Show What Tool You Made*

/ Show What Tool You Made*
  • Thread Starter
#181  
OK to pass along?
Of course it's OK, sixdogs.

blowgun2.png Click on drawing to enlarge

I don't know if I made it clear or not, but the hole blows out the side of the pipe rather than straight out the end. As far as I know, there is nothing on the market like that.

I also made one about 6 foot long to clean the straw walkers on 1975 Gleaner model F combine. (with the hole in the end of pipe) It worked great, but blows the straw right back in your face, but that's not a big deal when servicing the combine every morning. You get dirty anyway.:laughing:
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #182  
Of course it's OK, sixdogs.

View attachment 365476 Click on drawing to enlarge

I don't know if I made it clear or not, but the hole blows out the side of the pipe rather than straight out the end. As far as I know, there is nothing on the market like that.

I also made one about 6 foot long to clean the straw walkers on 1975 Gleaner model F combine. (with the hole in the end of pipe) It worked great, but blows the straw right back in your face, but that's not a big deal when servicing the combine every morning. You get dirty anyway.:laughing:

Check this out. I have the air and water wands. They work great but the air one uses a lot of air.

Radiator Blow Out Wash Out Kit Radiator Genie | eBay
 
/ Show What Tool You Made*
  • Thread Starter
#183  
Check this out. I have the air and water wands. They work great but the air one uses a lot of air.
Radiator Blow Out Wash Out Kit Radiator Genie | eBay

The air must leave the pipe at a 90º angle to do much good, just a bend in the end of the pipe will not do much good. It must be inserted between the radiator and the condenser. I was inspired to make mine after trying one like the one on eBay you suggested.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #184  
I retired from wheat farming in Western Oklahoma in 2003 and sold my 4450 John Deere. Lots of dust collected on the radiator and A/C condenser fins and is difficult to blow it out. I took a Milton type air nozzle, removed the tip from the 1/8" pipe threads and added a 24" piece of 1/8" black pipe. I welded the end shut, then drilled a .125 inch hole near the end to blow out at a 90 degree angle. I could then stick the pipe extension in between the radiator and the condenser, blowing the dirt out of both of them without damaging the fins. It really worked good.

View attachment 365357

View attachment 365358
Click on photo to enlarge, then look on the left end to see the 1/8" hole.

Actually, yours is a more robust tool than what I bought. I use an RV tank cleaning wand, but putting air behind it rather than the hose tap or pressure-washer. Nice work you have done.

The tank wand usually is $9 at Walmart or about $15 at an RV center.

10MT-abracadabra-1-copy.jpg

Or, you can make one yourself because the plastic PVC pipe for the RV tank only last one or two seasons. This copper/brass is really robust.
wand-01.jpg

Funny how maintaining a tractor we can use other products from various places to get the job done. :)

Keep these ideas coming people. It makes farming interesting and easier. haha
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #185  
The air must leave the pipe at a 90º angle to do much good, just a bend in the end of the pipe will not do much good. It must be inserted between the radiator and the condenser. I was inspired to make mine after trying one like the one on eBay you suggested.

You got my curiosity up so I went out to look at my radiator wands that I suggested in an earlier post. I never noticed it before but you are right. They are shooting out at about a 45 degree angle. Other than using HUGE amounts of air, it gets the job done but I bet yours was cheaper to make.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #186  
The air must leave the pipe at a 90º angle to do much good, just a bend in the end of the pipe will not do much good. It must be inserted between the radiator and the condenser. I was inspired to make mine after trying one like the one on eBay you suggested.

How did you type the degree sign? Alt 0176 doesn't work for me here on tbn
 
/ Show What Tool You Made*
  • Thread Starter
#187  
How did you type the degree sign? Alt 0176 doesn't work for me here on tbn

LOL.......I use a Macbook Pro and Google's Chrome browser. It has a whole list of special characters such as:
∆ ↓ ↑ ✮ ½ ¾ ⅔ ½ ⅓ ¼ º ².
I don't know if the PC version of Chrome has them.
You can cut and save these and paste into something later such as 50¢ or Hº².
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #188  
Hey yall, first post here. Wanted to show off my fire rakes i made. I didnt want to pay 50-60 bucks for this simple tool so i made two of them from scap for $0.
20140225_090648.jpg
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #189  
Hey yall, first post here. Wanted to show off my fire rakes i made. I didnt want to pay 50-60 bucks for this simple tool so i made two of them from scap for $0.
View attachment 365682

Now that is really nice work. Better than the tools coming over from Asia. Even the color coding looks professional.

:dance1:
 
/ Show What Tool You Made*
  • Thread Starter
#190  
Bearing Outer Race Removal

An old man showed this trick to me many years ago. Now that I am an old man, I thought I'd pass it on to the young readers of TBN.

Remove the axle, inner race and bearing. Lay a bead of weld on the surface of the outer race with a stick welder. The object is to heat up the race; then let it cool and shrink. You can usually pull it out with your fingers, but a tool with a hook on it is sometimes needed.

It works especially good on GM auto rear axle bearings. Without using this method, they can be near impossible to remove.


Bearing Race Removal.png Click on drawing to enlarge
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #191  
Now that is really nice work. Better than the tools coming over from Asia. Even the color coding looks professional.

:dance1:

Well thank you sir. I think the pics make them look a little better than they really are. I cut the heads out of 1"x3" angle iron and the handles are old galv trampoline poles. I painted them and wrapped the handles with sandpaper tape. They work pretty dang good.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #192  
Bearing Outer Race Removal

An old man showed this trick to me many years ago. Now that I am an old man, I thought I'd pass it on to the young readers of TBN.

Remove the axle, inner race and bearing. Lay a bead of weld on the surface of the outer race with a stick welder. The object is to heat up the race; then let it cool and shrink. You can usually pull it out with your fingers, but a tool with a hook on it is sometimes needed.

It works especially good on GM auto rear axle bearings. Without using this method, they can be near impossible to remove.


View attachment 365726 Click on drawing to enlarge

Slick ! That should really cut down on the # of colourful words that type of job creates !

Rgds, D.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made*
  • Thread Starter
#193  
Hey yall, first post here. Wanted to show off my fire rakes i made. I didnt want to pay 50-60 bucks for this simple tool so i made two of them from scap for $0.

Never heard of a fire rake, but after Googling it, I learned a lot about them. Yours looks as professional and useable as those shown for sale on line. I'm putting a couple of them on my "to do" list.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #194  
Never heard of a fire rake, but after Googling it, I learned a lot about them. Yours looks as professional and useable as those shown for sale on line. I'm putting a couple of them on my "to do" list.
Those rakes bring back memories. When I was a kid the state forestry commission or somebody issued two rakes and a backpack spray tank to my grandfather. He'd load the tank onto my red wagon and let me play fireman. They broke the rakes out to rake leaves. I don't remember how well they worked for that purpose.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #195  
They work very well for fire brakes in our pine forests down south. They also work pretty dang good raking small limbs and stuff after cutting up a tree.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #196  
To type a degree sign °, hold the <Alt> key down then using the number pad with the <num-lock> on type 248 then release the <Alt> key.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #197  
QUOTE=graydog111;3705905]Bearing Outer Race Removal

An old man showed this trick to me many years ago. Now that I am an old man, I thought I'd pass it on to the young readers of TBN.

Remove the axle, inner race and bearing. Lay a bead of weld on the surface of the outer race with a stick welder. The object is to heat up the race; then let it cool and shrink. You can usually pull it out with your fingers, but a tool with a hook on it is sometimes needed.

It works especially good on GM auto rear axle bearings. Without using this method, they can be near impossible to remove.


View attachment 365726 Click on drawing to enlarge[/QUOTE]

I will attest that this works! Several years ago, I had a blind hole race that I could not remove and a TBN member told me to use this method. It literally fell out after putting a bead on it. Recently, a coworker asked me how to remove an impossible race and I told him to do this. He was a little skeptical but ended up trying it and it worked like a charm.
 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #199  
Here is a video of a tool I made to chunk 44 lbs of bowling balls.

 
/ Show What Tool You Made* #200  
That will cure the 7-10 split.
 

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