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12-15-2011, 02:22 PM | #21 |
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Re: Home made tools
It's a drum puller. Similar to a krw.
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12-15-2011, 02:47 PM | #22 |
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Re: Home made tools
I thought it was much smaller than it is, I guess. That's what I get for guessing. Thanks a bunch,
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12-15-2011, 04:51 PM | #23 |
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Re: Home made tools
This tool is used to remove the Oil Pressure Sending unit from a flathead V-8. 3/8" extension fits into the square hole and the "C" device fits over the sending unit and captures the square above the threaded portion of the unit.
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12-20-2011, 09:48 AM | #24 |
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Re: Home made tools
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12-20-2011, 10:21 AM | #25 |
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Re: Home made tools
Here's a nice tool I bought that was made by Bill Wzorek for removing oil pressure sending units. Even had an attached brass plate with the previous Fordbarn logo. This tool is so well made that it could take a direct bomb hit and still be functional . Bill was making and selling these as a fund raiser for Shelly's Fordbarn. I'm not sure if he is still making and selling these, but you could always send him a pm to find out.
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07-03-2014, 01:00 PM | #26 |
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Re: Home made tools
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07-03-2014, 02:55 PM | #27 |
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Re: Home made tools
I really like Tinkers belt adjusting tool. simple but efficient.....
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07-03-2014, 05:03 PM | #28 |
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Re: Home made tools
I like Franks tool made for "Stretching a Dollar"
Re: Home made tools
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07-03-2014, 05:10 PM | #29 |
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Re: Home made tools
Thanks for starting this thread Tinker.
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07-03-2014, 06:53 PM | #30 |
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Re: Home made tools
I'm leaving on vacation. When I return, I'll post some pictures of the tools I've made.
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07-03-2014, 06:58 PM | #31 |
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Re: Home made tools
I ported flathead blocks on a waist-high workbench for nearly ten years before I figured out a better scheme – a two-axis gimbaled fixture that allows me to position a block exactly as I want it, and quickly alter its position, in small or large increments, in almost any two-axis global orientation. Designed to fit a conventional engine stand, it also fits nicely into a socket welded to a steel post in my porting area. In the X axis, the fixture indexes at 45-degree increments for a full 360 degrees of rotation, and in the Y axis it indexes infinitely through all 360 degrees of rotation. The big plus for this type of fixture is that tool application is always in the most-effective direction, which is generally in the 3 to 9 o’clock positions. As a consequence, tool control is excellent, critical cuts and surface finishes are optimum, and fatigue is greatly reduced.
I could have built the fixture with chamfered and welded corners, but Art Morrison Enterprises was starting to do neat hot rod and racecar frames with their new mandrel-bending gear for rectangular tubing, so I figured why not? A full-size Ford/Mercury block is positioned in the fixture with the camshaft centerline lined up with the Y axis axles. This corresponds with the longitudinal CG – or nearly so; the block can be held with very little drag on the drag bolt and is easily rotated when the drag is loosened. A V-8-60 block sits just a taste higher to feel neutral. A year ago a pal asked me if I would port a set of Chrysler Hemi heads for a vintage dragster he was restoring. Sure, I just needed a couple of angle plates to bolt to the end plates in the fixture that a head could sit on and be secured with bolts. Suddenly, several aluminum cylinder heads from Yamaha SR500 singles showed up, needing porting, of course. (These motors are popular and successful in AMA dirt-track racing.) This time a simple bridge of 1/8-inch stainless, with a 45-degree break on each long edge to stiffen it, neatly supports a head. Finally – or maybe not – Vern Tardel showed up with a big ’49 Lincoln flathead block destined for another vintage dragster. Longer extension plates supported the big block which is secured with bolts in the main-bearing saddles on the ends. This monster sits lower in the fixture; lined up on the camshaft centerline, as I originally did it, it was an unwieldy pendulum. Dropping it about an inch did the trick and it rotates as easily as the smaller blocks. |
07-03-2014, 07:25 PM | #32 |
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Re: Home made tools
Just to be clear I did not make that one. Just appreciate the thought and skill. All thanks go to Vergil, the creator of the tool. Not me.
. Last edited by Tinker; 07-04-2014 at 08:31 AM. Reason: sp |
07-03-2014, 09:19 PM | #33 |
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Re: Home made tools
Awesome, Mike. Very cool.
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07-03-2014, 10:07 PM | #34 |
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Re: Home made tools
Here is a tool I made to put flathead valve assemblies together. I couple of pieces of angle iron and a piece of pipe. Looks bad, works good.
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07-04-2014, 07:35 AM | #35 | |
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Re: Home made tools
Quote:
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07-04-2014, 07:57 AM | #36 |
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Re: Home made tools
Hey JM that's that Black & Deckerism showing through. Zeke
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07-04-2014, 08:38 AM | #37 |
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Re: Home made tools
Excellent job on the porting fixture Mike.
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07-04-2014, 09:22 PM | #38 |
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Re: Home made tools
Thanks, Mart. I have an idea for harvesting even more goodness from the fixture -- a set of adapters that will allow me to position a crankshaft in the fixture to carve away about a dozen pounds and streamline and polish it to reduce windage. I love the result of the work . . .
. . . but after doing one in this primitive fashion . . . . . . I made a simple fixture from rectangular tubing that was a bit better, but it still danced around on the bench. The porting fixture could turn the arduous crank-carving chore into a relatively pleasant task. The changes available in the X axis would be even more beneficial than they are for porting a block. Mike |
07-06-2014, 07:04 AM | #39 |
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Re: Home made tools
Spring shackle removing and installing tools
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07-06-2014, 07:09 AM | #40 |
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Re: Home made tools
tools for removing transmission pilot bearing & pinion perload adjustment, torque check and hand rotation tool
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