Brand of preferred Bourbon?
Im not real picky or very discerning and like to try them all, and will usually buy a bottle of anything in the $40-$60 range is about as fancy as I get. I try not to buy the same thing twice just to try different ones, but Michters, Four Roses, Bulleit, McKenna, any of the Buffalo Trace variants are always good, and currently I think theres a fancy black label Knob Creek 120proof and an Evan Williams white label 100 proof that are open since people have been coming over this week, (and someone brought over an American Born moonshine that's in the freezer).
First, I had a need for a dedicated T dolly and had a few pieces that I had been planning on using to make one sitting around for awhile. Some sort of obsolete fixturing that was being tossed at work, but basically 1 1/4" steel rod with a male and female thread on either side, cut the male end off and ground it down for a rounded edge. I offset where I welded the handle and kept the female thread to make it extendable. Then drilled a few holes so I can bolt it to a table. My back's been doing pretty good lately, but standing in one place for too long starts to bother it, so being able to sit to do stuff versus standing hunched over a vise is helpful.
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Dan Haas, on Flickr
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Spent some time starting the new trunk floor edge section. I wasnt so worried about it matching the stock one exactly, i just didnt want it to look blaringly obvious that it wasnt what is supposed to be there. I had a sort of plan, and im sure there would have been a better way to do it, or if i had a radius brake. Still needs to be trimmed, some side pieces to make it a bit more rigid, and fully welded but its enough to get an idea
The pictures aren't great, and everything covered in Dykem makes it harder to see. 52" long, marked out and a "flap" cut out. Infront of the flap gets folded down, i used a steel rod to bend it as i wanted to keep the transitions and edges curved like as if it was stamped
I don't know why I did all of this on a small table, I have a bigger bench that would have easily fit all of this.
2019-12-30_07-11-58 by
Dan Haas, on Flickr
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Dan Haas, on Flickr
Rounded 1 side of the new recessed piece over a T dolly
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Dan Haas, on Flickr
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Front side/section rough cut out
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Dan Haas, on Flickr
And a few more cuts and tacks and cleaned up a bit. To get the back "flap" section to fit nice and tight, i cleco'd the curved edge of the recessed piece to the back section and cut along the edge with an air saw, tacking the new edges together as i went. When i rolled the edges of the recess piece, it wasnt a uniform straight edge anymore so this just ensured a mated and flush edge.
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Dan Haas, on Flickr
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2019-12-30_07-40-51 by
Dan Haas, on Flickr
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Still rough, i need to trim it back to fit around a few areas where it will get welded to the old floor, bumper bracket holes need to be cut, fully welded, etc