gone to the great junk yard in the sky.
*sniff*
Wow I'd say you got the life out of that one!
Coming along. I've just about got the basics of the garage sorted (got the dehumidifier up in the window now). Time to get started on tearing apart this Series 5 front end so I can clean it up, figure out my control arm/spindle setup, and importantly start measuring for the K20 or K24. I gave the control arm bolts a bit of a tug earlier, but as predicted they are pretty solid. So I sprayed them down with some PB Blaster, let 'em sit over night. I'm hoping a breaker bar with a cheater on it, will get them off. If not, well, I keep threatening to get one of those cordless Ryobi impact guns...of course I have three different torches sitting around here, a butane, a propane, and a oxy-acetyline.
http://instagram.com/p/CFnX2YOp7wS/
Spent all day hanging around Hellcats at Bondurant.
It’s a big piggie beast of a car but they don’t exactly suck. The mechanics say they are little to no drama. Brakes and tires. Brakes and tires.
Getting in the Mini afterwords felt fragile and vulnerable.
Come on Rob, a man of your academic standing should know how to spell acetylene, LOL.
Butane is for heat shrink, propane is useful for things like plumbing or melting the o-rings in broken-off dipstick tubes that are frozen into Ford 5.4L iron blocks so you can pull the remains of the tube out without driving it down into the pan or any other number of online redneck fixes (ask me how I know); oxyfuel of either the propane or acetylene variety is the only one known as the 'blue wrench.' I have all of those choices too, excepting that my oxyfuel is more specifically oxy-propane, and I skip the lesser two when it comes to rust-frozen fasteners. Because time is money and blaze orange is fastener speak for, "I give up."
Ha, I literally just used the butane for some heat shrink and a little bit of soldering earlier.
The propane is one of those I have, because I found it when I was sorting through my dad's stuff.
I grew up on the oxy-acetylene torch for brazing copper lines and even low-grade, non-structural welding (though, obviously, a MIG/TIG/Arc are vastly superior for actual structural stuff).
Yea, if I have to go to the torch, a medium blue flame and five minutes should do it. Hopefully, I won't, because there are some almost 60-year old dry ass rubber bushings in those control arms that I really would prefer to not ignite...
That reminds me, when I grab an extension cord from Home Depot tomorrow, I need another fire extinguisher.