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Total 54 documents matching your query.

1. [Shop-talk] Gutter on metal roof (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2011 17:29:15 -0800
I have a 24 x 48 foot pole building shop. There is a 24 x 48 open lean-to shed on the north side where I park my tractors. The pole building and roof are metal, and the tractor shed roof is also meta
/html/shop-talk/2011-01/msg00318.html (9,771 bytes)

2. [Shop-talk] Skirt for a Play Cottage (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Fri, 28 Jan 2011 22:52:00 -0800
Why not go ahead and use the wire netting or hardware cloth, and then put wood lattice over it. The wire would never show.
/html/shop-talk/2011-01/msg00464.html (10,280 bytes)

3. [Shop-talk] technical question about force applied to mount (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2011 18:34:39 -0800
I have one, and always bolted it to the floor into anchors when I needed it, and put it away when I didn't. I know of some people that bolted theirs to a sheet of plywood and then used it that way, s
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00158.html (11,193 bytes)

4. [Shop-talk] Electrolytic Rust Removal on a large part (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2011 20:38:36 -0800
The Old Wood Working Machine (OWWM) guys use this process (the technical term is "spooging") a lot to do cabinet saws and other large iron and steel objects. Works fine. Kiddie pool or home made tank
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00178.html (11,884 bytes)

5. [Shop-talk] Cement patching in cold weather? (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (Dave C)
Date: Sun, 20 Feb 2011 16:43:39 -0800
If it's just a temporary patch until the weather warms up, then asphalt cold patch, tamped in place with a 2x4, should work. Try to get it up to room temp first.
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00193.html (8,825 bytes)

6. [Shop-talk] Changing transmission fluid (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2011 10:42:58 -0800
I believe the thinking is that a flush may push crap back into the transmission where it could clog oil passageways and cause more damage than it might prevent. I have a couple of Subaru Forresters.
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00212.html (10,155 bytes)

7. [Shop-talk] Tire changer mount, the conclusion (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2011 11:28:50 -0800
Did we talk about welding a piece of square stock to the bottom of the tire changer and shoving it into a car's receiver hitch?
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00237.html (10,426 bytes)

8. [Shop-talk] historical machine shop question (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:23:03 -0800
Some people are still using them. If you go to owwm.com (Old WoodWorking Machines), several of the people on the old woodworking machines forum have lineshafts set up in their shops to run their vint
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00218.html (10,382 bytes)

9. [Shop-talk] gah. Moron press <-- Gutters (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Fri, 04 Mar 2011 18:48:19 -0800
That looks really interesting. I have a rambler and we're in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. The gutters are always full of crap, and none of the so called gutter guards actually work. These thin
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00224.html (9,041 bytes)

10. [Shop-talk] Fwd: 3PT Hitch rolo tillers (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Tue, 08 Mar 2011 18:45:32 -0800
Yeah, pretty much what Tony said. I have a couple of tractors, an old gray market early 80s vintage Mitsubishi 16 (or so) hp, and a newish New Holland TC 30 30 HP. Both have manual gear boxes. The Mi
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00262.html (11,613 bytes)

11. [Shop-talk] My equivalent of a nuclear meltdown..... (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Sun, 20 Mar 2011 19:17:06 -0700
My dad used to have trouble with skunks on his property. He would catch them in a live trap, then use a long pole to pick up the trap and then drop it in the stock watering tank. It wasn't particular
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00308.html (11,550 bytes)

12. [Shop-talk] vacuum cleaners (non-shop) (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 19:01:43 -0700
We had a big, heavy, noisy Panasonic for about 15 years or so. It finally got to be too much of a PITA and after much research my wife got a Hoover "wind tunnel technology" vacuum. It also came with
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00344.html (10,343 bytes)

13. [Shop-talk] 220V extension cord with breaker (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2011 19:01:46 -0700
Depends on how you define "circuit breaker" and "stationary power tool". I have seen a lot of stationary tool motors (always single phase) that have thermal overloads built into them. Motor gets hot,
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00361.html (10,688 bytes)

14. [Shop-talk] 220V extension cord with breaker (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2011 19:08:57 -0700
Well, not on purpose.... About 15 years ago I was cutting something fairly large with my relatively new Grizzly horizontal/vertical bandsaw (with a Chinese motor with no thermal overload, not to put
/html/shop-talk/2011-03/msg00362.html (10,334 bytes)

15. [Shop-talk] OFF TOPIC - wood splitting (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2011 19:09:56 -0700
My experience splitting fir, hemlock, alder and a little maple is that it's always easier to split when it's green. I've used a maul and wedges, and I have owned a splitter for at least 15 or 20 year
/html/shop-talk/2011-04/msg00386.html (10,395 bytes)

16. [Shop-talk] Mitre Saws (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Wed, 11 May 2011 18:10:22 -0700
Or to be contrary, you could get a pretty good used radial arm saw (or four or five really crappy ones) for your budget. Look for an older DeWalt or Delta from the 50s or 60s.
/html/shop-talk/2011-05/msg00333.html (9,022 bytes)

17. [Shop-talk] Mitre Saws (score: 149)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Thu, 12 May 2011 18:31:40 -0700
So the name of the company is.....????
/html/shop-talk/2011-05/msg00353.html (8,527 bytes)

18. [Shop-talk] testing (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Thu, 19 May 2011 18:40:06 -0700
I'm here, too. Local news: I got a C'Man 1/4" and 7/16", and a NAPA 7/16" combination wrenches at the local pawn shop for the grand total of a buck fifty. (They went missing from the set at school.)
/html/shop-talk/2011-05/msg00376.html (8,575 bytes)

19. [Shop-talk] Air Compressor (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Tue, 24 May 2011 22:05:11 -0700
The ones I have seen have been a whimper, not a bang. The corrosion finally weakens the tank and it starts to leak and won't hold pressure. I think the chances of a catastrophic failure due to corros
/html/shop-talk/2011-05/msg00421.html (11,354 bytes)

20. [Shop-talk] air compressor (score: 158)
Author: cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.)
Date: Wed, 25 May 2011 19:54:44 -0700
Antique boilers were made of iron, probably, and were riveted together. The also have a lot more volume and surface area than a shop air compressor tank, which would contribute to the force of any ex
/html/shop-talk/2011-05/msg00424.html (12,442 bytes)


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