Author Topic: This matter of tools  (Read 9388 times)

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clamp

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Reply #15 on: August 13, 2009, 01:51:23 am
I don't know why Royal Enfield just don't fasten everything with wing nuts.

    Then all you would need is a small toffee hammer for torquing up and an old Cornfake packet as gasket material.

     Fabulous gaskets  is cornflake packet,  opened out its big enough for a side cover.

   
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r80rt

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Reply #16 on: August 13, 2009, 02:10:25 am
I've made a lot of gaskets from 12 pack beer boxes, good stuff for old bikes :D
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1Blackwolf1

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Reply #17 on: August 13, 2009, 07:12:14 am
  Ah yes, a dying art.  Being able to tap out a gasket with an 8 ounce ball peen hammer and permatex.  The memories.  Will.
Will Morrison
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1976 Suzuki GT185 Rebuilder Special..AKA (Junkyard Dog)
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r80rt

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Reply #18 on: August 13, 2009, 12:10:27 pm
I've got a real set of hole punches for gaskets now, when I was a kid I used .38 special cartridges cases to punch out bolt holes in homemade gaskets, fun times for sure.
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1Blackwolf1

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Reply #19 on: August 13, 2009, 02:33:35 pm
  Did the same bought a hole punch set and a good set of exacto knives.  Now I use a little grease on the item and press the image onto real gasket material.  Works great and a lot cleaner gaskets. 
Will Morrison
2007 500 Military
2000 Kawasaki Drifter 1500
2000 Victory V92SC
1976 Suzuki GT185 Rebuilder Special..AKA (Junkyard Dog)
Many, many other toys.
The garage is full.


r80rt

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Reply #20 on: August 13, 2009, 11:08:54 pm
Yeah, the guys at the parts store laugh at me, the never saw anyone but me buy whole rolls of gasket paper before. Exacto knives are a must have item with old bikes too, I've also  been known to use copper flashing to beat out head gaskets for flathead one lungers on occasion. I love that kind of stuff  :D
« Last Edit: August 14, 2009, 02:01:36 am by r80rt »
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1Blackwolf1

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Reply #21 on: August 14, 2009, 01:46:08 am
  Dying arts learned in farmland USA,  I make many a "kid" gaze in wonder when he sees me do stuff like that.  I remember re-using head gaskets on tractors and annealing them before use.  Guess maybe that shows our age.  Will.
Will Morrison
2007 500 Military
2000 Kawasaki Drifter 1500
2000 Victory V92SC
1976 Suzuki GT185 Rebuilder Special..AKA (Junkyard Dog)
Many, many other toys.
The garage is full.


r80rt

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Reply #22 on: August 14, 2009, 01:57:55 am
Yep, we must be getting old. We used to overhaul tractors in the field, now it's unheard of. I still keep a scrap iron pile to dig through when I want to make something that I can't buy. growing up dirt poor will teach you things that nothing else can ;)
« Last Edit: August 14, 2009, 02:10:18 am by r80rt »
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clamp

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Reply #23 on: August 14, 2009, 02:33:35 am
Not unheard of, still done in Thailand at the shrimp farms where Yanmar single diesels will run for months on a gravity fed 50 galon drum.

   When its time for an overhaul they can do it in an hour.  cylinder and piston is pushed in by the long  head bolts. The crank comes out of the side,  ball bearings and are knocked off with a hammer, the big end shell is 2 dollar.

    All that and you didnt need to drain the oil.

    Yanmar industrial engines cheap and run for ever, static water cooled.

     The cheapness of these parts is ridiculous I had one in a boat once to drive a generator.
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r80rt

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Reply #24 on: August 14, 2009, 02:36:42 am
I want one of those engines!
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1Blackwolf1

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Reply #25 on: August 14, 2009, 02:39:12 am
  We had an old Wiscosin single on a hay baler I could pull it apart and do much the same by myself in no time.  Only needed help removing the 300+ pound flywheel if I had to replace the crankshaft output seal.  The cylinder bore and stroke on that was amazing.  Will.
Will Morrison
2007 500 Military
2000 Kawasaki Drifter 1500
2000 Victory V92SC
1976 Suzuki GT185 Rebuilder Special..AKA (Junkyard Dog)
Many, many other toys.
The garage is full.


LJRead

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Reply #26 on: August 14, 2009, 04:32:50 am
I had an old twin diesel Lister I bought in Hawaii and sweated it out in the engine compartment installing it.  Only 16 hp for a 12 tonne yacht, so it didn't go fast, but air cooled and putted along well.  So simple.  There was an engine hatch cover and I could put a beam across the cockpit combing and lift it out with a come-along.  Enough that is to work on it.  Now I have an old Volvo Penta, sea water cooled, and it seems good too - all iron and heavy as hell.

Heard that in the Danish boats, moderate sized fishing boats, they had one-lungers with cylinders as big around as a sizeable barrel.  Real thumpers.
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LJRead

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Reply #27 on: August 14, 2009, 07:26:17 pm
This question of tools, and particularly their weight, is overblown.  I feel that a very basic set of sockets to be able to tighten loosened nuts and do basic things like spark plug removal and even an oil change, tire repair, or basic tuneup, should be the criteria to base what we carry on.  A set of sockets, with ratchet, a set of open end wrenches, a few electrical bits and pieces, a few spares, sure it adds up but needn't be overwhelming as to weight.  When I do any work on the bike in the shop, I find myself using a number of different sizes of wrenches and such, and what I do in the shop isn't much different than what may be needed in the field.

Well, in a month or so I'll have the whole thing organized and can give a summary of it with weight.  They once failed me out of the Boy Scouts as being hopelessly non-conformist, maybe I'll get it right this time and "be prepared".
Lawrence J. Read
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1Blackwolf1

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Reply #28 on: August 14, 2009, 07:36:19 pm
  I'll await your report.  My tool kit is very minimalist so maybe I'll see something listed that I probably shouldn't ride without.  Will.
Will Morrison
2007 500 Military
2000 Kawasaki Drifter 1500
2000 Victory V92SC
1976 Suzuki GT185 Rebuilder Special..AKA (Junkyard Dog)
Many, many other toys.
The garage is full.