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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Mount Pleasant, South Carolina
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Replaced the lower ball joints, replaced the sway bar end links and sanded the rotors to remove the pad buildup, on the 14 F150 today. Took about 5 1/2 hours total, so not too bad. Cooler temps in the mid 80s made a big difference 🥶 than last time I was in there. I about died that day in the 90s. 🥵

Edit. I got a price from a place that has done some work on my truck recently and they wanted $975 with an alignment. New ball joints and end links were $110 on Amazon. I did not move anything, that would necessitate an alignment





Old 06-18-2024, 03:31 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by A930Rocket View Post
Replaced the lower ball joints, replaced the sway bar end links and sanded the rotors to remove the pad buildup, on the 14 F150 today.
Nice work, brother Rocket!

Love the yellow caliper hangers!

Curious - did you watch some YT videos ahead of time to brush up on the procedures?
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Old 06-18-2024, 03:59 PM
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^^^ I did watch a couple of YouTube videos, but I also went through this, when I installed the spindle lift several months back, so I had some background. I should’ve replaced the lower ball joints while I was there.
Old 06-18-2024, 05:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by A930Rocket View Post
Replaced the lower ball joints, replaced the sway bar end links and sanded the rotors to remove the pad buildup, on the 14 F150 today. Took about 5 1/2 hours total, so not too bad. Cooler temps in the mid 80s made a big difference than last time I was in there. I about died that day in the 90s.

Edit. I got a price from a place that has done some work on my truck recently and they wanted $975 with an alignment. New ball joints and end links were $110 on Amazon. I did not move anything, that would necessitate an alignment





Nice job!!!!

Did that job years ago on the ol 95 K1500. A big job solo and not all that fun. It’s doable, just a PITA!

Bravo!!


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Old 06-18-2024, 09:55 PM
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Today's handyman deck gate project. Fabricated two deck gates for new client and got one installed today, Deck and railing posts severely out of plumb requiring alot of shimming.



Retirement side hustle going well. Currently juggling 6 jobs. All referrals. Keeps me busy!
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Old 06-19-2024, 06:58 PM
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Bush cutter started rattling this morning as I was discouraging weed growth in one of the pastures. I broke for lunch and thought i'd call it a day, due to the heat and check out the source of the rattle later. After lunch, the Missus started in on another small pasture and I thought, " That doesn't sound good, at all. "
As she came out of the field, I could see one of the blades had been close to parting company with the rest of the machine.
The nut on the pivot bolt had backed off and the threads were buggered up, but 15 minutes with a three cornered file rendered it usable once again. The small registering shoulder which keeps the pivot from turning in the bar was worn off, but some carefully placed weld addressed that. I had it back together in about an hour. It works and doesn't rattle.
I have to remember to check those bolts from time to time.

Best
Les
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Old 06-21-2024, 02:27 PM
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The spring after we moved to this property I was clearing some brush and came across this pile of parts that had been a park bench. The wood was well rotted, but the cast iron appeared to have been powder coated and wasn't badly rusted. Whatever the finish, it was still mostly intact. I hosed the mud and crap off of the parts and set them out to dry, then stashed them in my barn for further attention - someday.




Fast forward 5 years - it's either do something with the parts or throw them out. I chose do something. This is what I had to work with - 4 pieces of cast iron that were in really good shape plus three 48" long slats and a little mystery piece of wood. The purpose of cast iron and the long pieces of wood were obvious, but the the little piece of wood went - ?? But a least now I knew how long the seat pieces should be. As it turns out an extra half inch would have made the project a lot easier.



My son is a fine furniture builder and a few years ago he "outgrew" this basic planer and gave it to me. I used it to plane down the flooring to the thickness I needed for the bench project. There was some oak flooring in the attic of my barn, left over from when the house was built. The wood was crap, with splits, knots, and of course I had to rip off the tongues and groves. It was nominally 6" but with machining off the tongues and groves and the kerf from ripping it down it came out to the exact width of the original seat slats - 2 3/4". I mapped out a way to get seven 48" pieces of 3/4" wood out of the 6 eight foot long scraps.



After cutting the slats to thickness and cutting them to length I ran them through my router with a round over bit to - well, "round over" the edges. I finished the wood by brushing on four coats of clear gloss spar varnish.



At first I thought about stainless steel carriage bolts, then flat head bolts, then oval head bolts. In the end I chose these cool internal hex stainless steel 1/4 - 20 round head bolts to hold it all together.
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Old 06-21-2024, 04:16 PM
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Spent so much time moving over the last month... lots of work at the hangar but not anything noteworthy enough for pics. The regulator went out on the cap so I pulled it and the alternator for testing.... cleaned up the alt and ordered a new regulator. On the pa12 project I set up the fairings to align the backer/mounting plates.... it's now time to do some simple fab work.

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Last edited by rsrguy; 06-23-2024 at 08:02 AM..
Old 06-23-2024, 07:58 AM
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Oops forgot to mention, (probably still in denial)the original fuse was damaged by a hangar tenant.... he closed the hangar door on it. We found a replacement so now we're swapping everything over to the replacement fuse.



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Old 06-23-2024, 08:10 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wdfifteen View Post
The spring after we moved to this property I was clearing some brush and came across this pile of parts that had been a park bench. The wood was well rotted, but the cast iron appeared to have been powder coated and wasn't badly rusted. Whatever the finish, it was still mostly intact. I hosed the mud and crap off of the parts and set them out to dry, then stashed them in my barn for further attention - someday.




Fast forward 5 years - it's either do something with the parts or throw them out. I chose do something. This is what I had to work with - 4 pieces of cast iron that were in really good shape plus three 48" long slats and a little mystery piece of wood. The purpose of cast iron and the long pieces of wood were obvious, but the the little piece of wood went - ?? But a least now I knew how long the seat pieces should be. As it turns out an extra half inch would have made the project a lot easier.



My son is a fine furniture builder and a few years ago he "outgrew" this basic planer and gave it to me. I used it to plane down the flooring to the thickness I needed for the bench project. There was some oak flooring in the attic of my barn, left over from when the house was built. The wood was crap, with splits, knots, and of course I had to rip off the tongues and groves. It was nominally 6" but with machining off the tongues and groves and the kerf from ripping it down it came out to the exact width of the original seat slats - 2 3/4". I mapped out a way to get seven 48" pieces of 3/4" wood out of the 6 eight foot long scraps.



After cutting the slats to thickness and cutting them to length I ran them through my router with a round over bit to - well, "round over" the edges. I finished the wood by brushing on four coats of clear gloss spar varnish.



At first I thought about stainless steel carriage bolts, then flat head bolts, then oval head bolts. In the end I chose these cool internal hex stainless steel 1/4 - 20 round head bolts to hold it all together.
That turned out very nicely. Looks comfortable for sitting under a shade tree. Nice work.
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Old 06-23-2024, 08:18 AM
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Installing pantry cabinets in an alcove in my kitchen.




I still need to add trim to the top of the face frame, install doors and slides and shelves, and decide on/apply a finish. Wife is out of town and I lack authority to make the finish decision, said authority having not been delegated to me :-(

Still wavering between paint (white? blue?) and stain (honey-toned).

It was a right b!t*h to get the three carcasses in place and level, as the space was very tight, the subfloor not flat, and the cabinets not designed with separate bases for leveling. The carcasses are 3/4” ply and very heavy. There’s a bunch of shims under there. The carcasses are screwed to each other and to the header, and now are level and rock-solid. The wall on the right is very not-straight, being over 1” off vertical from bottom to top. I cut the face frame at the necessary angle and will eventually caulk the remaining gap. The slight mis-matches between some pieces of the face frame are irritating but I can sand them down and I think after stain or paint, I won’t notice them.
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Last edited by jyl; 06-23-2024 at 10:07 AM..
Old 06-23-2024, 09:58 AM
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Yesterday, I changed the oil in the F150 and polished out some small brown spots on the hood. I don’t know what it was, but it took about three hours to get them all.
Old 06-23-2024, 11:47 AM
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I've been chasing a "wobble" noise coming from the driver's side front end on the RX350 for a while now. I replaced the driver's side axle because it had been slinging grease from the boot nearest the transmission, so I replaced it, thinking that was the cause of the noise. Nope. The wheel bearing had originally passed the shake test, as that was the first thing I checked, and I thought, okay, it must be the wheel bearing after all. So, I ordered a steering knuckle complete with bearing and hub and replaced the ball joint as well, all to no avail as the noise remained. I noticed that the caliper slider pins were stuck pretty well, and the rotor had a slight lip on the edge, so yesterday, I had both front rotors "turned" and I cleaned and re-greased the slider pins with synthetic grease. Again, to no avail as the noise remained.
Well, when removing the passenger side rotor, I noticed that the axle boot nearest the hub was completely torn all the way around, and there was a lot of grease build-up, so, ah ha!!! Could this be the source of the wobble sort of grinding noise that I am hearing even though it is on the passenger side??? I don't know, but I will find out. I have a new axle for the passenger side arriving in a few days, so today, I removed the old axle. What a mess!!! I went ahead and removed the entire steering knuckle so I could clean everything really well. I will also replace the ball joint on that side and have everything ready, so all I will have to do is install the new axle when it arrives.
Oh yeah, I broke my 1/2 drive Craftsman breaker bar trying to break the axle nut loose. I borrowed a 3/4 inch drive breaker bar and 30mm socket from my brother-in-law's toolbox and used a huge cheater pipe to break the nut loose. Funny, that pipe used to be part of a clothesline and is very light. I found it under my storage building a couple of years ago, and it makes a great cheater pipe for sure.

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Old 06-23-2024, 05:56 PM
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Slowly getting doors installed.
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Old 06-23-2024, 09:34 PM
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Nice work, jyl!
Old 06-24-2024, 01:04 AM
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Replaced the anode in our water heater today. The old one looked like a toothpick.
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Old 06-24-2024, 06:01 PM
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Doors finally done, they need magnets for positive closure, and pulls, but that’s later, now to slides and pullout shelves.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211
What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”?
Old 06-24-2024, 08:16 PM
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Pruned Cabbage Palms today at one of my accounts. I do this once a year right after they produce their flower stalks. I did 15 and have 7 more to do.

This is called a "hurricane cut" - one that only leaves the newest shoot plus one or two more fronds.

I use two different size extension ladders plus a Milwaukee M18 cordless Hackzall with a 12" carbide pruning blade and a Kebtek cordless pruner.





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Old 06-25-2024, 04:04 PM
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I have a Linn Classik cd player that died a few months back. Found online that the power section is very sensitive to having proper voltage. Swapped out the two caps in that section and the unit is back up running. Thought I might have to do the surface mount caps too but not going to worry about those just yet. Thankfully my neighbor is a guru with this stuff and helped to get the job done and the caps in his parts supply.

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Old 06-26-2024, 05:52 AM
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Continuing Thread: What Are You Fix-It'ing Today?

The 95 GMC K1500 continues to vex me. “Because” anything is possible…at this bloody point. I swapped out the plug wires (warranty) and a new new fuel filter. Pulled the O2 sensor to open up the line pre Cat, and attempted to start.

No Go!!!

Oh yeah, checked all known grounds too, strong and secure.
Battery to engine
Battery to fender
Head to firewall
Frame
Filler sleeve to frame
Rear light/loom to frame





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"What the hell is an Aluminum Falcon??"
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Working Projects: 1968 912

Last edited by bugstrider; 07-02-2024 at 12:32 PM..
Old 07-02-2024, 12:29 PM
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