k0ua
Epic Contributor
I thought they might take a dim view of anyone carting off their rail. They are a very possessive outfit.:laughing:
BTW, after at least 2.5-3 years of that rail sitting there seemingly ignored,, I noticed a CSX truck parked across the street from it, with a gu y seemingly sleeping there in it....
That's the guy you needed to ask. An employee of the rail road that might rather let you have it than have to mess with it himself.
"but if I were to leave a case of beer on the porch of the little building he used as an office"
LOL
I visit pour local city re cycle depot every so often and browse thru the paint collection shed.
Couple of well placed $$ lets me chose. My usual grabs are red black yellow tremclad paint and primers.
I have found qts that barely had more than a brush dipping or two. Best find was gal of primer and gal of tremclad gloss black.
Simply amazing what some folks heave out.
Oil based paints withstand freezing but not water based ones.
When it comes to tires he even helps me search for the size I want!
Back to homade stuff. A belt sander conversion on an old bench grinder, complete with rollerskate wheel.
I dont understand why they want money to give back re cycle materials. So much paint is ''destroyed' and could me multi mixed and used. yet we have to pollute more and make new paint.lol
To make the degree sign ï½° , hold the <alt> then using the number pad, 248
Here is a great reference to the ASCI codes:
Special Characters — Alt Keyboard Sequences
Recycle centers only take stuff that can be re processed and that they can sell. Rubber gets shredded, paint is multi mixed mixed into cheap 'Blah' colors, paper re cycled, and metals sold to smelters. They don't take construction debris either.
The $$ I gave to the attendant is basically a TIP to allow me to browse and help myself. They frown on folks stealing garbage and my TIP is real cheap shopping.
I'm making some shafts on the lathe using HSS cutting tools. Got tired of standing there with a brush or an oil can which provides either too much or too little cutting oil. Decided to get a setup for directing cutting oil onto the work. But I didn't like the prices for a purpose built tank and pump, or the idea of yet another gizmo to be plugged in and maintained. So I rigged this thing up using a Harbor Freight air tank ($19), a Grizzly magnetic oil stand ($35) and some fittings for an adapter. The adapter I made up has a hose barb on both ends. One end is for a feed tube inside the tank and the other end is for an output tube leading to the oil dispenser. I put about a gallon of cutting oil in the air tank, and installed the adapter (with a bolt taped to the feed line to keep it on the bottom of the tank). I pressurized the tank to a few pounds, and there you are - a very precise amount of oil delivered to the working point. The whole setup can be easily moved to the drill press or milling machine as needed. I keep the tank underneath the lathe on a shelf out of the way, but for the photo I set it up with a short piece of tubing just to show how everything fits together. It seems to last a long time on one pressurization, presumably because the volume of oil dispensed is small compared to the volume of pressurized air in the tank.
A friend of mine works in the woods running forestry equipment. He needed a tool to turn the pin in the locks of the chains on the machine, so here's what I come up With
View attachment 382212 View attachment 382213 View attachment 382214
A friend of mine works in the woods running forestry equipment. He needed a tool to turn the pin in the locks of the chains on the machine, so here's what I come up With
A friend of mine works in the woods running forestry equipment. He needed a tool to turn the pin in the locks of the chains on the machine, so here's what I come up With
View attachment 382212 View attachment 382213 View attachment 382214