You mentioned the belt sander was loud. My recollection those things were loud and sounded like they had bad bearings when they were new.
Nice test stand. And it looks to be portable as well. That was a nice touch adding wheels.Is it stable? It needs to be long enough to not tip over forward.
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welds are looking pretty tight
just caught myself up! nice score on all the old tools, they look like quality gear!

What you might not see, or I haven't shown is the test stand is an entire suburban frame with the rear axle and fuel tank still installed. I don't think I'll have to worry about it tipping over. Tires go flat after a few weeks but nothing I can't handle.![]()






Of course I ran the numbers, I tried to pick the rear end up and I counted the number of herniated discs from an unsuccessful attempt, now I can't run with that number of herniated discs. There engineering in real world applications.
JB
By my experience one herniated disc equals 500 pounds of lift force.
And also one herniated disc equals $25,000 in hospital bills.
All those tools have stories to tell.
The pics made me smile deeply in my heart, reminded me of all my dads tools.
Spark tested, injectors were firing, had fuel pressure.
Sprayed a little carb cleaner in the intake and it fired up! Sweet!
It will run and rev but I shut it off quickly as there is no radiator and the water pump isn't connected. I have a couple if those stands and they are fantastic to have when you don’t have any help...which for me is most often.
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I may have to get another, or at least ask for one from Santa.

That ought to make a good welding table even it it is a little bigger than I needed or wanted. I mentioned it to Andy and we made a deal, I'd bring it over, he'd cut it and take half of it off my hands. I was also supposed to deliver some aluminum to feed his hobby but completely forgot it at home. 
JB your welding table is looking fantastic![]()

Great job on welding up the arc!
JB: great looking welding table and nice job cleaning up that 1/2 circle cut out cause it looks might smooth now.
just curious if you have ever seen this sort of design so you can move your welding table in and out from the wall if you don't want to pull out the heavy lifting tools all the time.
however you decide to finish it off is certainly up to you and i'm sure it will work great.
looks like you had a pro cutting it in half and hopefully he finds a good spot for his half.

I have some thinking to do.Great progress on the frame!
The 35 Chevrolet has X-bracing with a relatively small tunnel right at the back of the transmission (not on the 35 transmission, I'm sure) and it is a little tight.
What's the purpose of the bracing you're putting in? If just additional stiffness they certainly can be spaced apart more. I suggest any bracing between them be bolt in.
I’m at SEMA too. I bought a tire changer and a hella sandblaster yesterday and will be looking at 4-post lifts today for some vertical vehicle storage.
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I got the chance to drive a 1300 lb car with one HVH 150 motor. They arent that high revving, so the trans will he needed to reach 9 sec worthy top speeds. We only had a 360V pack, I'm sure 800 helps. Wonder how many passes you get on a charge?Glad to hear you haven't had any more rivers running through your shop!
I was surprised to see GM's electric motor was hooked to a conventional transmission. I wonder if they are single speed motors? With a VFD you hardly need a transmission. I think. So I am.
Wow those 2 new crate engines are wild. I would have never thought GM would do something like that and let alone put it in a COPO Camaro.
Bret
Glad to see progress getting made. In the mean time, my project truck gathered more dust.
The good news is that a lithium mining company wants my property. I will be buying something with a shop, or building one.
Glad to hear you haven't had any more rivers running through your shop!
I was surprised to see GM's electric motor was hooked to a conventional transmission. I wonder if they are single speed motors? With a VFD you hardly need a transmission. I think. So I am.
Progress is always progress
I got the chance to drive a 1300 lb car with one HVH 150 motor. They arent that high revving, so the trans will he needed to reach 9 sec worthy top speeds. We only had a 360V pack, I'm sure 800 helps. Wonder how many passes you get on a charge?
"I'm excited to see where it goes from here as a lover of fast cars. But as someone who works in the oil industry I hope we keep using I.C. engines for a few more decades at least!"
Nobody can predict the future, but I can see cheap commuter cars being made very inexpensively: blow molded body, two motors, a computer, battery pack and a few additions like steering and brakes to take over after electrical braking. When thousands are built each month the gasoline supply will become constant surplus. We used to have two and three gas stations on every corner, I can see very few stations in the very near future.
In other news, I haven't screwed up an engine yet today.


I won't be pushing it that hard but I mean why not have it right? The sad thing is the trans fell over in the trunk of his car and trans fluid got on it. I'll clean it with brake clean and see if it will work, if not the rebuild kit is $1,000. 