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#1
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Hi Tony,
Great photos, and how to do it. As the old saying goes "Necessity is the Mother of Invention". For close cutting work I have found my Dremel tool invaluable even for automotive work. I have used it numerous times on the truck. The small cutoff wheels go through thin steel like a knife through butter but give you great control. One of them might be good for step 4! Think I mentioned it before in another thread but my first use of a Dremel for automotive work was to cut off a muffler on my car back in the seventies. With their small cutoff wheel I split the inlet and outlet without touching the head or tail pipes and the muffler practically fell off. The small wire brush is also handy for getting rust off a threads in a tight spot if you wish to save the fastener. The Fuel tank retainer strap bolt is a case in point. They snap easily as I found out the hard way if not cleaned up and drowned in penetrating oil. Note: If you use a wire brush in the Dremel tool slow it down and do not use at full speed otherwise the wires may break prematurely and fly out at great speed. New ones have inbuilt speed controllers but my old tool doesn't so I run it through an external speed controller. Full speed is fine for cutting however. Look forward to step 5. Regards,
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F15-A 1942 Battery Staff Jacques Reed Last edited by Jacques Reed; 12-12-18 at 22:55. Reason: Added speed safety warning for Dremel tool. |
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#2
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Well, mission accomplished.
Step 5 - gently nick inner conduit which can then peel off. Lowers risk of cutting it with angle grinder. Step 6 - remove some of outer conduit spring. Crap yourself. Realise you may have buggered it when outer wires splay apart. Step 7 - think "Bloody hell we have stuffed it!!" ![]() Step 8 - use vice jaws to recollect wires and twist metal reinforcing end back out over conduit wire. ![]() Step 9 - exhale/inhale for the first time since starting the proceedure. Knocked about and inch and a quarter off the end. Spring has not lost its integrity either.
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Pax Vobiscum.......may you eat three meals a day & have regular bowel movements. Last edited by Ganmain Tony; 13-12-18 at 07:38. |
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#3
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Hi Tony,
Should add: Step 10: Pour yourself a good one and celebrate a job well done! Cheers,
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F15-A 1942 Battery Staff Jacques Reed |
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#4
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Thanks Jacques,
Glad to have it behind me quite frankly. ![]() Interesting to note - the spring around the cable that is located in the drum, does not seem to have lost any significant tension. I also thought I might have taken a bit too much off. One line was at its maximum stretch when I put it back in. Fortunately when I sat the truck back down on all four tyres, some load came back onto the rear leaves and has provided JUST enough slack. It should improve again when the box is put on the back.
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Pax Vobiscum.......may you eat three meals a day & have regular bowel movements. |
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#5
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Getting my backside "into gear". I decided to tackle the transmission.
Did not take any photos of the hours of removing sludge and crap from everything. Good news is everything cleaned up extremely well.
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Pax Vobiscum.......may you eat three meals a day & have regular bowel movements. |
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#6
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You have to keep reminding yourself this stuff is 80 years old.
I replaced all the bearings as they were a bit noisy, and the races and balls looked a bit worn. Putting it back together went smoothly. Rear mount must have been loose for a long time in its working life as the wear on the cross member and mount was horrendous.
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Pax Vobiscum.......may you eat three meals a day & have regular bowel movements. |
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#7
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Nice work you are doing Tony. Is that the correct rubber mount for a truck?
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Bluebell Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991 Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6. Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6 Jeep Mb #135668 So many questions.... |
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