300UGUY
Super Member
59 degrees and partly cloudy ... real humid/wet ... I could see fog rising up off the ground in the headlight last night when I drove the Simplicity CFC 18 ZTR - which has a steering wheel BTW- up to the shed at 10 or 11 PM.
Got the MIG cleaned out/up the night before last ... Grabbed some mothballs when I was at the Big Orange yesterday to see if we can avoid anyone taking up residence inside in the future. The only thing that required much work was the wheels ... they had got pretty chewed up from it getting dragged around in/on gravel ... so I pulled 'em off, ran a bolt thru 'em, stuck on a flat washer and nut so they wouldn't spin on the bolt and then chucked that up in the drill press and hit 'em with a large file for the rough pass, and then used some drywall screen for the final pass. Rolls much more smoothly now.
Last night I fixed the frayed cord on the Sawzall and pulled the rubber nose cover and metal workstop off in preparation to repack the gearbox with grease ... which I also have to do with the angle grinder. So there will be a trip to the Milwaukee Service Center up by Cleveland later today to pick up the correct grease for each. Probably should grab a set of brushes for both of them if they are reasonable. Also cleaned up the framing and finish nailers.
Day before yesterday I started doing a little refurb on my Tool Gypsy bandsaw. With the shed being unheated, anything with bare metal had started getting a little crusty from the condensation and humidity that comes with the seasons:
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But nothing a little sandpaper and elbow grease wouldn't handle ... along with a coating of mineral oil to see if we can avoid having to do it again any time real soon. I noticed while I was doing this the rear blade guide on the bandsaw set back quite a ways from the material being cut ... and if it wasn't for the rear backing plate/jaw in work clamp being fixed, the saw could actually cut something wider than the 6" it is rated for - at least on a straight 90 degree cut. So while I was at Home Depot today I picked up some really nice steel spacers and longer bolts for the rear jaw ... and viola ... The Super Cut mod was born:
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Cutting a 7 1/2" wide piece of 1/2" plate ... which will be the mounting plate for the new stand for the bench vise I'm building ... to get it off the bench:
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A very mild feed rate is critical to keep it from stalling out ... but it works:
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Did some measuring and fitting for the SSQA build project, cut and drilled some steel for the mount for the diverter valve on the loader and got a bunch of junk cleared off/put away from the main work bench.
And the very last thing I did last night before coming back to the house was burn all the scrap/trash wood/cardboard/paper to reduce the combustibles in the building ... and it sure didn't take too long for it to get like a sauna inside.
Got rid of a couple old broken axe handles and a rake handle that was bad ... I also burned about an 1/8 can of Minwax Poly that had skinned and gelled up ... and a can of All-Purpose PVC cement that had gone south ... but was still very volatile ... which was fairly entertaining ...![]()
I've seen a lot of bandsaws, but that is the only one that allows the blade to swivel for a angular cut. Neat machine. Fluid film will keep it from rusting up, but a layer of any oil will do the same thing. I use old crankcase oil to keep things moving, it allows me to recycle it in a way.