Chrisb62
Well-known member
Great learning experience for the kids, probably will never be forgotten by them. Lots of work on your part so good on you.

I was planning to rebuild my garage - a small open one without any doors. .... and the add doors.
Thank you for making it through this very long discussion!Hello there
First post for me here on the forum and the only thing I can say is THANK YOU Jack Olsen. I was planing to rebuid my garage - a small open one without any doors. It's ~5 meters deep and currently ~5 meters wide with possibility to expand it with 2 more meters. I always considered to small, but now, after reading everything here in the past week I understand that size is not always important.
I need to extend the deep with 1 meter and the add doors. Due to you I think I will be able to do something and not dreaming anymore to a garage for 3-4 cars.
I think MacLarens (sp?) have their wings swing up under hard braking. My guess would be the effect is pretty negligible. Like the Porsche 'active' stuff, I think gizmo is the right term. But I'm sure it's fascinating to guys who have a new Turbo on order and are enjoying checking all the boxes.Jack, I went looking for a video of the Porsche inflating air dam and found this promotional video covering all of the gizmos and various strategies. (Of course, airflow management to the radiator dates back to the 928S4 and movable wings, the 964 generation of 911.) What was news to me was that some modes you can select will use the rear spoiler as an air brake!
(Alas, I don't keep up with car magazines like I used to, so a lot of things are news to me.)



Scary - what's the latest and greatest with Zinc these days for our 911's - need to do mine soon.You change your oil all the time, right? You never give much of a thought to the foil seal -- just push it in with your thumb.
Do something often enough, everything will happen.
My 911 has the oil (13 qts) go into an external tank. Today something felt funny after I poured in the first replacement quart. I couldn't find the main piece of the seal flattened down around the neck of the bottle -- or inside the bottle when I cut it open. I couldn't see it in the tank, either, until I dug out my endoscope camera.
That's it, sitting on the tank's screen. I almost bumped it down one of the holes in the screen. (Why are there holes cut in the screen?)
It was a pain in the neck to get it out, but I finally did.
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I once fixed an intermittent oil pressure problem on a 350 SBC in a C10 pickup that turned out to be half a dozen of those floating around in the pan. It would carry good oil pressure until you reved it and then they'd get sucked up into the pickup screen and block it of. Let it sit and they'd float away.You change your oil all the time, right? You never give much of a thought to the foil seal -- just push it in with your thumb.
Do something often enough, everything will happen.
My 911 has the oil (13 qts) go into an external tank. Today something felt funny after I poured in the first replacement quart. I couldn't find the main piece of the seal flattened down around the neck of the bottle -- or inside the bottle when I cut it open. I couldn't see it in the tank, either, until I dug out my endoscope camera.
That's it, sitting on the tank's screen. I had to go about 14" down, and then over. It's a pretty big tank. More than once, I almost bumped the foil piece down one of the holes in the screen. (Why are there holes cut in the screen?) There was a fair amount of cursing while trying to get the flexible neck of the camera and the flexible neck of the grabber to stop bumping into each other.
It was a pain in the neck to get it out, but I finally did.
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A buddy's truck was doing that, a 59 Ford PU. Same deal only his was a small boxwood leaf. I finally helped him pull the tank (behind the seat - remember those?) and we emptied it into a bucket. There it was!I’ve told the story many times but my dad’s ‘59 Chevy truck kept “running out of gas”. He replaced a bunch of parts over a long time. Turned out it had a very large maple leaf floating around in it. As soon as gas got lower the leaf got stuck over the outlet. Drove him so crazy he almost sold the truck cause of that.
I do. I helped my dad pull the behind-seat tank on his '59 Chevy, I was a little boy. He cursed like a sailor when he finally got it out. Someone who REALLY didn't like him must have rolled it up to get it to go down the fill tube.A buddy's truck was doing that, a 59 Ford PU. Same deal only his was a small boxwood leaf. I finally helped him pull the tank (behind the seat - remember those?) and we emptied it into a bucket. There it was!
You change your oil all the time, right? You never give much of a thought to the foil seal -- just push it in with your thumb.
I've never done that due to the obvious risk, as you found out.You change your oil all the time, right? You never give much of a thought to the foil seal -- just push it in with your thumb.
So true. While I haven't yet gotten too far down the road to re-doing my garage layout I plan to come back here multiple times for inspiration and ideas to steal. One of my favorite things is the compartmentalized workspaces. Similar to Jack's situation I need a space I can do ANY project in whether it be wood, metal, automotive...etc. Unfortunately I'm working with a 17'x19' space so will be even more limited than he wasI keep coming back to this thread as I refine my work space. Watching the video has me rethinking my metal working area.
That is really neat, what do you have the camera mounted to?A decade ago, I made a guide for driving my local race track, Willow Springs Raceway. In thinking about making an update, I wanted a camera angle for the car that would show where it actually is in relation to the edges of the track, and this is where I am in my testing.
Is it just me or does the video go black after 0.35 second mark?A decade ago, I made a guide for driving my local race track, Willow Springs Raceway. In thinking about making an update, I wanted a camera angle for the car that would show where it actually is in relation to the edges of the track, and this is where I am in my testing.
Oops. You're right. The editing software added a lot of black footage at the end. I'm sure it was my error.Is it just me or does the video go black after 0.35 second mark?
Jack, does Molly know she's famous on the Garage Journal. It is fun for many of us to watch her grow up. We have three great-grandchildren and have a really easy job. We don't have to spoil them -- they have grandparents for that. We just show up and scare them by being alive.