

No vroom until Friday. As the temp drops in my unheated shed. Wrenches will cool off and turn blue and miserable. Snow forecast. Perfect evening to touch 'er off


Hopefully it all ends something like this


Moderators: Redneck_Randy, badmoonrising, lakerunner
I had that same thought.......pond tuuunes wrote:im not sure how fast your tune is gonna be. But are you worried at all about how much wind your "shack" can take?
The thought crossed my mind. It was originally built by the old woodsman Al quite sturdily although lightweight. I have continued to upgrade since. Single lengths of conduit bent from floor to ceiling to floor all in one swoop. Steel angle at top and bottom of walls to weld it all together. A combination of vertical 2x4s and 2x2s at the corners. 1/4" plywood with u clamps bolting it to the conduit in quite a few places stiffens it up greatly. I also tied into the rails for further strength front to back. The roof is generally built in the same way with the front edge especially beefed/sandwiched to take the blast.pond tuuunes wrote:im not sure how fast your tune is gonna be. But are you worried at all about how much wind your "shack" can take?
Let me trash it on a reef at high speed in the wee hours first. Then you can have it.ronb wrote:OMG, sounds awful. I will come up and haul it away..
Did it ever occur to you that you were looking at a jet drive?You need to put more prop on there...
It is comforting to know that you are not overexerting. I won't be breaking much of a sweat myself from here on out. We've already had several light snows. Running heavy wire feeds with my paks on...with fingers blue and stiff.woolznaz wrote: I don't know about the rest of you guys, but this has been easy. I have not even broken a sweat on this whole project!
woolznaz wrote:Vrooom, vrooooooooom indeed! Great progress! Congratulations on the big steps taken so far. It is a lot of fun watching this project move forward so thanks for sharing the pictures. I don't know about the rest of you guys, but this has been easy. I have not even broken a sweat on this whole project!
Yea, he makes this sound like a big project..... seems easy to me from here. I'm glad I'm not the only one that thinks so. In fact, I cannot wait to see what we do next!Just Laxin wrote:woolznaz wrote:Vrooom, vrooooooooom indeed! Great progress! Congratulations on the big steps taken so far. It is a lot of fun watching this project move forward so thanks for sharing the pictures. I don't know about the rest of you guys, but this has been easy. I have not even broken a sweat on this whole project!
I know what you mean, I haven't even scraped a knuckle!
She's quite the trooper, I guess. It was nice of them to recommend her and I'm impressed they knew she would be willing to help.tuned wrote: As the main tarp weighs in at about a hundred pounds alone, it was recommended to use Pam ..... Worked like a charm]
Not only willing to help, but supplied the right amount of lubricant. Only problem is she got it all over my old plow truck (which I was carefully using as a ladder extender). Although I had to clean the windshield so I didn't make 'muddy oil', the body will probably never get washed. I figure it is now doing double duty as rust preventativewoolznaz wrote:She's quite the trooper, I guess. It was nice of them to recommend her and I'm impressed they knew she would be willing to help.tuned wrote: As the main tarp weighs in at about a hundred pounds alone, it was recommended to use Pam ..... Worked like a charm]