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That time of year
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Topic: That time of year (Read 68876 times)
sixball
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2832
Location: Northern Nevada
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #30 on:
May 27, 2025, 02:11:12 PM »
Looks great from here! A useable piece of equipment, good job!
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The probability of life originating from accident is comparable to the probability of the unabridged dictionary resulting from an explosion in a printing shop. Edwin Conklin
Essex_29
Master
Posts: 420
Age: 60
Location: Finland
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #31 on:
May 28, 2025, 03:52:25 PM »
Yes, that looks really good!
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sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #32 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
«
Last Edit: June 01, 2025, 11:09:27 PM by sammons
»
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sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #33 on:
December 30, 2025, 11:30:47 AM »
With the chassis swap on my old mower complete, i started cleaning things up. Got a quick buff on paint, still have to wax it up. Decided that all the black plastic stuff needed dyed. No matter what i put on it, (Back to Black, vinyl dressing, silicon, etc), nothing lasted more than a week and back to fade. So i pulled them off, scrubbed it all and dyed it with Duplicolor's vinyl/fabric dye. Much better, hope it lasts a while. With a white paint pen i actually got the numbers painted back on. Don't know if it'll last but sure looked better. Got my new Marylin Monroe steering wheel knob on the fresh refinished steering wheel😁
«
Last Edit: December 30, 2025, 11:35:56 AM by sammons
»
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TFoch
Bowtie Moderator
Master Deluxe
Posts: 3031
Age: 68
Location: New Hampshire
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #34 on:
December 30, 2025, 07:13:30 PM »
Looking great!
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Spending time with my grandkids gets in the way of finishing my car but I don't regret it!
sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #35 on:
December 31, 2025, 09:28:05 AM »
Gonna be nice this spring to mow with everything on the chassis tight again. The steering was severely worn, hard to turn and wondering and to mention front spindles bent. The deck lift arm was shot also. Donor was a fairly low hour one. Now i'll have to finish putting donor back together, it will just pull my trailer.
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sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #36 on:
January 15, 2026, 06:50:47 AM »
Three stepps forward..... 😡 I had the mower all back together. I thought i'd better get some gas and fire it up since the weather was warm enough to open the windows to check it out. Turn key to on heard the usual kick of carb solenoid, then to start.... nothing. Checked battery again for full charge, 12.7v. First thought was ign switch may not have gotten plugged in all the way. When we did the chassis swap, i swapped in my V-Twin, my wiring harness. I did not swap out my ign switch, or any of the safety switches. Started with ign switch, even cleaned it first and all the connections with a brush and electronic clearner. Nope nothing. Now i have to check all the safetys. I'll have to pull the deck back out to get to the brake/clutch safety, pull the battery, tray and support to get to the blade safety etc. Looked on youtube for ideas, several guys are checking all by cutting the mag/coil wire to ign to check for continuity between all switches with the "beep" function. Had to pull top cover to verify the coil wires, still not testing out.
Seems like the doner mower was running, but the farmer had cut and bypassed all the safetys. I'm guessing he had a bad one now. Sure wish i would have thought of that first while doing the swap🙄
Had to bail on it to go to my new Dr. Had to find another as my buddy retired. Guess he was 6mo older than me. So i had to re up everything and transfer all records etc last month. Get all nrw blood tests for comparison to last years. Went in to get my test results etc, new Doc says all ok and that they verified Rheumatoid Arthritis, and laughed, i said really😁 Then i asked what my rheumatoid factor number was now... 18yrs ago it was 458, normal people are +/- 15. My new number 650. I told her i kinda feel like its that high😅 Anyway all good just a click or two up on A1c from me trying to gain weight over the last 14 months. She said i could stop now and lay off the fatty stuff . I did gain 26lbs.
Now... back to the mower today, maybe!
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sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #37 on:
July 15, 2026, 09:29:15 PM »
I was out this morn trying to beat the heat with my old walk behind edger. Did part of my neighbors drive way and busted another plastic wheel center. Just replaced on 2yrs ago. Noticed fronts are cracked in the centers. Talking to neighbor after dinner tonight, told him i was gonna do more but...
He asked what size because when he sold his parts store he had a bunch of NOS old ones in back that he had moved to the round top behind me. We walked over and found the pile. Picked up two 7" fronts and two 8" rears. He said they were stocked in the 50s or 60s. These are steel wheels with rear bearings and solid rubber tires. He says hell, just take them. I tried to pay him, nope.
They will darn sure out live the machine. Tomorrow project, they have 1/2" center hole, mine are probably 7/16" or possibly 3/8". Thats ok, i have brass shim stock if i need it😁
Looks like he'll get more edged. He has one, but it doesn"t work that well. He usually just weed wacks the side walks.
My edger has enough power to whisle thru. I cut down my old mower blades to use on mine. They will do 1 or 2 seasons instead of 4 edgings with the factory cheesy blades.
«
Last Edit: July 15, 2026, 09:38:58 PM by sammons
»
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sixball
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2832
Location: Northern Nevada
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #38 on:
July 15, 2026, 11:02:13 PM »
Yep! That time of year. My friend and I have been clearing years of willows from around my springs and water tanks. I thought I was filling my pond but a leak developed when it was a foot from the overflow. I'm dumping 1700-2000 gallons a day into it and I'm loosing ground. Don't know what to do about the thousands of tadpoles that showed up while I was trying to fill it. The water must have found some roots or a way back to the aquifer. I can't see it anywhere. I need goats, lots of goats!
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The probability of life originating from accident is comparable to the probability of the unabridged dictionary resulting from an explosion in a printing shop. Edwin Conklin
sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #39 on:
Today
at 09:09:23 AM »
Sorry your having pond problems. When my brother was having his pond cleared of cat tails they hit his water line that fed it from the windmill. Had a heck of a time gluing it back together as it was below later level.
My uncles place had two big buffalo wallows that always held water from rain/field runoff. He decided to dig a pond there. Dug and packed it with betonite. He tried to get a local rancher to bring cattle in to pack it good, but the guy said he couldn't as it would be putting too much nitrates in the ground and the liability becaude of his well water. It never held water.
«
Last Edit:
Today
at 09:16:22 AM by sammons
»
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sammons
Master Deluxe
Posts: 2168
Age: 65
Location: sw kansas
Re: That time of year
«
Reply #40 on:
Today
at 01:18:25 PM »
Got rear wheels replaced this morn and edger serviced. They went right on, they were 1/2" center hole. They used a shoulder bolt, looks like fronts are similar, but not sure how axle comes out yet. Decided to get my neighbors sidwalks and drive done while it was cooler. Also he couldn't object, they went to Dodge to get theirJeep windshield replaced😁 Breezed right thru it. Sure rolls easy with real bearings👍
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That time of year
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