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What was the last thing you made?

This is my early '70s Murray Eliminator 3 speed bicycle survivor project that is in the works:
View attachment 84774
I found a donor bike from the same era in the trash to provide both missing and damaged parts.

Stripped to nearly her bare bones:
View attachment 84775
This bike will look like crap when it is finished, but will be in 100% perfect working condition.
I'm still up in the air about re-lacing the crusty rusty wheels to more modern rims, but that has yet to be decided.
If I do the wheels, it would be considered a resto-mod.
If I don't, she will be considered a survivor.
It looks like my bright orange Chopper bike , seventies kid me.

Wish I still had it.
 
I made a 100 amp load bank to load test 36 volt, 1000 ah and up, batteries. This is not something that most people would ever need. I use it a lot to test electric fork lift batteries. Now, how is that for boring?
No, it's interesting. I used to service the load banks which were for aircraft generator testing.

The aircraft generators were then towed by us up to RAF fighter jets and visiting NATO ally aircraft.
 
When mixing epoxy, especially in small batches, it should be weighed down to the drop. When I was busy mixing several times a day, I only had time to cobble together balances from scrap wood and thread. Then there was a pleasant period when electronic scales made life easier. Then, my old one died, and the locally available replacement is one decimal point less sensitive. So, I made a lever to multiply the weight ten times. I used wormwood rescued from my firewood, and aluminum to match the scale. I'm rather pleased with the novelty of using a counterweight to stabilize a top tray, instead of the usual triple beam arrangement. The lower tray can be used without the counterweight to weigh heavier loads.
Scale1.webp


Scale2.webp
 
When mixing epoxy, especially in small batches, it should be weighed down to the drop. When I was busy mixing several times a day, I only had time to cobble together balances from scrap wood and thread. Then there was a pleasant period when electronic scales made life easier. Then, my old one died, and the locally available replacement is one decimal point less sensitive. So, I made a lever to multiply the weight ten times. I used wormwood rescued from my firewood, and aluminum to match the scale. I'm rather pleased with the novelty of using a counterweight to stabilize a top tray, instead of the usual triple beam arrangement. The lower tray can be used without the counterweight to weigh heavier loads.
View attachment 93784

View attachment 93785
Whose Epoxy? In boatbuilding I have used both MAS and West Marine products. They seem to be resilient to minor volume differences between resin and oxidizer. The most sensitive I have ever used is Epon 88, which I used to embed specimens for electron microscopy.
 
Whose Epoxy? In boatbuilding I have used both MAS and West Marine products. They seem to be resilient to minor volume differences between resin and oxidizer. The most sensitive I have ever used is Epon 88, which I used to embed specimens for electron microscopy.
Where I live, I can only get West 5:1, and I sometimes want quite small batches. I was delighted with the toughness of System Three's Phase Two resin, and liked the economy of their regular grades, until it got humid one evening and turned my bright-finished boat milky white. They also have one that works as a barrier coat to allow polyester to cure atop it, so I can seal in rust, and finish with bondo, I've also bought a lot of West laminating resin, at 3:1. It saves a lot of time with lowered viscosity.
Epoxy always "goes off" but if the mix is not exact, you wind up with some As or some Bs without partners, which weaken the matrix. I have used dozens of kinds, and been responsible for retraining polyester workers to mix it thoroughly.
 
When mixing epoxy, especially in small batches, it should be weighed down to the drop. When I was busy mixing several times a day, I only had time to cobble together balances from scrap wood and thread. Then there was a pleasant period when electronic scales made life easier. Then, my old one died, and the locally available replacement is one decimal point less sensitive. So, I made a lever to multiply the weight ten times. I used wormwood rescued from my firewood, and aluminum to match the scale. I'm rather pleased with the novelty of using a counterweight to stabilize a top tray, instead of the usual triple beam arrangement. The lower tray can be used without the counterweight to weigh heavier loads.
Oh.....I think the last thing I made was a mistake.

1678832880988.webp



In my case a picture isn't worth a thousand words.

I saw the picture and thought this was a Beer Catapult.

Then I read the words.
 
Here is my progress on the canoe. The strips are under stress because of the bow and twist of conforming to the forms. So, completion has slowed. I am using Western Red Cedar for the bottom and will complete one side to the center line, trim it, and mirror on the other side.

20230314_154225.webp
 
IMG_0337.webp

I made a swing-away laptop table and keyboard tray to use for Zoom calls. It clamps onto my kitchen table to replace the sliding jury rig that had usurped the front of the table for years. All salvaged and recycled wood.
 
This is genius and I want one haha
Amazing work!
Thanks. You should see me on Zoom. A talking head level with the camera, or more, and I don't have to tidy up the background scenery. It is also easy to spin around with the camera off to just watch a meeting while cooking, etc. I think it should be easy to see how it is done from that pic. I clamped and glued all the wood.
 
For a semi-plastic carving material, I was recently introduced to Beet Root, a common food item. It dries very hard without cracking or severe shrinkage. It looks worth investigating.

Here's my latest - about 80% of my salvage/scrap wood, and I can unscrew it and have about 70% back - there was very little trimming to assemble this puzzle. It features live-edge wormwood, and will be oiled when I can open the windows next week. It divides my room into more sections and provides more shelf space, as well as a counter top that is more comfortable for my height. The low table surface can slide out for knee clearance. I'm especially pleased with the economical yet effective structure from the arm of the fold-down bed to the near end of the countertop, using door skin for a shear web.
Shelves.webp
 
For a semi-plastic carving material, I was recently introduced to Beet Root, a common food item. It dries very hard without cracking or severe shrinkage. It looks worth investigating.

Here's my latest - about 80% of my salvage/scrap wood, and I can unscrew it and have about 70% back - there was very little trimming to assemble this puzzle. It features live-edge wormwood, and will be oiled when I can open the windows next week. It divides my room into more sections and provides more shelf space, as well as a counter top that is more comfortable for my height. The low table surface can slide out for knee clearance. I'm especially pleased with the economical yet effective structure from the arm of the fold-down bed to the near end of the countertop, using door skin for a shear web.
View attachment 101796
So very 1950s.
 
So very 1950s.
This place feels really homey to me. It was built in three stages on a tight budget. I'm sure that the kitchen cabinets were carried in as sheets of plywood. Even the countertop material is the same pattern that my father used around 1960, and I chose some matching period furniture.
 
I just started to work on a wig that I want to use as part of an earthquake survivor lip sync number for I feel the Earth Move by Martika that I have had inside my head for years. I found the right sized bird that I wanted to be tangled in my hair and now need some Bobby pins to hold it down some more since the clip it already had is so small. Next I need some foam board to create pieces of drywall and a fake rat and then dust the entire wig in baby powder. This is my first wig that I’m fully styling beyond using some hair gel to spike the hair or using a clip to hold up some of the hair back.
 

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