oldironfarmer
Well-known member
JB came by for a visit to my place today.
What a great guy!! Thanks for stopping by for real, JB
What a great guy!! Thanks for stopping by for real, JB
Just got to the end.
Amazing transformation on the WHHH. Looking forward to seeing what you do with this place.
I have been reading quite a few threads lately and tryign to get some motivation for my own 28x32 sheet metal detached garage. I have so much space and need to organize my junk.
Keep up the great work!
JB came by for a visit to my place today.
What a great guy!! Thanks for stopping by for real, JB![]()
Wow, man, a thousand posts! That's a milestone!

I then tried to install the fuel tank but couldn't figure it out so he is trying to find some old pictures and parts to help get me in the right direction. It sounds easy but where the tank was mounted before there isn't the "normal" mounting points for a gas tank, and the filler neck doesn't line up.
For some reason I could only see the pic of the truck cab on the lift and the air compressor in your prior post but no pics of the wood stove. But regardless it's good news that you now have a place to at least warm yourself up while working in the garage space. And it sounds like you had a fun trip get that stove.
He bought another one and dropped it off already so I'll be ready to try to start it soon. JB came by for a visit to my place today.
What a great guy!! Thanks for stopping by for real, JB![]()

I have a friend in Texas who was complaining about it being 52 degrees today. I bet he would have died in 20.
Great to read about..![]()
Pics are showing up now. Nice little stove and great to be able to warm up a bit. With temp all the way up to 27 today its a proper heat wave here. I may actually get something done out in the garage.
the comp doesn't look too bad. i forgot, how large is it? sure wish i had it. only 21 here today.that ir tank looks swell. now you need to clean up the motor!the comp doesn't look too bad. i forgot, how large is it? sure wish i had it. only 21 here today.
jim
It is good for ~22 cfm at 90 psi if I remember correctly. It should do the job and combine that with the smaller compressor at ~13 cfm also at 90 psi I'll have 35 cfm of air available when needed along with 200 gallons of reserve capacity. Hence the name tornado ally. 

Merry Christmas! My best wishes!
looks like somebody has been busy having fun out in the shop
Merry Christmas
Don
OK, so it's the Tuesday before Christmas (I hear that's cause for a holiday somewhere ). And the sun is long gone, so a few drinks have been had.
So JB, while I may not contribute here a lot, I do appreciate what you're doing (for you and for us) - and I wish you, and yours, a whole heartedly fantastic and prosperous Christmas.
I cannot describe (in manly words) what this site means to me. More power to You and yours.
Have a great Christmas, and a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year.
Lyndon
Nearly Fatherly Christmas . . . .![]()

This little turn of phrase made me chuckle...
"I got a little carried away" and stripped the entire tank and decided to paint it now:
Image: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/picture.php?albumid=4889&pictureid=65923
There might be a mantra for GJ members in there... something like "Hi my name is ______ and it has been 2 days since I got a little carried away with a project in my garage."
Response from support group: " Welcome ______, keep up the good work!"
Keep up the good work JB!







I got a little carried away, yep that pretty much explains it, if I really got carried away I would have acid etched the inside, coated it, blasted the outside clean, powder coated the tank, and completely rebuilt, stripped and painted the motor and compressor. I'll settle for a little carried away for now. With my recent acquisitions I'll be simply repairing equipment for a year, if I go hog wild it'll be a decade and possibly a divorce or at least a big addition to the house. LOL
JB


JB, I like your style..
All the best for Christmas..
Regards

JB
So lets try a new one - Merry Christmas to you and yours, in your part of the world, and I hope the "holiday season" sees you elbows deep in projects in that great big shed of yours.
Oh, and Have a Happy New Year too. . . .
Lyndon
From a day ahead, and way, way Down Here.![]()
![]()
![]()

Stove is all kinds of awesome.
I had thought of repainting my compressor too, then decided I preferred the old paint.
Yours looks great.
Continue to love your little JD, shyly waiting in the background.
I got a little carried away, yep that pretty much explains it, if I really got carried away I would have acid etched the inside, coated it, blasted the outside clean, powder coated the tank, and completely rebuilt, stripped and painted the motor and compressor. I'll settle for a little carried away for now. With my recent acquisitions I'll be simply repairing equipment for a year, if I go hog wild it'll be a decade and possibly a divorce or at least a big addition to the house. LOL
JB
JB,
I worry that my attempt at humor failed, if so, please accept my apologies. I always look forward to your posts and I have been amazed by the amount of progress on and in your shop, including the work on your compressor.
Don
JB,
I worry that my attempt at humor failed, if so, please accept my apologies. I always look forward to your posts and I have been amazed by the amount of progress on and in your shop, including the work on your compressor.
Don
Your attempt at humor left me speechless, hence just smilies.
Very well done!
JB just gave you a cool answer, he wasn't offended.
Merry Christmas!!
...Good news is the hockey pucks for the compressors and other equipment showed up yesterday. I bought 25 of them for $19 on the bay, I should have done this a long time ago...
BDBecker,Every time I read about someone buying hockey pucks online, I always think "Why didn't you just go to the store and buy them?" and then I remember that not everyone has local access to them (there is a hockey shop less than 2 miles away from my house, and probably a dozen or so sporting goods stores around the metro that probably have them). If you haven't already researched it (which, being an engineer, I'm sure you have) Forstner bits seem to be the favorite for drilling holes in them.
Have a merry Christmas!
Let me know if that is a terrible idea. Sadly I haven't researched that at all, just to lazy or was that busy?...For me shopping online for them took 5 minutes tops whereas a special trip to the store even on my way home would take more time...
...I will chuck them up in the lathe and try that first with some standard twist bits or even the paddle bits.Let me know if that is a terrible idea. Sadly I haven't researched that at all, just to lazy or was that busy?
Why the "puck" did you buy so many?

) temps lately, although small I plan to start a jr. hockey league in the W.H.H.H. 
I thought about just buying 10 of them but decided for just a few dollars more I could get all I'd ever want.
I plan to put them on both compressors, 7 total, the surge tank, 4 total, and will find uses for the others over time I'm sure. This way next time I want some I can just say "Now where the puck did I put those?".
I totally hear you. I used to do most of my shopping online when I lived in SD. The nearest town with any decent stores was 45 minutes away. Actually, when Wife and I were dating, she lived 62 miles away and I used to make that trip a couple times a week. There is definitely a different perspective to travel time and distance when you live in a rural area.
I've never actually done it, I've just read about it - how's that for a typical engineer response? I've heard of guys freezing them before trying to drill them with standard bits. Using Forstner bits will let you do a countersunk hole though.