Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #61,291  
Finished drinking first cup of coffee. 62° with partly cloudy skies this morning. Heading to 82° with rain in morning. Wife's dentist visit turned out to be a Sinus infection. Taking antibiotic. Another doctor visit today. Then some putter in the shop. May get started hanging the 10 LED shop lights I bought.
Drew, if you are having problems seeing what you are welding and are using a auto darkening helmet. You have the darkness set to high on helmet.
Eric, carbide burrs work really good if you use them. :D
Good Morning All.

Ron, did you get your Air Fryer, from Sam's yet? Have you tried it? I got mine about 3 days after ordering. Tried some frozen French fries and followed recipe of 400 degrees for 18 minutes, giving them a shake at about 10 minutes. They were, in my opinion, way overcooked and hard. Tried another batch Saturday evening at cooked them for 12 minutes. Much better but, will try 10 minutes next time.

I didn't really comprehend how big this thing is before it arrived. It's huge but, very large cooking capacity. Now I have to find a place to store it in our walk in pantry.

I'm going to try some chicken thighs and drumsticks next weekend.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,292  
Good Morning!!!! 67F @ 5:30AM. Plentiful sunshine. High 89F. Winds SSW at 5 to 10 mph.

A few months ago I noticed that Weather Underground stopped issuing forecasts and tracking conditions for my immediate area. The closest places I can look at now are either 1000' higher or lower, and the temperatures never agree with what my thermometer says here (it's usually half way in between). But today the higher place is actually warmer than the lower one. Must be some kind of temperature inversion going on...

When I reach for a carbide burr, Eric, it is always with a sense of dread if it is to be used on steel. The tiny slivers generated are like needles, and I always end up with at least one deeply embedded in a finger. And if I don't sweep up right after I'm done, I'll keep getting them until I do.:duh:

I remember back when I couldn't detect any deleterious effects from birthdays. Enjoy it while it lasts, PJ!:laughing::laughing::laughing:

Many years and tens of thousands of miles ago I ordered and received some special transmission gears from an outfit in Germany for one of my old motorcycles. They were delivered promptly and worked perfectly. I was about to place a large order for more German motorcycle parts from a company here in the US when I thought, what the heck, let's see if that other place was still in business. I quickly found them using Google, and learned that not only are they still in business, they had most of the parts I needed at a much lower price than their American competition. Even better, they had pictures of each one posted so I had some assurance I was ordering the right thing. The only downside is that the German company is still using BMW's original part numbering scheme, which does not agree with other online resources or the printed parts manual I have. They do publish some exploded views of the parts on their website, but they're not linked in any way that would make them easy to access. Still, I was able to place an order, pay with Paypal, and get an email in both German and English confirming the sale. If the last order is any guide, the parts could be here as soon as next week.

One thing that didn't work when we hooked up the van's instrument cluster last week was the LCD clock. Just didn't display anything. Apparently it's a common problem, one most people fix by sticking a three dollar clock over it. Only problem with that is that the new clock isn't illuminated at night like the old built-in one. But I found one post that suggested replacing any capacitors on the circuit board. There was only one, so I typed the name and numbers I found on it into Google, and up came a page offering to sell me one for twenty-seven cents. After postage and a special $1.50 handling fee, I figured I could order a few extras and if the repair works, maybe give them away to someone else in the same boat. Got an email later in the day saying that they'd already shipped, too.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,293  
Ron, did you get your Air Fryer, from Sam's yet? Have you tried it? I got mine about 3 days after ordering. Tried some frozen French fries and followed recipe of 400 degrees for 18 minutes, giving them a shake at about 10 minutes. They were, in my opinion, way overcooked and hard. Tried another batch Saturday evening at cooked them for 12 minutes. Much better but, will try 10 minutes next time.

I didn't really comprehend how big this thing is before it arrived. It's huge but, very large cooking capacity. Now I have to find a place to store it in our walk in pantry.

I'm going to try some chicken thighs and drumsticks next weekend.

We got ours. Unpacked it, found a place to put it. That's it. With having good weather and having company for a few days. We have been using pellet grill for complete meals. Ribs or tri-tip with fresh corn and potatoes. With bean or other salad. We make good use of the vegetable market near our house.
Will get some use soon. We usually use potatoes fresh cut for our fry,s.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,294  
The overnight low was 45*, yesterday high was 87*. We did get a shower in the afternoon yesterday and some more last night. The forecast is the same for today.

PJ Sprog, hope you have a great day. Happy birthday!

Not sure what today will bring. I think the wife and grandkids have it planned out for me.

Hope everyone has a nice day.
CWB
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,295  
We got ours. Unpacked it, found a place to put it. That's it. With having good weather and having company for a few days. We have been using pellet grill for complete meals. Ribs or tri-tip with fresh corn and potatoes. With bean or other salad. We make good use of the vegetable market near our house.
Will get some use soon. We usually use potatoes fresh cut for our fry,s.

Which pellet grill did you get?
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,297  
77.6F and clear @ 11:00, high today predicted to be 81F. Late getting moving today.

Got MMM disconnected yesterday after I finished mowing and that was pretty much it ... didn't get the FEL put on or move it up to the shop. Good chance of rain on Thursday ... so I might wait until tomorrow afternoon to start on the SSQA repair.

I did however refill the three sunflower seed feeders and cleaned out and refilled the feeder for the hummers. Also hauled trash up to the end of the driveway ... skipped the recyclables as the can was only 1/4 full.

Also dumped some more cat litter down one of the ground hog holes. There are four holes in that spot ... gonna take quite a while to fill them all. Dunno whether it's working or not ... but I haven't seen any ground hogs on that side of the house, which is a good sign.

Did bring the downstairs cat up and put her in the cage in the living room for a couple of hours last night to try and get all of them used each other. The Squeak was utterly terrified ... carried her into the room twice and sat down with her and both times she ran away, hissing and yeowling. The other two cats were avoiding the room as well.

Winds appear to be dead calm right now so I might go for another round of spraying today. Could also spend some time cleaning up the shop.

Held off on ordering the plastic cover for the rear driveshaft for the FWD on the Kubota ... wanted to take another look at it after I talked to service guy in at the dealer. He didn't think it would be too bad to replace and thought that there was probably enough splines on the shaft that the yokes could be unpinned and slide back to disconnect the rear shaft from the front. Said worse case might be that I'd have to drop the front axle ... which is way more involved than I would care to mess with right at the moment ... :rolleyes:

It's right above a cross member on the frame ... and there isn't a whole lot of room for maneuvering parts around ... :(
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,298  
70°F and .05 inches rain since midnight. Looking more promising to work on my shelves. As these are outside tasks, yesterday was disappointing, just enough wet and too much wind.

Drew, you'd feel much better if I could post pics of my welds.

Be safe
Have a great day
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,299  
RS, how do you adjust the valves on a Kubota? ...
With your copy of the Workshop Manual for your tractor close at hand ... :D

Seriously though, it was pretty simple (for my tractor specifically, YMMV)

1. Remove anything that will prevent you from removing the valve cover. In my case it was the muffler/exhuast/tailpipe.

2. Remove the glow plugs (so there is no compression and the engine can easily be turned with a wrench on the bolt head that holds the crankshaft pulley on)

3. Remove the valve cover.

4. Set the engine to Top Dead Center (TDC) on the compression stroke for cylinder no. 1.

So the first thing you have to do is identify which cylinder is no. 1 on your engine. Typically, it's the first cylinder at the front of the engine (but on at least some Yanmar's it's the last cylinder at the rear ... at least according to mechanic friend)

Kubota describes cylinder no. 1 for my tractor being the one closest to the "gear case" in the Workshop Manual. If you aren't a mechanic and real familiar with their terminology that can be a little confusing. When I initially read it, I thought "Gear case ? ... are they referring to transmission ?" (rear of engine)

Nope ... it's actually a case/housing on the front of the engine that holds various gears that probably control the timing of the camshaft, injection pump, etc.

There are two TDC's for cylinder no. 1 - one is on the compression stroke and the other is on what Kubota calls the overlap stroke (which I believe is the exhaust stroke) ... so it's possible that the engine can be 360 degrees out of the position you want it in.

On mine, when the engine is at TDC, the TDC alignment mark on the flywheel will be in the middle of the window (a small 2" hole on the right side of the bell housing, covered with a removable rubber or plastic plug) and both rocker arms for the intake and exhaust valves on cylinder no. 1 will have clearance (ie. both valves are closed)

Once you have no. 1 at TDC, you look in the Workshop Manual and check the table and see what valves on each cylinder you can check/set with the engine at that position. On my engine it was intake and exhaust valves for cylinder no 1 ... then something like intake on cylinder no. 2, exhaust on cylinder no. 3, ... etc.

After you have all the valves set for that engine position, you rotate the engine 360 degrees and check/set the rest of the valves that you didn't already do.

For my engine, the clearance spec was something like 0.0054 to 0.0073 (?) ... so I used a 0.006 feeler gauge.

On each rocker, there is an adjustment screw (with a locknut) to take up the slack and set the clearance ... you loosen the locknut, place the feeler gauge in between the valve and the rocker and tighten the adjustment screw until there is a slight resistance or drag on the feeler gauge and then, using the screwdriver to maintain the position of the adjustment screw, tighten up the locknut.

After you think you have it set pull the feeler gauge out and stick it back in between the valve and the rocker ... it should come out with only a minor amount of drag/resistance ... and go back in with only a very minor amount of effort, if any at all.

I used a 0.007 feeler gauge blade as a "no-go" check ... IOW, after I adjusted it as above with the 0.006 blade, I would try to insert the 0.007 blade ... which shouldn't go.

FWIW, when adjusting valves, it's better that they be slightly on the loose side rather than being too tight (being too tight can cause burnt valves, more common on exhaust valves)

... - or is this a question that if i have to ask I should get a mechanic to do it?
That's hard for me to say with any degree of certainty, without knowing how mechanically-inclined you are.

I will say this though:

Assuming that one has a manual which lays out the procedure, and one can follow written directions, and exercise reasonable care in doing so, it really isn't all that difficult ... or at least it wasn't on my tractor.

Hope this helps.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #61,300  
PJ ... Happy Birthday !

Drew ... thin metal = tough stuff to weld. To quote Uncle Buck: "... just bird poop it !"

Also, FWIW, I can't wear my glasses (bifocals) when I weld ... too close to get correct focus (I'm mostly near-sighted)

The dogwood and hawthorn berries are red, red, red ... and their leaves are starting to turn. When that happens you know the end of summer isn't that far off ... :(
 

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