From a friend on Facebook.
I'll spend time after dinner going over, and over, and over my sermon. Don't feel at all good about this one, not a good thing on the Sunday before Christmas.
I went to the metal shop this morning and media blasted the seat rails and a few misc. parts. Then home to install the steering box and column.

I put in a 5-speed transmission, a T5, that came out of an early-80's Chevy S10 so I'd have a fifth gear (overdrive) and be able to drive the truck at freeway speeds. (As built the truck was only good for about 60 mph wide open.) The problem is that this transmission comes with an angled stem that would have the stick hitting the front of the bench seat. And fifth gear would be so far to the upper right that getting there would be more like rowing than shifting.

For the 10 years we were restoring two century-old houses in MI I subscribed to This Old House magazine. They had a monthly feature titled, "Name This Tool" in which they showed a picture of an antique tool used in home construction and asked what it was used for.


So help me out here. What is this??
I don't know whose idea it was to put an NFL game on Saturday night but I want to thank them for their thoughtfulness.
*His web site says he's closed from 12/17 to 12/23. Odd that he'd close the week before Christmas and open up two days before, unless you remember that's Hanukkah.
3 comments:
I think the tool is for snipping slots in sheet metal.
I've got some sheet aluminum left over from the trailer build so I'll give that a try. But I didn't have to make slots on that project so I don't know why I would have purchased this tool. Or where, for that matter. Not a Home Depot item.
If it doesn't actually cut slots, it looks like there could be clearance to form a U channel in sheet metal.
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