Hybrid View
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02-06-2011 07:37 AM #1
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02-06-2011 08:05 AM #2
What one person sees as "complicated" another sees as "perfection".

Don
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02-06-2011 08:16 AM #3
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02-06-2011 09:16 AM #4
Your Uncle Bob, Senior Geezer Curmudgeon
It's much easier to promise someone a "free" ride on the wagon than to urge them to pull it.
Luck occurs when preparation and opportunity converge.
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02-06-2011 09:25 AM #5
I like it - just wish I had enough tools to do some of the "complications" that folks like Ken and Steve can with SS as well as common steel.
T-buckets!! Love 'em. A study in simplicity until you get creative: http://www.google.com/images?q=t+buc...w=1677&bih=746Dave W
I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug
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02-06-2011 01:44 PM #6
Thanks you guys I really appreciate the comments.
This thing with the lightning holes came about when I was figuring out what I was going to do for the infra structure inside the frame rails to strengthen the frame up. I already made up my mind that any lightning hole I made I wanted some big radius' on them, not just welding in the tubing and putting a small radius from the weld. Not that there is anything wrong with that. It's a lot of work and I think it makes a part look real nice. I just want some big ones on this car. I have been playing with the idea of making some tooling I could slip inside of the different size material I'm using but it would take so may dies it would take forever. I have dimple dies but again they wouldn't work on say a piece of 2 X 3, you could get one side dimpled but not the other. Then I thought of just taking some 1/8" sheet metal and braking one side 90 degrees. With the pieces bent like that I could dimple both pieces then weld them together and I would have a piece of 2 X 3 with big radiuses. I gave up on that when I had flash backs on welding the stainless frame together, so that was out. That's how I came up with the idea of just machining the whole thing, drill an oversize hole and slip the machined piece in and weld around the hole and it's done.
Ken
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02-06-2011 02:47 PM #7
Ken i wouldn't want to do this again
i had to machine up some of the tubes in mine, it seemed to take forever to get them finished 
Last edited by roadster32; 02-07-2011 at 12:37 AM.
Its aweful lonesome in the saddle since my horse died.
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02-06-2011 02:53 PM #8
That looks really nice, some times I think I should take up knitting
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02-06-2011 08:13 AM #9
A 'T' project? Those things are the next evolution up from having a tiller for steering! How do you handle that or is it on the wrong side too? The 't' is a study of simplicity, Henry would not use 4 bolts if he could get by with three, the packing crates from parts suppliers became the floor boards, a forged steel clevis was replaced with a bent piece of wire for the ignition advance and a farmer was the consultant for expert mechanical shop repairs!
Just having fun Roadster, i'm sure i'd love your tee.





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