I still have my Casio fx-39 from 1979 it seemed to cost a lot back then so i kept it for years and retired it to a box in the loft.
this is one
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Just an update on the lawnmower. We have spark. I have my own special starter system. Managed to give myself a belt. Will be more careful in future.
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Belts look fine and the cables work to engage drive and the blades . It's 24 years old. Been neglected but I don't think it has seen much work. No damage to the Nylon sprockets.
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State of air filter.
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The blades are the worst looking part. Will they clean up a bit in use? They hardly turned until I loosened them away from the metal plate that they cut against.
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Carb float. It moves freely. There's a bit of a clue showing as to what's coming next.
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Carb Bowl. Lots of lovely rust.
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Had a lovely time taking it apart and having a poke around. I have ordered some new fuel hose, HT cap cover and spark plug.
Worth it despite being disowned by the wife and getting called "Mr Trebus". Again!
Richie before you start it ….lube the cylinder with the spark plug out ..give it several pull overs and squirt a bit of WD 40 in between pulls. Done so it lubes the piston rings & the cylinder wall and piston skirt . Other wise if it's too dry .....the rings might break or pick up metal from the walls & knacker the machine .
PS Your'e a jammy git finding such a score . They are brilliant machines if looked after .
When I did my city and guilds in Ag Engineering, we were the first year that was allowed calculators in the exam. The format was eight half hour questions of which you could pick five. We practiced on old exam papers and could do all eight questions in half an hour. We thought this was brilliant until we sat the exam, they just made the questions several times harder, and I was crunching until two minutes from the end. Phew.
My evil brother who became a copper , bet me I could not pee over the single strand of wire running round the cattle field . As a result though I'm led to believe Mum & Dad were married before he was born ..... I do have my doubts .
Used to do this for a laugh when we were kids (many moons ago) we had a a line of 4 or 5 of us the strange thing was only the the one touching the fence and the last one in the line got the shock.
cant think of a better place to put this and it doesnt rate its own project thread, so ill put this here...todays half of yesterdays post
its working fine just need a but of fettling.
I am unsure but i bet it could have been a weeks wages as i remember him saying he was happy i was good at maths but i cost more to put through education than my 3 sisters all put together.In 1964 my brother spent a two months wages £76 IIRC on getting one of the new fangled Sinclair six digit red LED calculators that took four or six AAA batteries and needed a new set a couple of hours late . Even the one shown above looks a long way off in the future , what sort of price was if ( if you can remember ) ? I was learning how to use a slide rule & still have one with the instruction & plastic storage case .
Like the look of that..I've been a very naughty boy, but I'm worth it
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Its an 18v router, no battery, but comes with a trim and plunge bases, fences etc.
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The body itself is quite small
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I've used it already for a small job however I need to wait for some guide bushes and cutters for the Leigh dovetail jig to be delivered before it gets a lot more use. The intention is to use my Dewalt corded for the tails, and the Milwaukee for the pins, that way I don't have to keep swapping cutters. I have depth jig to help set the cutter depth but they always differ slightly when changing cutters meaning either a tight or sloppy dovetail and much messing about. This way once set up correctly I can breeze through all 40+ dovetailed drawers and trays for the kitchen without fiddling about.
This is my second Milwaukee 18v Fuel router. The other one is sat in a work colleague's desk in Chicago waiting for the next time somebody comes over to the UK. That may be a while so will probably sell that to another US work colleague.
Cheers
Andy
Today I acquired, a do-it-yourself haircut just to tidy things up a bit. Looks like I've been redacted....![]()
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That'd be far too sticky.![]()
I like that...that's niceHaving a tidy of the garage: centres from the old Turning cell at Cessna Fluid Power in Glenrothes, I picked it up when the factory closed with some other tools and found it at the back of a shelf:
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I've been a very naughty boy, but I'm worth it
View attachment 222520
Its an 18v router, no battery, but comes with a trim and plunge bases, fences etc.
View attachment 222522
The body itself is quite small
View attachment 222521
I've used it already for a small job however I need to wait for some guide bushes and cutters for the Leigh dovetail jig to be delivered before it gets a lot more use. The intention is to use my Dewalt corded for the tails, and the Milwaukee for the pins, that way I don't have to keep swapping cutters. I have depth jig to help set the cutter depth but they always differ slightly when changing cutters meaning either a tight or sloppy dovetail and much messing about. This way once set up correctly I can breeze through all 40+ dovetailed drawers and trays for the kitchen without fiddling about.
This is my second Milwaukee 18v Fuel router. The other one is sat in a work colleague's desk in Chicago waiting for the next time somebody comes over to the UK. That may be a while so will probably sell that to another US work colleague.
Cheers
Andy