Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator

What other projects are you working on?

Luckily I only use it local so it never goes above 45. But it sure bugs me every time I use it. I have a hierarchy of friends. The ones at the top are the ones that have things I borrow and I know will come to my rescue at 2am in the rain.
Trailer guy is the nicest guy I know and we have been good friends for over 40yrs. I just showed him how to adjust the trailer brake controller on his F250. I’ll let him use it again because in the scheme of things our friendship is worth more than trailer tires.
 
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Luckily I only use it local so it never goes above 45. But it sure bugs me every time I use it. I have a hierarchy of friends. The ones at the top are the ones that have things I borrow and I know will come to my rescue at 2am in the rain.

I know those guys. Both of ‘em.

You are so right- some people know the deal.
 
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On occasion, the neighbor Lady will 'borrow' me to help her with some 'mussel ' work, as long as it's not brain work, I'm fine.
But then I can and do borrow her JD tractor, Z-turn mower, boom truck for trimming trees and plow truck to clear the snow from our neighborhood roads. And I also service and maintain her eq. too.
But alas, I haven't been successful in 'borrowing' any of her Corvettes... yet.
 
Replaced the elastic in a 20 year old dance skirt - it was actually my very first dance skirt - paid $90 for it. Now I can get a better one for half that price from Amazon, but back then there weren't many places selling Belly Dance "anything", and most of the weren't online yet. Bought this one from my dance teacher at the time.

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The original elastic wasn't just put into a casing, the casing was stitched to the elastic. I *HATE* that, makes replacement much more difficult. The fabric is thin and diaphanous, so picking out all those stitches was a non starter - so I just folded the old casing with its shot elastic over to form a new casing. Made the skirt an inch+ shorter - but as it had actually stretched over the years, that was OK.
 
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I took my 99 ezgo gas cart out to the desert thus past weekend. My Son was bouncing around the desert at 3am and lost a bolt the lift bracket to the spindle. He repaired it with a tent stake and some wire. Got in it later and wondered why I could not keep a straight track. I found a bolt for a temp fix and drive it for the rest of the weekend. I’ve had this for 15yrs and other than an occasional greasing have not touched it. I decided to check the whole front end. Bearings were dry but no damage done. Pulled everything off. I replaced some bolts, cleaned and greased kingpins and bearings. Drives like new. Next is to drain and replace diff fluid and do general maintenance on the engine. Hopefully get another 15yrs out of her.



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Those of you on the welding thread may know I picked up a welder to learn body work for the TJ, and started practicing on my son’s basketball hoop.
Well I finished that project and it ain’t pretty but boy is it better than the original! I backed up the backboard with 3/4” PT plywood, Gorilla adhesive and silicone sealant, topped off with upsized stainless hardware. She’s an ugly one but solid as a rock! He’s loving the new rebounds that actually send the ball back his way! Success!

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Finally took down this maple that had a large and growing hollow cavity; being excavated by ants. If it collapsed on that cavity it would have landed right on my barn.
All went well - it fell away from the barn. And now I have a few nice rounds of firewood 👍

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Sigh. Why can't I say no to the offspring? Our SIL asked if I could fix up the mini bike his Dad had as a kid. I said "Sure, be glad to." Then I saw it.
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I guess it hadn't run in 40 odd years. SIL's Dad supplied the red snowblower engine, which is going back to him. It has a 1" shaft and the Salsbury 330 torque converter this thing runs takes a 3/4". Luckily(?), I had a low hour 5.5hp Briggs Intek with a 3/4" on the shelf.
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I'll lose the fuel tank and come up with a different exhaust.

It's completely apart now while waiting on new jackshaft bearings, a belt, a shaft and other accoutrements.
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I have a bunch of parts from a stalled mini bike project that will end up on this. And that will free up ever so little space in my garage attic.
 
It took some sleuthing by a contact on another forum, so I now know what make this damn mini bike is. Us old farts may recall the old mail order outfit, Herters, that sold hunting and fishing gear. This was their Trail Mini. I used to drool over their catalog and still have one of their rifle cleaning kits. I also have some old lures and a ceramic knife sharpener from them.
 
No work on the LJ this weekend. :(

Instead, I rough-graded a pad for a 30,000 gallon rainwater tank because the aquifer under us will be dry in a few years, and there’s no rural water near us:
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I’ll order a few loads of sand this week and grade the pad next weekend.
 
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We had to go to 1,000 feet years back because the local farmers were dumping fertilizer down their irrigation wells at 300 ft. Is there any water deeper for you?

I like harvesting rainwater - but am curious how you're going to fill a 30K gallon tank. Is there a low spot you can pump from?
 
No work on the LJ this weekend. :(

Instead, I rough-graded a pad for a 30,000 gallon rainwater tank because the aquifer under us will be dry in a few years, and there’s no rural water near us:
View attachment 533451

I’ll order a few loads of sand this week and grade the pad next weekend.

The communists in my state say they own the rainwater. just saying .
 
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Is there any water deeper for you?
Not in my area. I'm near the upper reaches of a three-layer aquifer - The Trinity Aquifer. In addition, there are numerous faults around me that prevent the aquifer from flowing properly in the area (it's like a fixed pool). The Upper and Lower Trinity layers are very sketchy in this area, and the Middle Trinity, where my well gets its water, is being over-pumped. Even if I could go deeper, it would be cost prohibitive. Wells in the Lower Trinity, a few miles east of me, cost about $120,000 because they are 1,300 feet deep.

When our well was drilled in 2006, the water level was 565' below ground surface. I have an ultrasonic meter on my well head, and as of today, it's 732' below ground surface. The pump is just above the casing screens, sitting at 760'. So, in 18 years, the level has dropped 167', or 9.3' per year. With 28' of water column above my pump, that means I have about 3 years until no more well water. :mad:

I've been the elected Board Member for my precinct of our county's groundwater conservation district for about six years because I have a strong interest in understanding our aquifers. On the other side of our county, the very same aquifer has decades to go before there are any issues. I literally own property in the absolute worst part of the county for groundwater!

I like harvesting rainwater - but am curious how you're going to fill a 30K gallon tank. Is there a low spot you can pump from?

I have four buildings here, and they all have steel roofs (asphalt shingles and potable water are not compatible). The roofs total about 7,000 square feet, so about 7" of rain will fill it. When it rains here, it really rains. We can get 7" in a few days when it rains. My neighbor just put the same size tank in last fall. We didn't get much rain until early spring. In April and May, we got 14" and his tank is full now.

The way the system works is the gutters collect the water and put it into PVC pipes that go below ground (if you look at the extreme right of the picture I posted above, you can see one of the collection pipes at the corner of the house (we don't have gutters, yet, so it just stops where the downspout will enter once the gutters are installed.) They converge into one pipe that then comes out of the ground and goes up into the top of the tank. The tank is located at a lower elevation than the buildings, so gravity does its thing to move the water. To get it in the house requires a pump, just like a well does. Our system is a little more complicated because the buildings are at different elevations, so I actually have three tanks and will pump water between them, as needed.

A well around here is about $40,000 to $50,000 these days, and my rainwater system is about the same cost. I would just go directly to rainwater collection if doing it over, obviously.
 
The communists in my state say they own the rainwater. just saying .

I'm aware. In fact, I remember when they changed the law (maybe a decade ago) to allow you to collect 110 gallons (as Zorba said, two barrels). I wanted to retire to a mountain state, and we spent several years researching and travelling to decide. I believe none of them allow rainwater collection. We've abandoned the desire to relocate. Instead, we plan to travel for 5 or 6 months and stay here for the winter.
 
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Not in my area. I'm near the upper reaches of a three-layer aquifer - The Trinity Aquifer. In addition, there are numerous faults around me that prevent the aquifer from flowing properly in the area (it's like a fixed pool). The Upper and Lower Trinity layers are very sketchy in this area, and the Middle Trinity, where my well gets its water, is being over-pumped. Even if I could go deeper, it would be cost prohibitive. Wells in the Lower Trinity, a few miles east of me, cost about $120,000 because they are 1,300 feet deep.

When our well was drilled in 2006, the water level was 565' below ground surface. I have an ultrasonic meter on my well head, and as of today, it's 732' below ground surface. The pump is just above the casing screens, sitting at 760'. So, in 18 years, the level has dropped 167', or 9.3' per year. With 28' of water column above my pump, that means I have about 3 years until no more well water. :mad:

I've been the elected Board Member for my precinct of our county's groundwater conservation district for about six years because I have a strong interest in understanding our aquifers. On the other side of our county, the very same aquifer has decades to go before there are any issues. I literally own property in the absolute worst part of the county for groundwater!



I have four buildings here, and they all have steel roofs (asphalt shingles and potable water are not compatible). The roofs total about 7,000 square feet, so about 7" of rain will fill it. When it rains here, it really rains. We can get 7" in a few days when it rains. My neighbor just put the same size tank in last fall. We didn't get much rain until early spring. In April and May, we got 14" and his tank is full now.

The way the system works is the gutters collect the water and put it into PVC pipes that go below ground (if you look at the extreme right of the picture I posted above, you can see one of the collection pipes at the corner of the house (we don't have gutters, yet, so it just stops where the downspout will enter once the gutters are installed.) They converge into one pipe that then comes out of the ground and goes up into the top of the tank. The tank is located at a lower elevation than the buildings, so gravity does its thing to move the water. To get it in the house requires a pump, just like a well does. Our system is a little more complicated because the buildings are at different elevations, so I actually have three tanks and will pump water between them, as needed.

A well around here is about $40,000 to $50,000 these days, and my rainwater system is about the same cost. I would just go directly to rainwater collection if doing it over, obviously.

That's cool! I'm just getting into small scale rainwater harvesting here as water in Florida is plentiful - and expen$ive because of the sewer fees. I'm using it to water my new garden, learning as I go. We're just coming to the end of our dry season, so it will be interesting to see how far 110 gallons goes next fall/winter. It goes for months without any rain at all, then its every day for the rest of the year. One thing I'm looking at is recovering my A/C condensate - that's about an extra 10-15 gallons a day. That, and I know I'll need more rain barrels.
 
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Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator