1/2 Cup
Member Emeritus
Great work
Regards
Regards


So I went a little overboard and currently have it in a bunch of pieces.

So I got to use the old ones in the basement. Wherever there was a lightbulb, I swapped it out for an outlet. I then made mounts for the lights to hang a little off of the rafters since the house is a wiring hackjob. Then I took the fixtures apart and wired in power cords to the exact lengths I needed to reach the new outlets. So I have 6 in my area which is really great. There are also another 3 throughout the rest of the basement.

With the extra tank plumbed in it runs for quite a while. When it runs it does shake the garage a little bit. I helped it out a little by adding some rubber isolators where it is lagged down. It's much quieter than the old Craftsman we had which is now lofted in the barn. My uncle had the exact same thing as this one but a 2010 model and it was so loud that you didn't even want to be in the shop when it was running (and it ran quite often). Hope that info helps.
, but anything looks better than the pitted and pealing that it was before. So I'll keep that in mind for next time. Just need to make sure everything is square and possibly make a few adjustments.
There are some 10x10 and 12x12 beams in the pile (some 60+ feet long). My neighbor has a saw mill so my goal is to drag some beams out to be rough cut and stored. I hope to build a large craftsman inspired table when I move out.
. These are too small for my neighbor to even bother with so I will stick to doing it myself. At one point, the wood got in a bind and stopped the blade. I thought for a good 30 minutes that I had burnt up the table saw motor and was just about out the door to get a replacement on craigslist. Then I remembered that my dad's old table saw always used to trip the breaker when it got in a bind. Alas, disaster averted.
. So I switched the bench and the desk. I have always wanted this layout but the desk sits nicely under the electric panel and the bench doesn't. A few modifications to the bench and presto!
. My dad has improved a little but there is still much to be desired.
. Regardless, I thought it was a pretty good deal.
. Water everywhere as it took me a good 10 seconds to find the shut off valve. Then more hot, pressurized water kept spewing out the top. Made a huge mess, but in the end it was only a $6 fix with some new fittings. So I got all of my things cleaned up and went back to work. Finally was able to get the wood where it belongs.

....
Also, if anyone has any to sell, I would be interested in any gun made by Ithaca. As always, thanks for reading.

Here is my mobile crimper.

mdbeck1 - I have looked at that site and some other just to get ideas on prices. I'm not sure how all the logistics work when buying a gun online and that's why I have shied away from that option. I'm all ears though if you could explain how it works.
Anybody else know how shipping a gun works with the FFL and all that?

The sucky part is that it was 90+ degrees and they were all on the third floor.