- Location
- The Village of Kay
Looks good in there. Here is your old winch. If you zoom in you can not see it.Finally mounted my new to me winch. Should have taken some pics of spooling the rope on, but didnt.
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Awesome! Glad its working out for you.Looks good in there. Here is your old winch. If you zoom in you can not see it. View attachment 120160
I like this picture, my friend in her samurai in the background always seems to photobomb everybody.Looks good in there. Here is your old winch. If you zoom in you can not see it. View attachment 120160
It won't be on the entire bed, just a small strip like 4"x8" or so, to help distribute the load a bit. The engine is a 1.9 TDI as well, so I have plenty of power.The weight of 1/4" plate on that bed will require a second engine for that poor Sami!
Is there a reason you need to keep the factory B-pillar bar? I kept it on my Sami build and regretted it later - too many compromises with strength and aesthetics IMO. Also, I think it actually made the project more difficult overall by keeping the stock tube there. If I was doing it again, I'd build the cage 100% from scratch.
She killed it in the sami. The courses where tight and narrow so she dominated in that thing. Wasn't even a close 2nd place.I like this picture, my friend in her samurai in the background always seems to photobomb everybody.
Started installing my cage this past weekend. I have everything welded up except the main bar. I'm planning on sandwiching my flatbed frame with some 1/4" plate, and bolting it down, so it'll all still be removable. Then I plan on running more DOM down to the frame, and then cross bracing the main bar to prevent it from racking if I do flop.
It won't be on the entire bed, just a small strip like 4"x8" or so, to help distribute the load a bit. The engine is a 1.9 TDI as well, so I have plenty of power.
I used the stock roll bar, just widened it, if that's the "b pillar" you're referring to? I just used it because that's all I had. I will be putting a cross brace up on it as well to prevent any racking possibility. This cage kit is from LowRange, and everything just snaps together more or less. I don't have a bender to build anything really. Everything else is DOM. I'm hoping it'll hold up okay, but I guess we'll see haha.
Thanks! It's kinda on a budget. I managed to find the front half of the Lowrange kit for $100 brand new.I think it is rad you’re working with what you have. Turning out great. Thanks for sharing the progress.
All that new tube work and your going to leave the factory b to b hoop. B to B hoops give me cancer. I like a the smooth transition of the A to C pillar. I dig your metal car port turned garage, brings back memory's.
I would if you was closer and new what you want.Thanks! It's kinda on a budget. I managed to find the front half of the Lowrange kit for $100 brand new.
I understand it's not perfect, but it's better than nothing. I don't have access to a bender, or the money to do all brand new DOM either though. I don't plan on rolling it necessarily, but if I do, hopefully I don't die. Unless you want to bend me up a new bar?
With the help of some buddies, installed a ducted whole house fan.
After seeing how well ricsrx's worked to cool his house, I had to have one.
It will easily pull 5 degrees out of the house running on low for 30 minutes.
In short. Yes. Absolutely worth doing!Ooh I’ve been curious about these! So do you think it’s definitely worth doing? That attic is huge! Do you think it would work as well in smaller scissor trusses?
How much did the whole thing cost if you don’t mind me asking.In short. Yes. Absolutely worth doing!
Our place is a 3300 sqft rambler. There is conflicting information if you should include finished basement space in your CFM needs. I split the difference. The fan is oversized for the main floor and undersized for the entire square footage.
I purchased a Quiet Cool CL-5400 and the e controls USA RT2 wireless controller. The controller was way harder to find and research online than it should be but it enabled me to not add in-wall wiring for a Hi/Low switch and timer. It also has a thermostat function.
The old school direct drive and belt drive fans are very affordable and move a ton of air but they require cutting the rafters or building a sub frame. The older fans are also difficult to insulate and usually use a swamp cooler style grill/damper. The main reason I didn't use a 36" old style is the noise aspect...they are effen loud.
The whole principle is that once the outdoor air is cooler than the indoor air, you open the windows to the room you want to cool/ventilate. It draws cooler air in through the house and exhausts it into the attic. The result is fresh, cool air dragging the heat out of the walls, furniture, and most importantly attic.
Once the house cools to the outside temp you close it up and give your A/C a fresh start on cooling the house once the heat load sets in during the afternoon.
The other morning at 5am the house was 67* but outside was 55*. We opened 4 windows several inches and had the house down to 57* by 7am!
In reality all these are is insulated exhaust fans that purge your whole house and attic. They are also excellent to use while cooking or showering.
I've put a ton of time into reading about these...I'm happy to answer anything.