet there are more than a few followers of this thread that would gladly 'trade' you $2 - $3 for a copy.
I'll volunteer as the first in line.
![]()
I thought Thomas' procedure was to send it out for powder coating... hummm, guess I would have gotten that one wrong on the test, I better keep studying

Doug, this is what I bought 3 years ago...
![]()
...when I had the very same idea. It's a 30" wide, brushed stainless steel exhaust hood. I don't know how effective it might be but at least that was and is an option.
Anyway as you can see, great minds think a like!
Thomas
...While there were hours of 8 mm movies, there were only minutes of ones that were pertinent to the shop...
I threw a rod threw the side of the block in a 8 horse Briggs motor on a tiller once, been probably 30 years ago. I had another crank and rod/piston set, but couldn't find a good used case for it and they wanted just about as much for a new one as I could go out and buy a whole new motor for. So I had some JB Weld in the tool box and made me up 3 or 4 batches of it before I got the half dollar sized hole in the case filled in, then gave it 3 or 4 days to cure.
You know I ran that little motor 7 or 8 years like that before it finally it blew up again and I scraped it, the thing never did leak a drop of oil.
HeHe...not trying to sell anyone on J B Weld...just thought I'd share my totally different J B Weld success story!![]()
i repaired a good size crack in a 4cyl mercruiser engine before with j.b weld. it worked.

Leave it alone. It adds character. The worst thing in Elroy's book would be seal damage. Ask yourself; how many cycles is it going to take before it really becomes an issue ?
OH I got it. Rip the cylinder out of the ground, have the chrome stripped off at a platter with a big enough tank. Have the cylinder center-less ground to remove the pits. Returned it to the platter for fresh hard chrome then go back to the grinder to have it brought into size.
And after all that, it works no better.
Elroy would rather spend his time dialing in the chassis at the drag strip to reduce his 60 foot times.
Well, or course I meant of the shop.
It would be neat to see the shop in use back in the day.
![]()
As always, Elroy, wise sage that he is, shows the wisdom of the ages.When the Rotary Lift is under load going up or down; as it passes the damaged area on the cylinder, it just glides by without a hitch or hint of a problem. All it really does is weeps a little fluid, not even seeps it but weeps it. ( seep and weep - those are technical terms used by A & P's BTW
) Every few months I'll take a paper towel and clean up the base of the cylinder. As I said, I can't measure any appreciable fluid loss and I've never had to add any fluid to the reservoir. To try to effect a repair might possible lead to a variation on "The Waddington Effect". For more information on that interesting concept, see:
http://www.sportaviationonline.org/sportaviation/201103?pg=6#pg100
So until it really does become a problem, I'll "leave it alone!"
Thomas
Wow!
Truly impressive! I've been here for a few weeks and avoided your thread because I thought it was about a restored gas station which didn't interest me.
Thank God I decided to check it out last Tuesday!
As the pages whittled down, I thought "I sure hope the Walker is done", then I thought "There's no way it can be done; there's not enough pages left to finish it".
I can't wait to see the next installment of your restorations!
Thanks for sharing!
Greg

Thomas Im restoring a gas pump cover for a guy that says he knows you and also knew Virgil J hes out of homer last name pierce i think john is the 1st name
I also picked up a cool 1949 coke machine yesterday for a awsome price it needs TLC but i got a lil bit of that left on the shelf

I worked in 2 shops that had Rotary in ground lifts and even with perfect cylinders they wept a little during normal use. I wouldn't worry about it unless it starts leaking to the point that you have to keep refilling the reservoir. Just my nickles worth of free advice (that never made any sense to me, is it a nickle OR free, it can't be both)
All it really does is weeps a little fluid, not even seeps it but weeps it. (seep and weep - those are technical terms used by A & P's BTW)
Thomas
