Rusty Bowtie

General Category => General Discussion - Intros => Topic started by: sammons on March 30, 2025, 08:03:51 PM

Title: That time of year
Post by: sammons on March 30, 2025, 08:03:51 PM
Mower repair/maintanice, get ready for this ol dudes 27th season. At least no deck repair, did that last summer. After mow season last fall i went to mulch up leafs, she spun over 4 times and broke another starter drive gear. I just replaced it again last spring, noticed then the bushings were getting sloppy at top. Figured thats why its breaking them when it's off when it comes up to fly wheel. For a few bucks more than new drive gear and bushings, i just bought a new starter off Amazon.

I got my garage door unclamped/ insulation removed so i could get it opened back up for summer. Got the mower broke loose from the ground and pulled it with p.u. into garage. Time to put the new starter on the  old big block. This thing reminds me of an old chevy 396, not the most powerfull offered, but plenty of power and torque and very dependable. 😁

Getting the front starter bolt is a real pain, if it didn't have that torques bit in the middle, you couldn't get it out, it's tucked in behind drive gear😡

Tom came over and bent my front spindle arms  around to get my toe set on the front axel and greased everthing for me. Be nice if these had and adjustable drag link. Did find out this mower was built by Huskvarna, did not know that. Got batt charged, engine
degreased, cooling fins all cleaned out. Turned fuel on, give throttle and choke a couple pulls to make sure they weren't froze up. Hit key... i bet it didn't turn over 3 times and fired right up, no slobering just smooth as silk, surprised me. Clean up wax body next.

All engine under the hood😄 Had bad toe out.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: Rattiac on March 30, 2025, 10:31:51 PM
Been working on small engine stuff as well. 
I had a 4yr old 5hp snowblower but just inherited dad's new 7hp snowblower.  My neighbor has always needed a good snowblower.  I'm always doing his driveway.  So he asked about my old unit. I sold it to him pretty cheap but couldn't let him pick it up just yet.  It needed some new glider feet.  So I welded up some 3/4" solid square on those feet and went through the fuel system.  Gave it a good drain,  removed the bowl,  all seemed well. 
Went to Lowe's and bought some 4 stroke canned fuel.  Let it idle for about 30mins.  The surge went away idled perfect.
Now he has a good snowblower and I have the next few years off.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 01, 2025, 10:35:34 AM
Glad you kept dads new 7hp, extra power helps. Good on you for getting the older one up and going for neighbor. 5yrs ago i was looking into getting one as i can't shovel anymore. But.. the neighbor comes over with his little John Deere tractor and blades, (or buckets if deep), so i do nothing but thank him.

Had to give up on the clean up, couldn't control my buffer. Just washed and waxed hood, rear fender paint is dead. Forgot to change oil and adjust brakes. Got oil/filter changed but too sore to do anything else right now. Next project after that will be getting my 3.5hp walk behind edger going again. I have to cut drive and sidwalks every couple weeks with this burmuda grass.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on April 01, 2025, 01:09:56 PM
Yep. Weed season is here. Ass son as this last batch of snow is gone I'l be spraying & rototilling. Wish I had the means & patients to get some of this in permanent pasture. I just end up repeating the cycle. I didn't have to move much snow this winter but the little battery blower my wife bought for me took care of the steps and a path to her car.  :) Pretty amazing little tool.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 02, 2025, 07:30:01 PM
Ya, thats what brothers doing out west.  Getting equipment up and running trying to get ahead of fire season, endless task.

The wind calmed down and rain/mix on the way the rest of the week, so i thought i would mow some high spots. Lol, i must have made it a whole 100' when drive speed slowed. Thought maybe i got some lube on the belt, nope. The idler pulley self destructed. Freind stopped and helped me, or should i say he pushed it back around into the garage. I think i have a spare off a previous scrapped mower, if not i'll steal it off the red one out back and order another later. Pulley is the original, looks like the plastic just wore thin and broke. Two steps forward, three steps back.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 08, 2025, 08:57:39 PM
Got my parts at noon. Watched youtube videos, all didn't show my model with a bolt going up from bottom. Thought it had a built in nut on top, nope. I went a head and pulled the deck for easier access early this morn. The nut on top, under battery and steering gear. Can't be 2 places at once, had to wait for Tom to get off work to give me a hand. That made it almost easy. Putting the deck back on i noticed something moving at the rear deck locator bracket. It was broke thru rear bracket hole. Something to weld up tomorrow.

While i was waiting this afternoon, i popped the seal out of the new pulley bearing. Yep, just like the last 4 sealed bearings... just 4 small globs of grease. How much could it cost to actually put enough grease in there😡   Got my grease out and paint brush to add grease and work around the bearings and put the seal back in. Check your sealed bearings before you install fellows👍

Ya, got the goodie out of that pulley😁

Pulley, broke bracket
Bottom bolt
Upper nut, hidden in there.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 17, 2025, 09:17:00 PM
After the transmission  pulley replace i needed brake adjust. I either got it worked once, then bound up, tried readjust same. Yesterday i finally got my transmisson belt and installed. This morn i took rear wheel off to see what was going on. The caliper had something rubbing hard and wearing a groove. It hasn't worked right since i had it all apart last spring, the pins were stuck and wouldn't push against pads.

Well i found it. A freind was helping me cause i kept dropping the assy cause my hands weren't working. Everytime parts would scatter. Last time i handed it to him... i flipped the caliper upside down🙄   the rotor hub was rubbing and throwing the brake arm off into lock up. Geez easy fix and everything working smoothy.
Pads need replaced so got some coming tuesday.

Pics for your amusement😄
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on April 19, 2025, 12:59:07 PM
Glad you got it fixed!


Yes, That time of year. I was using the box scraper to drag some weeds, because that was what was attached to the tractor. A rear tire went flat and caused me to slide off the trail down a slope toward the chicken yard. I had to maneuver the pickup around it and only knocked over one fence post. Things in the passenger side mirror really bare closer that they appear.  ::) The winch on the pickup was able to pull the tractor out but the tire was ruined. I have 2 new tires coming and should be at the tire shop Nest week. I have to pull the second one off and take it in today. Meanwhile the weeds are growing several inches a day!   :o
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 21, 2025, 07:23:48 AM
Sixball, glad you didn't slide down into the chicken yard. Those winches are sure handy👍

My buddy Tom bought an old Case tractor at auction last month. Can't remember what type its called, but has shorter wide tires on the rear that are really wide. They look similar to bomber tires with the diamond style tread. He said way to wide track in the rear, so he's shopping for different tires and wheels $$$$.


Brother had to pull out of his weeding to go to town to his kids house. Had a big oak limb fall on the rear fence, took it out and broke a concrete post off. Just never ending maintenence.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on April 21, 2025, 08:26:55 PM
Really like old tractors but don't want to restore any. In the 50s we were farming with a Case, an Oliver, & a FarmAll form the teens to the twenties. We mostly had implements that were converted from horse drawn. Our hay baler required two people to operators plus a tractor driver. We bought two new ones a DC Case that ran on butane and a John Deere Model R diesel with a 20' oneway disc plow. That was a time saver when prepping wheat fields!   Lots of uncles and cousins (aunts sometimes) farming the family estate. I don't remember any that escaped injury but luckily none died and we had all of our arms and legs and most of our fingers and toes.  :o A harvest time the whole world smelled like fresh baked bread.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 22, 2025, 07:13:29 PM
Got my parts today, my new magneto for the 3.5 Briggs on the edger, my brake pads for the Craftsman and my Aunt said she was sending something that was my grandpas.
Got the mag on the edger, four pulls and i was sore😡, so onto the mower. Took caliper and rotor off to get to inboard pad, man after hauling limbs it was flush with the housing. Not much more left on the outboard pad. Wow, hella brake, like throw you thru the windshield brakes. Went for a spin, drive belt still tight and mower jumps letting clutch out, touch brakes and they lock up. All i could smell was hot brakes as they burnt in. Pulled back in garage and backed them off some.

Opened my Aunts package.... she sent me grandpa's Navy dress blues. Didn't know they existed anymore. He got on the brand new boat, (SS Quinault Victory), in Portland Oregon, stopped for a bit of  fuel then on to Port Chicago, (grandpa called it Treasure island) on the 17th of july 1944 to load ammuntion for its maiden voyage to the pacific. Some of the Navy armed gaurd got an 18hr leave, so grandpa headed for family visit in Oakland. 10pm that night she blew up, sparing the eight navy guys that had leave. Pic of him at Okland at family house on july 18th 1944. These blues are what my aunt sent me. I thought it was cool.

Yep, out of brake pads

Grandpa 7-18-44
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on April 23, 2025, 01:54:48 PM
We lived in Port Chicago after the War. My brother did 1-3 grades there & Pittsburg. I had family working in shops at the ammunition depot when the big explosion happened. My wife's family ranch was taken by the government for Part of the Ammunition Depot. They were there before the Gold Rush. Your Grandad was lucky.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 23, 2025, 07:50:23 PM
Did they get most of Port Chicago rebuilt by the time you moved there? I know it was pretty destroyed in places.

Yes, very lucky. They called them "The lucky eight", odd that you never read anything about them, at least what i could find in old newspapers around there.

Pic of the "The lucky eight", grandpa on far right back row.

And Grandpa's telegramn to grandma
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on April 27, 2025, 12:31:30 AM
I was little 2-3 and only have a memory or two before we moved to Pittsburg a few mile away. My folks were separated and Dad was home in Texas. We moved back there  in 1949 but my mom's folks stayed in Pittsburg. We visited often once or twice a year until we all moved back in 1959. During some of that time my aunt & uncle lived in port Chicago on the last street above town. My uncle's sister & her family lived in a group old quonset buildings that I suppose were former military housing. He husband was one of the guys that was  working in the shops there when the explosion happened. The explosion was still often talked about all through my younger days. When I was in high school my dad worked in an auto shop in Port Chicago and it was still a bit of a town. Not long after they closed it & I think they tore it all down. A couple of years ago a friend who had been that had lived in that area but in here now loaned me a book about the explosion. All of the ammunition loading on there ships was done by crews of black sailors with white officers. There was a lot of competition between crews to load the most ammunition per shift. A lot of corners were cut and safety issues were often ignored. There were a lot legal cases filed and investigations but most of the blame was put on the the black sailors who were killed. It was an interesting book and there was some inside into what life in and around Port Chicago was like. I'll try to get the name of it if you are interested. The Lucky 8 may have been mentioned, I don't remember. One of the locomotives that pulled the ammo trains was never found. There was much speculation back then about if it was an atomic bomb. I'm sure there are things about it we will never know.
Like I said before my wife's family ranch and those of other families related to her were taken to build the Navel Ammunition Depot and the adjoining Camp Stoneman. None of those families got a fair shake and when the land was disposed of a lot of it went to a Mafia family that NO lawyers would bring cases against much less prosecutors or judges. They made Millions from land development. They even built one of the largest casinos in Reno.

Oh, I forgot. I got the new tractor tires yesterday and woke up to 2 inches of snow this morning. I didn't get them on today. Maybe tomorrow but that's not looking real good. It's that time of year!  :)
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on April 29, 2025, 07:25:17 AM
Ahh, really young. Too bad your family got screwed out of their land. Around here after the war, a lot of the closed air bases were turned back to the previous owners if they weren't turned into a reserve or city air strip.
If you happen to remember the book, i'll pass it on to my aunt. She is good at hunting down those types of things. Two of my aunts were going to attend a Navy reunion/memmorial for the ship a couple years ago but didn't make it due to doctors appointments that came up.

Glad your tires came in. My buddy Cheech called, he was going from filming a game around Sanfrancico and headed to Millwakie on I-80. Said snowing like crazy over Donner Pass and didn't run out of it till east of Reno.
I was wrong on my buddy Tom's tractor brand, it was Massy Fergeson turf tractor. The Case is his bucket/backhoe tractor. The MF turf looks like picture below, real squaty/wide in the rear.

Dang, i aggravated the crap out of my carpel tunnels in my wrists the other day with my lopping shears. Sharpened then and oiled up the pivots so it would be easier on me, then an hour and half of lopping low branches that i have to duck under while mowing. By that night they hurt like hell, was up most the night in pain. Spent the last two days with frozen pea bags on them, tried heat pad... that made it worse. I couldn't even hold my phone till last night😡
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 01, 2025, 02:37:44 PM
Got the tires on. Heavier than I can handle easily. One fell over when I was unloading it and I had to figure out how to lift it. The other fell when I was trying to line it up but I knew how to lift it by then. We had some heavy rain Tuesday night so I did some road work yesterday. Today I'll switch the Gannon Box for the tiller and knock down weeds in 3 small "fields" around the house. Then it is weed whacking & spraying to get back in control.  There is a limb I have trim as well. Hope not to damage the tiller too much on the rocks. It has one broken tine already. Can't see a maker name on it so I don't know how to look for new ones. The tractor likes its new shoes!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 01, 2025, 08:35:25 PM
Glad you got your new tires on with out wounding yourself. I hit a 2" plus rock mowing, bent blade and knocked retaining bolt lose, hell of a vibration😁  I suited up with my protective forearm sleeves and wrist braces before pulling deck. Still managed some big bruises😡 

Brother came back from weed wacking before lunch yesterday, killed 2 more rattlers up by the house. One small 18" and a bigger 56-8" long and 15 rattles , he said he was extremely aggressive. Cut heads off and buried them, put big ome in a box to skin and make hat band.  Went out to shop 9hrs later, it was still moving. This morn he checked at 20hrs and still moving. He put it in a ziplock and this afternoon quit moving and he skinned it out.

Tried down loading 12 sec video of snake still movomg in box at 20hrs, but it won't let me🙄

Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 03, 2025, 12:02:00 AM
That is a good one. The ones here are mostly around 3' and polite compared to most other rattlers. Haven't seen any yet thus year but any time now. The tiller is doing a very nice job. Making me think planting a pasture and a corn patch. It has pretty good rock tolerance. I am slowly illuminating rocks but will never get them all.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 13, 2025, 11:54:46 PM
Got the first rattler of the season on Saturday morning just inside the barn near the chicken house door. I was ready for it with the Taurus Judge. I heard it crawling away Friday night but it was near dark and I couldn't see it. It was not quite 3' with 9 rattles & a button. So it begins!  ;D Another reason to clear the weeds.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: Essex_29 on May 16, 2025, 03:53:28 AM
I'm so happy that we don't have rattle snakes here. Worst we have are vipers, but think I've seen two or three of them in all my life.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 16, 2025, 07:02:17 AM
Sixball, the season is on😏 The Prairie rattlers around here are generally 3', but the Diamond rattlers get up -5' to 6'. Brother sent me a pic from his place. Had another three that got up to the house. He doesn't like killing them, but can't have them around the house with the dogs and grandkids there. Too bad, these look like they had been eating good.

Tom, it sucks to have to be aware of them when you go to reach under or around something near the ground. Haven't seen any close in town since 4yrs ago when the nieghbor lady across the alley had one in her shed. By the time me and my next door nieghbor got there it dissapeared. Was very cautious for several weeks after.

Finally got my edger up and running. Replaced the recoil starter  last year with a NOS complete assy Tom picked up at an auction. Then the starter clutch kept locking up, shearing the crank key🙄  Then i had weak spark, intalled new coil, then clutch locked again, shearung key😡 Ordered new clutch and got it and new key, finally starts/runs smooth again.

Been working on freebee  mower Tom give me for deck for mine couple years back. Replaced fuel tank bung and fitting, all new gasline. It fired up, so i changed the oil and fixed a few other things. In the middle of clean up now. Next progect is my old garden cart to hook up behind it.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 17, 2025, 02:59:24 PM
I wonder how those snakes found his house without heads?  ::)

I've said it before but the Great Basin rattlers ar very polite & timid compared to the prairie rattlers and Western Diamondbacks I grew up with in Texas. They are very good mousers but snake bite treatments for the dogs is very expensive. My older dog should be immune by now. The vetoer quit giving the pre bite shots because they didn't work. The avoidance classe that we used changed their focus to mostly aiming the program to people walking their dogs. That doesn't help me. My dogs both have a different bark they use when they find a rattler. It is even different than their Gopher snake barks. If the dogs find them I shoot them like the ones I find right around the buildings. Since neither dog likes gun noise I don't think I'm encouraging them to look for snakes.

The weather has been crazy lots of wind and a little snow. It should warm up next week and I can get back to weed killing and garden stuff. My buddy is after me to do some machine work on the Sharps rifles we are building. I need to build a couple of fixtures to hold parts for milling. He has more energy than I do.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 21, 2025, 08:13:58 AM
Lol, everbody has more energy than i do🤣
Got the little dump cart unloaded of Vette parts and dug out of the ground, it was up to the axle. Tires were bad 15yrs ago and cost way to much at the time. It's been kicking my butt. Give it a quick spray down with muratic acid, amazing how fast it knocks down the surface rust. Those little tires are a pain to dismount these days. Got the wheels repainted first so when the new tires get here friday, they will be ready.
As an old relic from 1987 for my "Ditchweed Country Club" golf course, use to haul sand back when i had sand greens before i got burmuda grass. The "Beer Caddy" is very faint now, might have to paint that back on😁 Trailer fought me getting the under belly out, it has panhead flatblade 5/16" bolts with nuts under. Had to spot weld 4 that kept spinning, of course 2 broke off then but its apart now
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 24, 2025, 01:10:29 PM
Cool little trailer, good to see it coming back to usefulness. Craftsman brad had some great products. The Sears electric tractor from the '60s-'70s ? was far ahead of it's time.
 I have an old home made utility trailer I bought many years ago because it had a Dodge/Plymouth tube front axle I thought I might usr for a hot rod. That hasn't happened yet but I've hauled tons of things around the place with it. Thinking of pressing it into service again to haul rocks for some retains walls. 
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: TFoch on May 24, 2025, 04:50:39 PM
Nice work on the trailer Sammons!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 25, 2025, 07:29:41 AM
Sixball, those mopar "wavy" tube front axles were cool. We had several old hotrods with them.

Tom i got the trailer box repainted, (rattle can 🙄)  and  waiting for it to cure enough to re-letter and stripe.

I made 3 attempts to get the new tires mounted, no way i could do it. Those new 4ply are stiff, and was kicking back at me. Later this weekend my buddy Tom will come over and get'em on for me.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 25, 2025, 07:31:31 AM
Sixball, those mopar "wavy" tube front axles were cool. We had several old hotrods with them.

Tom i got the trailer box repainted, (rattle can 🙄)  and  waiting for it to cure enough to re-letter and stripe.

I made 3 attempts to get the new tires mounted, no way i could do it. Those new 4ply are stiff, and was kicking back at me. Later this weekend my buddy Tom will come over and get'em on for me.
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 25, 2025, 10:45:14 AM
Those cab be tough especially if you have to chase them around on the floor. I love my cheap Harbor Freight tire changer. The only tires around here that haven't been on it are the rear tractor tires.

Those wheels look new!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on May 26, 2025, 10:11:55 PM
Finally got dump trailer done, It's a 20 footer 😁  Rattle can paint sucks. Was a trying time with it cold, rainy and my hands not cooperating. Lets just call it rust treatment. Was going to hand paint beer caddy, that didn't happen. Tried on a peice of cardboard, kept dropping brush. Tom said he had a small chunk of white vinyl and would hand cut for me. Told him 1/2 to 3/4" tall. Lol he couldn't see good enough for that, cut them out at 1"🤣 Oh well, just gonna get scratched up anyway.  All my yard equipment is repaired now👍
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: TFoch on May 27, 2025, 06:45:46 AM
Looks great for a 20 footer!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sixball on May 27, 2025, 02:11:12 PM
Looks great from here! A useable piece of equipment, good job!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: Essex_29 on May 28, 2025, 03:52:25 PM
Yes, that looks really good!
Title: Re: That time of year
Post by: sammons on June 01, 2025, 10:54:31 PM
Lol "Houston...  we have a problem". The 4" of rain we had this week done her in. l started digging the tunnel in 1983 collapsed about 7 feet long  out of the 15' running length. I noticed a couple years ago that the water coming of the nieghbors round top had started to run under my deckagon grainery, last year i could see under it was going down the 15' deep main shaft. Put it on my mental things to do list. I relaced all the timbers in '98, the hard clay down there was still perfect. Haven't looked down there since 2007?

Saturday morning i had a hole about 3' outside the grainery. I called Tom and he happened to have about 7 yrds of dirt on his '58 Viking so he dumped that out lastnight. Came over about noon with his Case "Construction King" backhoe/loader. Not near enough dirt to do the job. I started throwing tire/wheel combos down the main shaft while he made a quick sand damn in the creek bed and started moving sand up. Put 8+ yards in, pushed down worked around and got all except the last 3' out of 15'. It was hard as a rock on the northend where the water hadn't got. Pushed a bit of sand into it, tamped everything down with the backhoe then the dirt and packed it.  15 yards of fill, problem solved
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