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what did you wrench on today??

Well I worked hard this week. Bought me some 6x6 sills to replace the ones neath my 38 year old shed.
ANgry wood ants everywhere! I would have normally just torn it down and built a new one but if I insulate it and add a bunsen burner I can rent it out for 1000 a month.
Odd thing about the shed it was the correct distance from the neighbours line when built but due to frost heaving and loam and clay it walked three feet over the line.
Neighbour said they did not mind but saving it requires aa good amount of work so Im rotating it and super modifying it .

I calculated its about 6 grand fro materials new so I shuddered and gasped and bought my nice rough sawn hemlock. Odd looking at a piece of wood that will outlive me.
I should youtube the process as no loony in the world but me seems to have ben inspired to measure the needed placement of a pivot point to swing it around.
but naw what the heck let em crush themselves with a shed with their own engineering prowess.

AS a result of my efforts and due to delayed onset muscle soreness I woke this AM feeling like a small train had hit me. Exhausted and short of breath. Secretly nursing a conspiracy that my last covid shot caused irreparable harm.

but there's things to do. I recently di the brakes on my ever aging Impala and alas the driver rear hub bearing is needing replacement.
SO sick and self pitying I summoned sufficient spite and self loathing to overcome my physical disability.

I knew it could be a bear as GM in order to reduce unsprung weight made the hub from steel and the carrier(can yah call it a knuckle anymore) from alyoooominiyum.
Personally I think it was to have a laugh at the misery caused by galvanic corrosion.

so with my MAPP gas torch and penetrating oil and the wrenches it took me an hour to find I started to work.

You all should be amazed that the hub assembly is fastened in place with 10 mm headed bolts. Doubtless exceedingly strong ones.
SO I did the grumpy old man heat cycling and dribble of lube thing and I was simply blown away. Only one bolt gave a hint of trouble so it got a triple dose of cycling.

A small bit of joy burbled up in me which I immediately suppressed lest the car repair gods punish hubris by making the actual separation of the hub make the damnation of Sisyphus look like a leisurely stroll.

Heat cycled the houshing, dripped lube. and again and again. Then tapped the joint all around with a sharp wood chisel to mechanically shock things.
tapped the hub with a clubbing hammer once and it fell out.

I instantly felt like a million.

You watch guys thrashing at rusted bits when gently tedious persuasion works. No breakage. no blood. No air chisel or sledge hammer.

So do I get the AC DELCO bits or can the Chinese really make a reliable hub and ship it to me for 64 dollars?
 
haha well, I was considering my brakes on my aged vehicle but after reading that plus all the squatting and kneeling with poor lighting and the always-necessary ad-hoc tool innovations, I'm now considering driving it into the local chain repair shop even if my "satisfaction moment" may come when I make a clean getaway from the bank I rob paying for it ...:)
 
I put a Chinese chain store branded alternator on our Honda Pilot a few years ago.. it literally lasted for 70 miles then it made smoke and bearing death noise. The real kick in the arse was the difficulty of the changeout...

I should have known better. One of the buildings we service is a warehouse that imports aftermarket parts - water pumps, alternators, bearing assemblies, etc. They come off the truck in giant crates unboxed. They then get boxed and have the appropriate auto store label slapped on the box, then get shipped out locally.

The return / defective part section in the building is impressive in a bad way.
 
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Today's task was to replace the rec/reg in the Kat 650. Battery dead after a full charge and a good run. There was a significant draw on the battery with the ignition off. Multimeter diagnosis showed at least 2 diodes dead. Had a spare in the garage. New battery required (dead cell).

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I put on a taller and more leaned back windshield on the Goldwing. Also added arm rests for the wife. I am finding myself enjoying riding that big honker. I may be turning into an old guy. But, I got on the FZ1 yesterday and dang, it's so much faster and fun to ride! Still love it!
 
Working on a catch pan for my track bike. Seems track insurers are super sissy about a drip of oil hear or there.
This is a chipboard mock up to get the fit right before I cut up $80 worth of aluminum.

2qeZ5MD.jpg
 
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This is a chipboard mock up to get the fit right before I cut up $80 worth of aluminum.

[ATTAC.............................ACH]

Looks good, and Seems like a good way to do it.
And, let me guess, and a few tabs somewhere for mounting screws....?
 
Put some superbike bars on the Gladius. Stock bars had awkward taper & slightly bent to begin with.
Had to remove one throttle cable off the push-pull throttle body under tank to remove housing & the bars end weight removal was difficult, due to rust, causing the rubber internal expander to just spin.

Then I partially assembled a Warn snowplow attachment for a 2006 Can-Am 400xt quad I recently imported from Canada to handle any snow issues we might get.
 
This little project has been waiting since last summer. Trying to reduce all the helmet buffeting I get at track speeds.
Little side plates to extend the pressure bubble beyond my helmet.

QRay4Ce.jpg
 
I thought the fairing on the XJ900F was a bit skimpy, and while it took the worst of the blast away from me, it didn't seem to do all that much when I was tooling around the backroads.
Then one day, I had the opportunity to give it some beans for a longer while. Those Yammy engineers knew what they were doing. Above 95mph, the fairing had an extended effect and I was sitting comfortably in a still air pocket, undisturbed by the noise and fury around me.
Dropping below 90mph was a bit unrewarding, but it was that that made me look more closely at adding a higher screen and some extra side protection for the winter, as 90+mph isn't very practical around here most of the time.
 
Previous Owner mysteries.
First exam of a formerly owned rack of BST36 carbs. Sold as from a 91 GSXR-1100.
Outside they look good, complete, inside oh no…

All screws were very hard to break loose. Used a driver tip in a socket wrench. Had to cut slots in some.
Silicone used on float bowl gasket.
Float bowls arranged wrong, with all drain screws facing inward.
Shim washers on main needles. (mid-range rich)
130 main jets. (top end very rich) OEM mains are 122.5.
All carbs need disassembly, scrubbing and a dip.
Full rebuild kit needed, All Balls looks like the best.

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Indirectly bike related...got me a new lathe. It's a made in Taiwan unit, which generally speaking is a step above the "china" units.
I'm using 4 "leveling casters", so the machine can be moved as needed, yet anchored, along with 4 more heavy duty mounting points. Can't wait to get this thing up and running...

20221220_162814[1] by nessism, on Flickr
 
It looks great Ed! I'm envious.
I was just saying on another forum how much I miss Manual machining.

When the "kid" took over the company, he got rid of all our manual lathes. Thinking the CNC machine is the way of the future. The dumb azz doesn't even have a clue to the value of a manual lathe or a nice Bridgeport mill... Oh well, as long as they keep giving me paychecks...
 
Indirectly bike related...got me a new lathe. It's a made in Taiwan unit, which generally speaking is a step above the "china" units.
I'm using 4 "leveling casters", so the machine can be moved as needed, yet anchored, along with 4 more heavy duty mounting points. Can't wait to get this thing up and running...

Couple of examples of what you will create with this?
 
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