I didn't know there were any more hydraulic hold-outs.
1) When I redesigned my hydraulic door system, I went to the library to try
and find the original supplier of the pump/motor/reservoir unit. Through
the Thomas Register, I found a company called Hypac. They have a model
that looks exactly like the original, except with 3 mount points instead of
4. It also has a relief valve that returns to the reservoir when a certain
pressure limit is reached. I bought two units and fit them both on the
original mounting plate. They even made custom lines for me. I routed them
through the floor to be neater. Originally, they came out a hole cut in the
corner of the cover of the eqpt well.
Hypac Inc. (606) 849-2447 item #2101194 12VDC 3/4GPM 25cu.in.
resv.
Rt. 2 Box A1 $160.74 each
(4 yrs ago)
Flemingsburg, Kentucky 41041
3) As for the window, there is no 'track' that the window sits in. It is
glued to a horizontal brace. I welded a gutter to this brace to better hold
the window and then reglued it. Window slippage is a common problem to
Bricks that haven't been reglued or modified by welding.
I've seen others give you some responses on the dash gauges and the emerg.
brake boot.
As for Microsoft Certification: If you know so much about MS products, why
don't you try to get your prospective employer to pay for the tests. They
are $100 per test and you could ask them to reimburse you for passed tests
only. The Solutions Developer track is 4 tests and the Systems Engineer is
6 tests. See http://www.microsoft.com/Train_Cert for info on the different
testing tracks. Certification is rightfully highly regarded by employers as
is any gauge of education, such as college degrees. The tests are
performance-based and the Solution Developer and Systems Engineer tracks
have their own core requirement tests and elective tests designed to
measure their respective disciplines. That 'piece of paper' has definite
meaning to employers and they are more apt to return to you other 'pieces
of paper', notably green, which are also highly desirable.
Ron Auger, Systems Architect, Olivetti North America
Microsoft Certified Product Specialist - NT 4.0 Server & Workstation
Bricklin #1631
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