p--thank you.
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Originally posted by PStechPaul View PostGot the old bench seat out of my 1989 Toyota 4WD Pickup. The driver's side had completely rusted loose. I was able to remove one of the bolts on the passenger side, but the other responded to a bit of yanking and crowbar:
Just sitting there for now. These were the seats from my 1999 Saturn that I had to junk:
Too cold and dark to do any more. Maybe next week I will get the mess cleaned up and see what metalwork needs to be done.
Didn't you do this last year or the year before?Andy
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There is no need to quote all the images...
It was three years ago that I discovered the seat belt anchor had rusted away:
The seat was rusty, but was still mostly intact:
Fixed it like this:
Now that the seat is out I might be able to assess the overall condition of the cab and mount the "new" seats properly. The old seat had dropped down noticeably, and could be considered a "low rider"... ; )http://pauleschoen.com/pix/PM08_P76_P54.png
Paul , P S Technology, Inc. and MrTibbs
USA Maryland 21030
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Paul, It appears that your PU is a death trap and should not be allowed on public roads. I know I would hate to think of meeting it on any road I drive on, fearing your rust bucket's steering or breaks would fail or worse. Scrap IT.Last edited by lugnut; 12-09-2018, 04:57 PM._____________________________________________
I would rather have tools that I never use, than not have a tool I need.
Oregon Coast
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It does seem as if the time has come with those vehicles to move on. To fix something, there kinda has to be a "something" there to BE fixed.
Or you need to get a less rusted junker and weld sound pieces from it to replace where the pieces of that one are not present. Or swap parts of the two around to get one vehicle that is not a problem.Last edited by J Tiers; 12-09-2018, 03:52 PM.CNC machines only go through the motions.
Ideas expressed may be mine, or from anyone else in the universe.
Not responsible for clerical errors. Or those made by lay people either.
Number formats and units may be chosen at random depending on what day it is.
I reserve the right to use a number system with any integer base without prior notice.
Generalizations are understood to be "often" true, but not true in every case.
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Originally posted by Sparky_NY View PostToyota, Nissan, Ford Ranger pickups, ALL well known for the frames rusting out in northern climates. With the rust problems detailed about the seats, I bet the frame is paper thin. Same basic problem the saturn had.Last edited by vpt; 12-09-2018, 04:38 PM.Andy
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Originally posted by vpt View PostBox frames are known for rusting out, not as much as open C-channel framed trucks.
Seems like enclosed poorly drained areas rust faster, which would be box frames.CNC machines only go through the motions.
Ideas expressed may be mine, or from anyone else in the universe.
Not responsible for clerical errors. Or those made by lay people either.
Number formats and units may be chosen at random depending on what day it is.
I reserve the right to use a number system with any integer base without prior notice.
Generalizations are understood to be "often" true, but not true in every case.
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Originally posted by J Tiers View PostAre you saying C-channels rust FASTER or slower?
Seems like enclosed poorly drained areas rust faster, which would be box frames.
I have some dyslexia and bad ADD, which means I do things fast and wrong.Andy
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Gotcha....
I just can't type worth a hoot, so I scerw up what I write also.CNC machines only go through the motions.
Ideas expressed may be mine, or from anyone else in the universe.
Not responsible for clerical errors. Or those made by lay people either.
Number formats and units may be chosen at random depending on what day it is.
I reserve the right to use a number system with any integer base without prior notice.
Generalizations are understood to be "often" true, but not true in every case.
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Have pretty rough ear infection and cold, so spent the weekend finding random things to engrave on to see how it came out. Still no molyD in the post, original seller couldn't post to me as I'm not in the UK and they "had no export license"!?! so some coming from Germany mail order instead.
The two dots in the centre are in the original CAD design (the centre is the origin for all the geometric construction forming the parts).
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Originally posted by MrFluffy View PostHave pretty rough ear infection and cold, so spent the weekend finding random things to engrave on to see how it came out. Still no molyD in the post, original seller couldn't post to me as I'm not in the UK and they "had no export license"!?! so some coming from Germany mail order instead.
The two dots in the centre are in the original CAD design (the centre is the origin for all the geometric construction forming the parts).
Helder Ferreira
Setubal, Portugal
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its set up as 3 colors to do the 3 functions, so red = cut, blue = vector engrave and black = raster engrave. In the control panel on k40 whisperer, you press the button to kick each process off separately, so for instance if you want to cut extra thick material, you can kick off multiple cut cycles without running multiple engrave ones, and each process you can control the speed in mm/s. I draw a part in cad, export it as svg and use inkscape to colorise the different functions by selecting the imported layer for each process and set the brush stroke color. Then I save the manipulated svg and load it into k40 whisperer. The only gotcha is the version of inkscape has to be fairly recent, or it doesn't write the unit data into the image and k40 whisperer can't import it. The one included in my linux distro is too out of date, but the windows version on the inkscape site is current, and I just compiled my own from source on linux.
I haven't even bothered plugging the supplied usb dongle in with the crap software, this just worked out the box flawlessly for me.
Link to k40whisperer, its free/open source. I believe scorchworks gets on this forum from time to time too, I use some of his dmap to gcode functions on my cnc mill for engraving so its becoming a familiar to find useful tools on his website over time :-
I can cut corrugated cardboard now without setting fire to it, I just run the cut cycle at 30mm/s instead of 10 and do 3 passes. So I can use old cardboard boxes to test my cad design is how i want it before committing it to something more permanent. Be it plastic cut, 3d printed, milled out on my linuxcnc bridgeport or cut on the wire edm. I find myself cutting something, then not being 100% happy with it in cardboard and making a few tweaks, cut it again tweak etc until I'm happy because the material cost is almost zero.
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