Duke wrote: So you drive that from the back...looking directly into you passenger's head:
Worked for Piper.
Duke wrote: So you drive that from the back...looking directly into you passenger's head:
Worked for Piper.
EastCoastMojo wrote: I put (some of) my used motor oil in a bucket of sand and use it to clean and add a protective layer of lube to my yard implements. Works GREAT.
Damn. That's using yer noodle there girl.
Wall-e wrote:trucke wrote:My grandfather may have saved a step parking the truck over the drain. They held to much oil to bother with a pan. It was a different time. Unrelated pic of oily goodness. Why don't I have a donut robot?!?!?NickD wrote: My, how the times have changed. Try that today and the EPA and DEC would shoot on sightMy dad did this when I was a kid ^^^^^^^.
I just burn it in an attempt to melt metal, and make parts
waste oil forge how-to
Technically, its a foundry (or more specifically, a foundry furnace). A forge is a chamber that heats metal in order to work it into shape - i.e. forged steel tooling. A foundry furnace is a chamber used to melt and or alloy metals (Foundry also can be used as a term that covers the entire operation - i.e. I work at a foundry).
I built my foundry from a discarded water heater expansion tank, and some industrial remnants I received free from a boiler installation and repair operation here in Cincinnati.
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