Another piece of the puzzle nearing completion
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- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
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Another piece of the puzzle nearing completion
Most recently I have been fabricating the exhaust parts for DeNada.
With the Stainless steel pipe and shower head fabricated and the "Y" pipe complete its time to move on to the transom thru hull.
Take a look..........
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With the Stainless steel pipe and shower head fabricated and the "Y" pipe complete its time to move on to the transom thru hull.
Take a look..........
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- scot
- Senior Member
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- Joined: Oct 3rd, '06, 09:47
- Location: Hurricane Alley, Texas
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Very cool Harry, I'll have our CAD guys make some drawing for my exhaust system and send them over.
Just kidding, I just completed the designed of my exhaust, picking up the fittings next week. Did you use 10s or sch 40? Is the 90 inside the elbow LR or SR? It looks like SR.
Nice work. You add a new dimension to "DIY", I would call your stuff: "better than you can buy" The term home-made does not apply.
Just kidding, I just completed the designed of my exhaust, picking up the fittings next week. Did you use 10s or sch 40? Is the 90 inside the elbow LR or SR? It looks like SR.
Nice work. You add a new dimension to "DIY", I would call your stuff: "better than you can buy" The term home-made does not apply.
Scot
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
- Brewster Minton
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- Location: Hampton Bays NY
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- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
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- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
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Thanks for the compliments........
My "Toy Box" is really a "Machine Shop" by day and "Toy Box" by night..........so its not really my hobby/boat shop....its really my livelyhood
I am really passionate about manufacturing and my profession and tend to get carried away applying my abilities and resources to my projects.........I really enjoy experimenting.........trying new and different things. Sometimes my ideas work and sometimes they don't.
Sean......the end cap mold is a piece of 1018 steel machined on a CNC lathe to a 2.6565" radius....never thought about a mixing bowl....good idea
Scot.....funny thing.....I fitted all of the exhaust pipe in the boat. The engine is in the correct location and the 6" FG pipe was in place....all I had to do was get the 2 connected together. Now, my brother does some pipe fitting and he laughed at my methods and told me that I was not "Pipe Fitting"..........he said I was "Stove Piping". Any thing that touches saltwater is 316L sch 40 the rest is 316L Sch 10. The elbows are 3" Long Rad. I have one section that is a 3" Sch 40 long rad inside of a 4" Sch 10 Short Rad that makes a jacketed section (Water cooled)
How about it Mikey.....Brewster...........whatcha thing????? I didn't realize how much the shop needs cleaning until I started looking at the pics that I posted here.......Its kinda crowded.........thats why I am headed to IMTS....may see something that we cannot live without.
At any rate here are a few pics around the shop..........
Harry
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My "Toy Box" is really a "Machine Shop" by day and "Toy Box" by night..........so its not really my hobby/boat shop....its really my livelyhood
I am really passionate about manufacturing and my profession and tend to get carried away applying my abilities and resources to my projects.........I really enjoy experimenting.........trying new and different things. Sometimes my ideas work and sometimes they don't.
Sean......the end cap mold is a piece of 1018 steel machined on a CNC lathe to a 2.6565" radius....never thought about a mixing bowl....good idea
Scot.....funny thing.....I fitted all of the exhaust pipe in the boat. The engine is in the correct location and the 6" FG pipe was in place....all I had to do was get the 2 connected together. Now, my brother does some pipe fitting and he laughed at my methods and told me that I was not "Pipe Fitting"..........he said I was "Stove Piping". Any thing that touches saltwater is 316L sch 40 the rest is 316L Sch 10. The elbows are 3" Long Rad. I have one section that is a 3" Sch 40 long rad inside of a 4" Sch 10 Short Rad that makes a jacketed section (Water cooled)
How about it Mikey.....Brewster...........whatcha thing????? I didn't realize how much the shop needs cleaning until I started looking at the pics that I posted here.......Its kinda crowded.........thats why I am headed to IMTS....may see something that we cannot live without.
At any rate here are a few pics around the shop..........
Harry
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- In Memory Walter K
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- Skipper Dick
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- Location: Cape Coral, Florida
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Damn, Rawleigh is going to be more jealous than I. He is building a shop with lots of machining toys and when I need help he jumps into the fray. Harry, that is a sandbox for big kids, especially kids with a passion for building great boats. I don't understand half of what I'm looking at and I'm jealous as hell. Can you fix popcorn or open beer with any of those?
Mikey
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
Mikey
I will gladly open your beer.........buttttttttt...........I will get a short clip of the "CAN SQUOZER" that my son Chris and one of his friends built.......its pretty cool
I have been known to warm my lunch with an acetylene torch when the power was out........This little fat boy AIN'T gonna miss lunch.
Harry
I will gladly open your beer.........buttttttttt...........I will get a short clip of the "CAN SQUOZER" that my son Chris and one of his friends built.......its pretty cool
I have been known to warm my lunch with an acetylene torch when the power was out........This little fat boy AIN'T gonna miss lunch.
Harry
- Brewster Minton
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Harry,
Back in the '60's when race cars were my passion I shared a warehouse with several guys with the same disease. One of our crowd distributed Jiffy Pop, that stuff in the aluminum container ready to pop. We had a case of it and no conventional stove. But being young, enthusiastic, hungry and resourceful he soldiered on. The first attempt was an acetylene torch with a very cool flame. Shot right through the pan and we had flaming hot cheap oil with gobbets of corn popping in midair and caroming across the warehouse in fiery chase of us all. Another attempt was to take a small pan with a 1/4 cup of gasoline and holding the pan with about four vise grips snapped together and a pair of work gloves to hold it. Corn popped but tasted of fuel. About to give up we were standing in a group cogitating when we suddenly had the smell of burning wood and pop corn. In a corner, away from the pyromaniacs, my brother had gathered bits of wood and started a small fire in '57 Ford air cleaner and was quietly popping corn. Lunch! Cold beer and warm pop corn. Still one of my favorite meals.
Back in the '60's when race cars were my passion I shared a warehouse with several guys with the same disease. One of our crowd distributed Jiffy Pop, that stuff in the aluminum container ready to pop. We had a case of it and no conventional stove. But being young, enthusiastic, hungry and resourceful he soldiered on. The first attempt was an acetylene torch with a very cool flame. Shot right through the pan and we had flaming hot cheap oil with gobbets of corn popping in midair and caroming across the warehouse in fiery chase of us all. Another attempt was to take a small pan with a 1/4 cup of gasoline and holding the pan with about four vise grips snapped together and a pair of work gloves to hold it. Corn popped but tasted of fuel. About to give up we were standing in a group cogitating when we suddenly had the smell of burning wood and pop corn. In a corner, away from the pyromaniacs, my brother had gathered bits of wood and started a small fire in '57 Ford air cleaner and was quietly popping corn. Lunch! Cold beer and warm pop corn. Still one of my favorite meals.
Mikey
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
Mikey
My parents were, in my opinion, unreasonably strict on me when I was growing up.
Like your popcorn story I have a similar story that I often remember. On Saturday night I would hang out with my buds at the local municipal pier on Mobile Bay. A couple of times I went home to either get dry clothes or fishing tackle or what ever and for what ever reason my dad would not let me go back out for the remainder of the evening even though it was early....9:00 or so.
One night we were at the bay fishing, watching for a Jubilee, goofing around and I/we got really hungry....there were NO, I mean NO!!, stores open to get a snack. Fairhope rolled up the sidewalks at 5 in the afternoon back in the 60's.
I knew better than to go home for a snack so....I borrowed a cast net and managed to catch a (thats a quantity of one) Mullet. I built a fire on the beach (aganist the law) and using sticks I roasted my prize catch........my memory is that, that was the best damn Mullet that I have ever eaten.
I'm still gonna get you guys a video of Chris's "CAN SQUOZER" this weekend........these guys worked several weenends on the "CAN SQUOZER"
Harry
My parents were, in my opinion, unreasonably strict on me when I was growing up.
Like your popcorn story I have a similar story that I often remember. On Saturday night I would hang out with my buds at the local municipal pier on Mobile Bay. A couple of times I went home to either get dry clothes or fishing tackle or what ever and for what ever reason my dad would not let me go back out for the remainder of the evening even though it was early....9:00 or so.
One night we were at the bay fishing, watching for a Jubilee, goofing around and I/we got really hungry....there were NO, I mean NO!!, stores open to get a snack. Fairhope rolled up the sidewalks at 5 in the afternoon back in the 60's.
I knew better than to go home for a snack so....I borrowed a cast net and managed to catch a (thats a quantity of one) Mullet. I built a fire on the beach (aganist the law) and using sticks I roasted my prize catch........my memory is that, that was the best damn Mullet that I have ever eaten.
I'm still gonna get you guys a video of Chris's "CAN SQUOZER" this weekend........these guys worked several weenends on the "CAN SQUOZER"
Harry
Harry,
Beautiful shop. I will tell you, it looks to me like you have made really good use of the space you have. It may be full, but it is pretty clean in my eyes!
I will see if I can snap up a few of our places at some point and get them up here...
I will say, for those of us with machine shops and manufacturing businesses as our "play fields" it is a true luxury to have the equipment and people who are skilled to know how to use it around and with us.
I borrowed my dad's tractor and bush hog last week to knock down some tall grass at the entry to the shop I run. I backed into a tree, and broke his 3 point hitch in half. There were cracks there before, and I just finished his job...
I just backed it into our welding and fab section, and lickety split it was good as new in about 45 minutes! Then maintenance greased the whole tractor at all zerks, and tightened the lug nuts on the front tires that he hadn't quite tightened enough.
It is a true luxury. But fun... The guys we have here are completely amazing.
Beautiful shop. I will tell you, it looks to me like you have made really good use of the space you have. It may be full, but it is pretty clean in my eyes!
I will see if I can snap up a few of our places at some point and get them up here...
I will say, for those of us with machine shops and manufacturing businesses as our "play fields" it is a true luxury to have the equipment and people who are skilled to know how to use it around and with us.
I borrowed my dad's tractor and bush hog last week to knock down some tall grass at the entry to the shop I run. I backed into a tree, and broke his 3 point hitch in half. There were cracks there before, and I just finished his job...
I just backed it into our welding and fab section, and lickety split it was good as new in about 45 minutes! Then maintenance greased the whole tractor at all zerks, and tightened the lug nuts on the front tires that he hadn't quite tightened enough.
It is a true luxury. But fun... The guys we have here are completely amazing.
- Skipper Dick
- Senior Member
- Posts: 330
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 08:22
- Location: Cape Coral, Florida
- Contact:
Randall,
Looks like you have a lot of dremmel type bits. I recently bought a Dremmel Stylus kit. It has rotary tool and a driver. By far one of the neatest rotary tools I have ever had. Cordless and variable speed and has some grunt too. Wish I had all those bits that you have though. The driver tool is about the size of my hand and will put 3 inch screws into a deck. Great for tight spaces that regular drill will not fit into.
Looks like you have a lot of dremmel type bits. I recently bought a Dremmel Stylus kit. It has rotary tool and a driver. By far one of the neatest rotary tools I have ever had. Cordless and variable speed and has some grunt too. Wish I had all those bits that you have though. The driver tool is about the size of my hand and will put 3 inch screws into a deck. Great for tight spaces that regular drill will not fit into.
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
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Hey Randall
Your shop pics bring back a lot of good memories.......My grandfather had a garage with a wide selection of wood working equipment. I spent a good bit of time in his garage attempting to build bird houses, gun racks, chess/checker boards and what have you.
What was so neat was that I in a world of my own when I was in his garage. He never let me use power tools......I was to young.....but I thought it was really cool when I clamped a board in the vise to saw it.....the board stayed still and suddenly sawing was not a wrestling match. I remember using a hand powered drill, you know.....it worked like a hand egg beater.
Just looking at your shop pics I can almost smell the freshly sawn wood and the multitude of paint, stains and thinners.
Good memories
Thanks
Harry
Your shop pics bring back a lot of good memories.......My grandfather had a garage with a wide selection of wood working equipment. I spent a good bit of time in his garage attempting to build bird houses, gun racks, chess/checker boards and what have you.
What was so neat was that I in a world of my own when I was in his garage. He never let me use power tools......I was to young.....but I thought it was really cool when I clamped a board in the vise to saw it.....the board stayed still and suddenly sawing was not a wrestling match. I remember using a hand powered drill, you know.....it worked like a hand egg beater.
Just looking at your shop pics I can almost smell the freshly sawn wood and the multitude of paint, stains and thinners.
Good memories
Thanks
Harry
Randall, Harry
Love to see those chisels in the box. Reminds me of my Grandfather's. He had a shop twenty by forty. Two drill presses, three table saws, shapers, routers, a twelve-inch planer, clamps of every size. A row of chisels to make you drool, and the piece-d-resistance a lathe that would turn an eight-foot bed post. And all of this was in the forties. He did some of the most amazing work and this was his avocation. He and my father would work in there endlessly and turn out some of the most amazing thing. I have only three items, but I have that love of working with wood (and fiberglass) and I agree, hand tools are the most satisfying.
Love to see those chisels in the box. Reminds me of my Grandfather's. He had a shop twenty by forty. Two drill presses, three table saws, shapers, routers, a twelve-inch planer, clamps of every size. A row of chisels to make you drool, and the piece-d-resistance a lathe that would turn an eight-foot bed post. And all of this was in the forties. He did some of the most amazing work and this was his avocation. He and my father would work in there endlessly and turn out some of the most amazing thing. I have only three items, but I have that love of working with wood (and fiberglass) and I agree, hand tools are the most satisfying.
Mikey
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
- Harry Babb
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:45
- Location: Fairhope Al
- Contact:
I told you guy that I would post a short clip of the "Can Squozer" that my son Chris and his friend John built a couple of years ago.
We were talking about our shops being a playground for Big Boys.....and I guess the apple did not fall far from the tree.
The story is that Chris and John aquire a large quantity of aluminum cans....they sell them to fund a school bus/RV conversion. They take the Bus to Gulfport every year to the Harley convention. During the year they pick a project that will improve the bus such as adding roof top air conditioners, generator, running water and they fund part of their passion with aluminum cans.....of which they aquire a bunch of at the Harley convention....Imagine that! ! ! !
At any rate they designed the entire machine using AutoCad then they manufactured all of the components in the shop on rainy Saturdays.
I am proud of the boys......it was their idea.....the crankshaft is mounted on Timkin bearings, they figured the stroke needed to accomendate the can lengths, the connecting rod length needed to clear the cylinder....although the design is pretty simple there are a lot of details to figure out in order for the "Squozer" to work right out of the box.....and it did.....very well!!!
We were talking about our shops being a playground for Big Boys.....and I guess the apple did not fall far from the tree.
The story is that Chris and John aquire a large quantity of aluminum cans....they sell them to fund a school bus/RV conversion. They take the Bus to Gulfport every year to the Harley convention. During the year they pick a project that will improve the bus such as adding roof top air conditioners, generator, running water and they fund part of their passion with aluminum cans.....of which they aquire a bunch of at the Harley convention....Imagine that! ! ! !
At any rate they designed the entire machine using AutoCad then they manufactured all of the components in the shop on rainy Saturdays.
I am proud of the boys......it was their idea.....the crankshaft is mounted on Timkin bearings, they figured the stroke needed to accomendate the can lengths, the connecting rod length needed to clear the cylinder....although the design is pretty simple there are a lot of details to figure out in order for the "Squozer" to work right out of the box.....and it did.....very well!!!
hb
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
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