In reply to NickD :
"That doesn't look too awful"... right until I saw the image with an axle 10ft in the air and two car lengths away
In reply to NickD :
"That doesn't look too awful"... right until I saw the image with an axle 10ft in the air and two car lengths away
In reply to stanger_missle :
Maybe. It looks to be maybe two inches taller, and some of that is tire. You got me thinking if the Outback halfshafts would work with a larger lift on a Forester, though.
nderwater said:
They've absolutely found a great fishing spot- deep pool, good water flow, some good edges on the currents.
You guys have to knock that off. I'm finally in the process of setting up the "new" Delta contractor saw we bought a number of years ago before we got running too many other directions to get the wood shop set up. I've got plenty of... uh... respect for the table saw without dwelling on that stuff.
In reply to SaltyDog :
I should be clear: Those are beautiful dovetails of the Internet, not my own. I got ahead of myself and did a set of hand-cut ones for an in-wall mailbox with no recent practice, and, uh... Let's just say I'll spare you all the pictures (and probably pick up a router jig to get that project sorted unless I find a pile of free time lying on the ground for getting that technique nailed).
Pic unrelated:
Don't remember if I posted this before or not, but I think it will be my very first sticker when I get a vinyl cutter
Knurled. said:While idly looking on eBay Motors for cars I don't have room for.
Does all that come with the car?
If they took that kind of care of THE PLACE WHERE THEY SIT, how well did they maintain the important parts?
In reply to Appleseed :
The eBay auction was from a repair shop in Tennessee who pulled the head after it blew the head gasket, and the owner of the car abandoned it there.
1917. The U.S.S. Recruit, a wooden battleship built by the Navy in Union Square, New York City, to recruit seamen and sell Liberty Bonds from 1917 to 1920. In order to drive up recruitment to the Navy - and to train those so recruited - the US military commissioned the construction of a full and seaworthy battleship in the middle of Union Square, Manhattan. The ship was staffed, with a captain, and was equipped with wireless and quarters for officers and other crew. It also had searchlights - illuminated at night. As well as functioning as a successful training and recruiting unit - more than 25,000 men joined the US Navy via Recruit - the ship was also deployed as an event and reception location, hosting, amongst other occasions, a visiting group of Native Americans, and a christening. The ship remained in Union Square for the duration of the War and beyond, finally being decommissioned and dismantled in 1920. The six guns it carried were wooden replicas.
In reply to Madhatr :
You win. Thread's over, shut it down, go home.
My first attempt at upholstery, front boat seats from scratch:
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