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Ace-Garageguy

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Everything posted by Ace-Garageguy

  1. Not exactly life-changing, but Floyd's "A Momentary Lack of Reason" kinda helped me work through the demise of an unfortunate relationship with a beautiful woman who had, apparently, no use for the concepts of monogamy and honesty. Lyrics to "One Slip" , a constant reminder to look very carefully before I leap in the future. A restless eye across a weary roomA glazed look and I was on the road to ruinThe music played and played as we whirled without endNo hint, no word her honour to defendI will, I will she sighed to my requestAnd then she tossed her mane while my resolve was put to the testThen drowned in desire, our souls on fireI lead the way to the funeral pyreAnd without a thought of the consequenceI gave in to my decadence One slip, and down the hole we fallIt seems to take no time at allA momentary lapse of reasonThat binds a life for lifeA small regret, you won't forget,There'll be no sleep in here tonightWas it love, or was it the idea of being in love?Or was it the hand of fate, that seemed to fit just like a glove?The moment slipped by and soon the seeds were sownThe year grew late and neither one wanted to remain alonesource: https://www.lyricsondemand.com/p/pinkfloydlyrics/momentarylapseofreasonlyrics.html Of course a lot of critics who live to hear themselves pontificate about stuff they're incapable of creating and probably don't understand anyway hated the album, but that's OK by me. And that's my essay.
  2. True, but what's always hard for me to totally swallow in "accidental" catastrophic losses like this is the apparent lack of training and preparedness of a crew to deal with what would initially be a small, easily controlled fire. Shades of the Bonhomme Richard debacle. “ 'Although the fire was started by an act of arson, the ship was lost due to an inability to extinguish the fire,' according to the investigation, which was written by Vice Adm. Scott Conn, then-commander of Third Fleet. ...the Navy’s investigation into the fire found that the Bonhomme Richard’s crew was ill-prepared and under-trained to contain the fire once it broke out. 'Once the fire started, the response effort was placed in the hands of inadequately trained and drilled personnel from a disparate set of uncoordinated organizations that had not fully exercised together and were unfamiliar with basic issues to include the roles and responsibilities of the various responding entities,' reads the investigation."
  3. That's pretty cool...
  4. Well, the ship could be getting a little long in the tooth and the owners looking at a major refit. Wouldn't be the first time corporations did a backroom deal that was "mutually beneficial", so to speak. Not a conspiracy theory..."just sayin'", as they say. But a wise man once said "never ascribe to evil what is more likely just the product of incompetence".
  5. If I posted mine, I'd be banned for life. EDIT: But this pretty well sums it up...
  6. Hasn't run in about a decade, and nobody there knows the first thing about Corvairs...except me...and I'm not getting involved.
  7. Annoying, isn't it? I've found dozens of my build thread pix posted elsewhere, not by me. Nobody exactly taking credit for my work, but the implication is pretty strong. I wish there was a destruct-button built into all of 'em.
  8. Hey...one way to keep cashflow going during the global "chip shortage": load a bunch of unfinished cars on a ship, burn it in the middle of the ocean, collect the insurance. Probably more cost-effective than waiting in line at LA / Long Beach behind 60+ other container ships. EDIT: And in that scenario, once they were finally unloaded, you'd still have truckloads of unsalable yard-art with no chips.
  9. Nice collection. Good stuff. Fascinating info.
  10. Another way, and more in keeping with the way you'd do it on a real one, is to simply cut the stub axle off the front spindle, and move it UP on the spindle the exact amount you want to lower the car. In real life, they sell things called "dropped spindles" that are just exactly the same idea. Measuring accurately is critical, as is making certain your work is neat, square, and symmetrical from side to side.
  11. I'm always in awe of the folks who'll bid in $1 increments hours or days before the end of an auction. Do you really think that nobody else is going to bump your bid by another dollar in 3 days? Really? All it accomplishes is running the price up needlessly...so of course it's encouraged by eBay: "Bid NOW so you can get a deal !!!" But logic isn't a strong seller these days.
  12. Congrats. I'm busier since I officially "retired" than I was before. Lots to do...just because I want to. James Dean is supposed to have said "Dream like you're going to live forever. Live like this day is your last". Pretty much on-point, I think.
  13. Yup, I could definitely suffer through a long road trip in that. Need to put a hitch on it to pull a trailer full of gas money though...'cause I sure couldn't keep my foot out of it.
  14. Beautiful job. Nice cars to drive, simple and reliable, quick enough to be entertaining. The overhead shot showing the white piping on the seats is particularly realistic. How'd you do it? Is it shown on the build thread?
  15. Looks like the MIG might actually look better on some chrome window and side trim with enough practice. Looks like it might be just the ticket for doing some flat drag-car interior "tin" that was the subject of another thread.
  16. The fuel line would go to a banjo-fitting on the side of the float chamber, just to the side of the velocity stack on your model. Scroll 2/3 down the link below, page 14 if it displays as a PDF, look at parts 15-18 on what appears to pretty much be your exact carb: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/547e5122e4b0193d67f28396/t/5854ddf6725e25b3b4c06d52/1481956877861/Amal+MK2+Carb+Manual.pdf
  17. Throttle and mixture cables on that one go in from the top, into those nut-like things. Study this, parts 10 and 11: https://www.jrcengineering.com/technical-support/amal-concentrics-tuning-and-jetting/
  18. Good news: this one appears to have the velocity stack cast in unit with the body. Maybe.
  19. Happy happy. The computer I store my photos in wouldn't restart after loading the newest version of my security gizmoprogrammothingy. I just KNEW I shouldn't have done it while I was doing billing paperwork (that I always send progress photos with). Locked up, wouldn't boot, couldn't get my photos of course. But after some patient diddling and sweet-talking, she came back and seems to be humming along happily now. Good girl. I think she just wanted some attention and reassurance. Now back to work.
  20. Last trip, I went I-10 instead of I-40 to see what the road was like. The previous trip in a big U-Haul, I-40 was so rough in Oklahoma it damm near rattled my teeth out, and did a little damage from load-shifting. Anyway, on the last trip on I-10, the Yotyto dumped her alternator in Phoenix, and I was stuck there a couple days while the dealership fixed it (low-mileage car, I took neither parts nor tools). I thought about calling you to see if we could get together for a beer, but circumstances prevented same. I'll be going 1-40 from now on though, as it's several hundred miles shorter.
  21. Yup...and the reason Chebby SB aftermarket parts are generally lots cheaper than the equivalent parts for Fords. Volume, volume, volume. I personally like the SB Ford engines better than the little Chebby for a lot of reasons. But for relatively cheap semi-bulletproof power, it's kinda hard to beat Chevrolet.
  22. Not on the road exactly, but at the shop... Jag S-Type 3.8 (my white XJ6 next to it) Corvair Rampside pickup Little Red Truck Triumph TR-250
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