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#102
posted to rec.boats
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Gotta Go!
On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:33:58 -0400, John H. Â* - show quoted text - "I like climbing.Â* I climbed a little over 3 stories of scaffolding today to get an HVACÂ* guy to do his job. The first floor is actually about 17feet, theÂ* rappel the Deuce did on his retracto leash. They were supposed to putÂ* the vent covers on the stubs out before the stucco guys got there. TheÂ* lead guy was whining that it was too high, too hard, no fall gear,Â* yada yada.Â* I just started climbing up there and when I passed the second floorÂ* his helper decided if an old geezer like me could get up there, heÂ* could. We met at the top and the lead guy handed us the vents out theÂ* window after the minute or to it took him to get up the steps.Â* The view was really worth the climb.Â* After that I just went back in through the 3d floor window and reallyÂ* made them look foolish. It did not occur to them that you really didÂ* not have to climb at all." Unless that scaffolding was rock solid (no movement), I wouldn't be comfortable on it. Maybe one of those basket on the end of a boom Genie rigs would be better. |
#103
posted to rec.boats
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Gotta Go!
On Tue, 10 Jul 2018 04:05:48 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:33:58 -0400, John H. * - show quoted text - "I like climbing.* I climbed a little over 3 stories of scaffolding today to get an HVAC* guy to do his job. The first floor is actually about 17feet, the* rappel the Deuce did on his retracto leash. They were supposed to put* the vent covers on the stubs out before the stucco guys got there. The* lead guy was whining that it was too high, too hard, no fall gear,* yada yada.* I just started climbing up there and when I passed the second floor* his helper decided if an old geezer like me could get up there, he* could. We met at the top and the lead guy handed us the vents out the* window after the minute or to it took him to get up the steps.* The view was really worth the climb.* After that I just went back in through the 3d floor window and really* made them look foolish. It did not occur to them that you really did* not have to climb at all." Unless that scaffolding was rock solid (no movement), I wouldn't be comfortable on it. Maybe one of those basket on the end of a boom Genie rigs would be better. Greg builds rope bridges. 'Rock solid' is not a necessity. |
#104
posted to rec.boats
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Gotta Go!
On Tue, 10 Jul 2018 06:13:04 -0400, John H.
wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 22:50:38 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:31:35 -0400, John H. wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 16:59:54 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 16:04:01 -0400, John H. wrote: On Mon, 9 Jul 2018 12:34:48 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: On Monday, July 9, 2018 at 12:05:56 PM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 11:32:08 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 06:23:28 -0400, John H. wrote: On Sun, 08 Jul 2018 16:16:24 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 08 Jul 2018 13:35:48 -0400, John H. wrote: And, most importantly, didn't break anything on the RV. But...I think a wheel bearing seal is leaking so will get the bearings repacked (or replaced) and resealed tomorrow. === Heh, why should land cruising be different than boat cruising? The definition of boat cruising is fixing things in exotic places. And of course "BOAT" stands for Break Out Another Thousand. RV's aren't quite as bad. But they do require a fair amount of maintenance. A new member of our camping group had just bought his 5th wheel trailer and brought it to a campout for the first time. He'd bought a rig that had been sitting on the dealer's lot for a few years. His refrigerator wasn't working. I asked if he had the manual and he had to go look. When he came out he said he wasn't 'mechanically oriented'. I told him he'd better get mechanically oriented, or rich, or an automobile and stay in motels. === That goes double for boats. We just had to pay a mechanic to fix a minor but annoying oil leak on the port engine. It required special tools, parts and skills (two new high pressure hoses) or I would have tackled it myself. After waiting in the job queue for several weeks we finally got it fixed. Total tab? About a boat buck. Boat costs are ridiculous. Since I've owned the truck, two 'modules' have gone bad - the transmission module and the glow plug module. Parts and labor in both cases was almost a boat buck. Unreal. I 'spect if Tim lived close enough, he could have fixed 'em! My 1989 Chevy 1500 yard truck recently lost a transmission at 165k miles. Local shops were quoting around $2800 to install a rebuilt 700R4 tranny. I did it on the concrete pad in front of my shop up on 6 ton jackstands with a 3.5 ton floor jack. Half a day to pull it, most of a day to put the rebuilt one back in. A couple of days and a few ibuprofen to recover. Around $900 all in. Next time I'll probably pay the man. When younger, I had a '67 MGBGT. Clutch throwout bearing was out when I bought it. Had to remove engine and transmission to fix it. Don't think I'd do it all now. I had to put the main shaft bearing in the transmission on my jeep. That involves pulling the transmission and the transfer case. The main shaft bearing is the first thing they put into the empty casting when they make one so I know a lot about Borg Warner 3 speed transmissions. It really wasn't bad but I was 28. I wouldn't hesitate to tear down the transmission but I want someone else to pull it. To start with, I gave away the transmission jack I built to do it. I also had the rear axle apart several times. It took me a while to get the new gear carrier shimmed right. I had to pull the shift rod out of a 74 Mustang II transmission but you can do that from the top, sitting in the driver's seat. ;-) In 1974 I bought a new Volvo. We went to the drive in theatre down off Indian Head Highway that evening. When the movie was over, I pulled the shift (floor mounted stick) over and pushed the stick up into reverse. The stick came right out of the tranny in my hand. By jamming the stick back down in the transmission and fiddling around, I was finally able to get the car into third gear. Drove back to the dealer in Alexandria and parked the car in front of the service department bay doors with the stick on the dash. Next morning I got a frantic call to come move my car. Told them to send a taxi. They did. The relationship went downhill after that. That Volvo was a piece of ****. Anyway, your mention of the Mustang prompted that story. This was the same kind of thing. My ex was at some kind of business thing downtown and the shifter stopped working. I threw some tools in the car and went down there. I was able to pull the console and get the top off the transmission right there in the parking garage. It was obvious the shifter just bolted to the end of the shift shaft that goes through the synchronizers and selects the gears. I pushed the car over to the opposite parking place so I could drive straight out. clamped my vice grips on the shaft and managed to find 2d and 4th. I drove it home that way. It turned out there was a threaded stud on the shaft (that was unobtainium locally) and it sheared off. I took it to a machine shop guy who chucked it up on a lathe, threaded a hole where the stud was and I put a grade 8 bolt in there $20. ... Better than new ;-) Being less than 24 hours old, from my point of view, I figured I'd let the shop work on it This car was out of warranty and since they did not have the part locally it would have been in the shop for weeks, even if they did. |
#105
posted to rec.boats
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Gotta Go!
On Tue, 10 Jul 2018 04:05:48 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:33:58 -0400, John H. Â* - show quoted text - "I like climbing.Â* I climbed a little over 3 stories of scaffolding today to get an HVACÂ* guy to do his job. The first floor is actually about 17feet, theÂ* rappel the Deuce did on his retracto leash. They were supposed to putÂ* the vent covers on the stubs out before the stucco guys got there. TheÂ* lead guy was whining that it was too high, too hard, no fall gear,Â* yada yada.Â* I just started climbing up there and when I passed the second floorÂ* his helper decided if an old geezer like me could get up there, heÂ* could. We met at the top and the lead guy handed us the vents out theÂ* window after the minute or to it took him to get up the steps.Â* The view was really worth the climb.Â* After that I just went back in through the 3d floor window and reallyÂ* made them look foolish. It did not occur to them that you really didÂ* not have to climb at all." Unless that scaffolding was rock solid (no movement), I wouldn't be comfortable on it. Maybe one of those basket on the end of a boom Genie rigs would be better. They are not going to stucco a building from a bucket. I am not sure I would trust a genie lift 35 feet in the air, rolling in sand as much as the scaffold anyway. |
#106
posted to rec.boats
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Gotta Go!
On Tue, 10 Jul 2018 06:14:29 -0400, John H.
wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 23:04:32 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:33:58 -0400, John H. wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 20:02:56 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 16:53:46 -0400, John H. wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 16:52:27 -0400, wrote: On Mon, 9 Jul 2018 12:34:48 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: On Monday, July 9, 2018 at 12:05:56 PM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 11:32:08 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 09 Jul 2018 06:23:28 -0400, John H. wrote: On Sun, 08 Jul 2018 16:16:24 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 08 Jul 2018 13:35:48 -0400, John H. wrote: And, most importantly, didn't break anything on the RV. But...I think a wheel bearing seal is leaking so will get the bearings repacked (or replaced) and resealed tomorrow. === Heh, why should land cruising be different than boat cruising? The definition of boat cruising is fixing things in exotic places. And of course "BOAT" stands for Break Out Another Thousand. RV's aren't quite as bad. But they do require a fair amount of maintenance. A new member of our camping group had just bought his 5th wheel trailer and brought it to a campout for the first time. He'd bought a rig that had been sitting on the dealer's lot for a few years. His refrigerator wasn't working. I asked if he had the manual and he had to go look. When he came out he said he wasn't 'mechanically oriented'. I told him he'd better get mechanically oriented, or rich, or an automobile and stay in motels. === That goes double for boats. We just had to pay a mechanic to fix a minor but annoying oil leak on the port engine. It required special tools, parts and skills (two new high pressure hoses) or I would have tackled it myself. After waiting in the job queue for several weeks we finally got it fixed. Total tab? About a boat buck. Boat costs are ridiculous. Since I've owned the truck, two 'modules' have gone bad - the transmission module and the glow plug module. Parts and labor in both cases was almost a boat buck. Unreal. I 'spect if Tim lived close enough, he could have fixed 'em! My 1989 Chevy 1500 yard truck recently lost a transmission at 165k miles. Local shops were quoting around $2800 to install a rebuilt 700R4 tranny. I did it on the concrete pad in front of my shop up on 6 ton jackstands with a 3.5 ton floor jack. Half a day to pull it, most of a day to put the rebuilt one back in. A couple of days and a few ibuprofen to recover. Around $900 all in. Next time I'll probably pay the man. I decided if it is laying on my back under the car, I ain't doing it. Anything standing up or sitting on a stool is OK. That is why I prefer outboards these days. Everything is waist to chest high. Best to stay off ladders too! I don't have the ladder phobia. I am running EMT (the conduit, not the ambulance guys but you can make the joke anyway) across the top of the screen cage as we speak. Lots of ladder work. Ladder phobia is an offshoot of a shattered calcaneus. I like climbing. I climbed a little over 3 stories of scaffolding today to get an HVAC guy to do his job. The first floor is actually about 17feet, the rappel the Deuce did on his retracto leash. They were supposed to put the vent covers on the stubs out before the stucco guys got there. The lead guy was whining that it was too high, too hard, no fall gear, yada yada. I just started climbing up there and when I passed the second floor his helper decided if an old geezer like me could get up there, he could. We met at the top and the lead guy handed us the vents out the window after the minute or to it took him to get up the steps. The view was really worth the climb. After that I just went back in through the 3d floor window and really made them look foolish. It did not occur to them that you really did not have to climb at all. Climbing is the fun part. Landing from a dropped ladder is the hard part. I agree you want the ladder to be stable. If I am going to be up there a while doing something I might tie it off if it is easy. |
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