General Tech What did you work on Today?

I love when you replace a part only to have the replacement part fail 5 miles into the test drive. When it failed, it was choking the motor so bad that I barely got it home…….I was rolling enough coal that I could have impressed any redneck. I finally got around to tearing it back apart and found the valve stuck open.
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I should have just deleted it the first time around, but decided against it for not having to go through the hassle of reprogramming the ECM. If the quality of parts is this bad I probably will just go ahead and do a delete.
 
I got some tool organizers for Christmas. My son and one of my daughters got quite a few tools of their own.

We have spent two days rearranging and organizing my five toolboxes into 3 and 2 halves for me. Each of the kids gets a top set of drawers in the smaller toolboxes now.

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Getting creative with replacing the arm rest for a 98 manual window XJ and the 3D printer.

Fender washers, jb weld, gorilla glue, and a lot of patience and I think I got a door handle that won’t pull off on a slight breeze.

Should at least last until one of these comes up online or salvage yard. IMG_8802.jpeg


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IMG_4602.jpegIMG_4601.jpegIMG_4603.jpegResized_20241022_160358_1729635884568.jpegIMG_4100.jpegIMG_4124.jpeg Back in September, I was approached by the local fire chief about collaborating on a wildlands fire prevention project, where we would install a gate on one of the fence lines on our family ranch to provide landowners who recreate in a neighboring canyon an escape route, if a wildfire were to break out and block the shared access route into their property.

As part of this project, the wildlands fire prevention crew will also clear brush along the access road escape route through our ranch (approx 1.8 miles of road), implementing an 80/20 cut and chip method where they will clear brush 25 feet from the road center on either side, removing 80% of the brush and leaving 20% to create a 50ft wide fire break.

We agreed to build the gate to their requirements, 15ft 8” opening to allow wildlands fire equipment to pass through and a security lock system. The FD will have a key to our gate lock stored in a Knox box on the gate lock box to allow them to access the gate in the event of a wildfire.

We completed the gate build in Oct and will be rebuilding the fence line in the spring. The wildlands crew will start the fire break project as soon as spring 2025 road conditions allow.IMG_4604.jpeg
 
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I helped my Dad install this mailbox post on the ranch when I was about 14yrs old and since that was about 45yrs ago, it was due for a proper refresh.

After the appropriate amount of descaling using a Cheekpoker 5000, I slathered the post with rusty metal primer and let it cure for a week before applying 2 coats of oil-base satin white Rustoleum.

Once the white had cured, I masked the horse and treated the ring with Hammerite Black.

The post cap had long since disappeared and finding the post to be an odd size, I fabbed up a new cap using some scrap metal, forming a ring and then welding on a disc. It still needed something to properly fit in with the ranch theme, so I sourced a pair of lucky star hat hooks that I melted together to top it off. I also installed a new mailbox and fresh address lettering to complete the project.

The horse was painted white in homage to the Utah Grand Champion Arabian mare that my Grandpa Amos Bingham owned and we inherited, along with the ranch, when he passed in 1974. We bred this mare and raise several of her foals during my teen years. Showing horses was something that my Dad really enjoyed and he taught us kids how to care for them, train them and prep them for shows. We also owned Quarter horses that we used to compete in chariot and flat track racing, plus some for working cattle on the ranch.

Fitting post for today, as it’s my Dad’s birthday and he would have been 84 today.

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