Sponsored

What did you do WITH your Ranger today?

subquark

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Jan 28, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
4,544
Reaction score
23,071
Location
Portsmouth, NH
Website
subQuark.com
Vehicle(s)
Soupie! Race Red '22 XL 101A Scab 4X2 w/steelies
Occupation
game publisher
It's under control :whew:

I was amazed how nice that thing worked. Could use a damper on the rotation. That bearing has no resistance. The strap is just above the center of gravity and makes it easy go from vertical to horizontal. Thanks for sharing yours.
That's great because my wife and I really enjoy your videos. =)
Sponsored

 

AzScorpion

Moderator
First Name
Dave
Joined
Jul 25, 2019
Threads
335
Messages
26,279
Reaction score
132,361
Location
Back Home In AZ!
Vehicle(s)
2023 Ford Ranger Tremor
Occupation
Retired...Full Time Slacker
Love the strap (and your chain adjustment plate). =)

Great use of your crane with awesome pics!

I'm telling you, this is the next big "damper" item for the forum! =D
:stop: Lets not get carried away now!?

It's really nice and all but there's only one damper on here and that's the original DeeZee.??

And here I thought you were going to be my next damper salesman:question:

1729252959953-px.webp
 

Fordup

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ed
Joined
Jun 3, 2022
Threads
17
Messages
1,941
Reaction score
9,596
Location
NY
Website
youtube.com
Vehicle(s)
2022 Black Lariat Crew , 1966 Chevrolet Biscayne
Occupation
Retired YouTube Creator
:stop: Lets not get carried away now!?

It's really nice and all but there's only one damper on here and that's the original DeeZee.??

And here I thought you were going to be my next damper salesman:question:

1729252959953-px.jpg
David actually works for Jeff. Should get a reward for being Amazon's salesman of the century :champagne:
 

AzScorpion

Moderator
First Name
Dave
Joined
Jul 25, 2019
Threads
335
Messages
26,279
Reaction score
132,361
Location
Back Home In AZ!
Vehicle(s)
2023 Ford Ranger Tremor
Occupation
Retired...Full Time Slacker
David actually works for Jeff. Should get a reward for being Amazon's salesman of the century :champagne:
I heard Bezos named his new yacht the S.S. Subquark :shock:?

1729254878560-yw.jpg
 

fjwlobo

Well-Known Member
First Name
Fred
Joined
Dec 4, 2020
Threads
2
Messages
296
Reaction score
1,142
Location
Brooklyn Park, Maryland
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ranger Lariat FX4 SCREW
I heard Bezos named his new yacht the S.S. Subquark :shock:?

1729254878560-yw.jpg
Is he getting rid of it and need it hauled to the dump? :giggle:

@subquark will be ecstatic as it will take many trips. :like::clap:

It would also give him an excuse to get a trailer :crackup:
 


acsnowrider

Well-Known Member
First Name
JOHN
Joined
Jan 14, 2020
Threads
1
Messages
158
Reaction score
311
Location
FL
Vehicle(s)
2019 RANGER XLT
Occupation
RETIRED FORD ELECTRONIC/DRIVEABILITY TECH
Vehicle Showcase
1
I WENT THRU A FORCE THREE CAT HURRICANE!!! The weatherstation (possibly impacted by flying debris), recorded 76 MPH when it came off the roof, shearing midway up the mount. The guy across the street, his stayed up, and recorded 126MPH on site. The Ranger withstood this disaster effectively, and thank goodness, carried us thru with no issues!:like:
Roof was cabled down to concrete, (you can see the guy wires), and attached thru upper beams with 3/8 eye bolts--eye bolt were "Pulled out straight", during storm!!!!
DSC02573.012.JPG
 

Doc

Well-Known Member
First Name
Doc
Joined
Dec 24, 2018
Threads
94
Messages
5,769
Reaction score
23,241
Location
Live oak fla
Vehicle(s)
2026 5.0 Mustang GT, 2024 Ranger STX
Occupation
Retired
I WENT THRU A FORCE THREE CAT HURRICANE!!! The weatherstation (possibly impacted by flying debris), recorded 76 MPH when it came off the roof, shearing midway up the mount. The guy across the street, his stayed up, and recorded 126MPH on site. The Ranger withstood this disaster effectively, and thank goodness, carried us thru with no issues!:like:
Roof was cabled down to concrete, (you can see the guy wires), and attached thru upper beams with 3/8 eye bolts--eye bolt were "Pulled out straight", during storm!!!!
DSC02573.012.JPG
Mee Too .. ripped the roof off my shed ..
 

subquark

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Jan 28, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
4,544
Reaction score
23,071
Location
Portsmouth, NH
Website
subQuark.com
Vehicle(s)
Soupie! Race Red '22 XL 101A Scab 4X2 w/steelies
Occupation
game publisher
Ugh, I've taken 2 one-week vacations this year, the first was to tear down an old ceiling, add insulation, and drywall it (2 bedrooms and a stairwell). My craptacular shoulders sure let me know how they felt about that project.

Now, on the Friday of this week-long vacation, I'm nearing the completion of an equally exciting project, new floor, commode, and vanity. You probably saw the million pound toilet and vanity pics, which also pleased my shoulders.

Today, my knees are also screaming at me, so I didn’t get much done (pulled up half the old plywood atop diagonal planking yesterday).

But I still did a trucky thing, picked up a sheet of 5/8" plywood and a 2x6 to sister up some joists. Had sLowe's cut the plywood to close to the final size which allowed it to fit the Soupie's bed. =)

1000003682.jpg
 

ControlNode

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Nov 29, 2021
Threads
16
Messages
1,709
Reaction score
3,642
Location
Eastern NC
Vehicle(s)
84 Civic "2000S"/16 Focus RS/21 Ranger XLT
Occupation
Computers
Ugh, I've taken 2 one-week vacations this year, the first was to tear down an old ceiling, add insulation, and drywall it (2 bedrooms and a stairwell). My craptacular shoulders sure let me know how they felt about that project.

Now, on the Friday of this week-long vacation, I'm nearing the completion of an equally exciting project, new floor, commode, and vanity. You probably saw the million pound toilet and vanity pics, which also pleased my shoulders.

Today, my knees are also screaming at me, so I didn’t get much done (pulled up half the old plywood atop diagonal planking yesterday).

But I still did a trucky thing, picked up a sheet of 5/8" plywood and a 2x6 to sister up some joists. Had sLowe's cut the plywood to close to the final size which allowed it to fit the Soupie's bed. =)

1000003682.jpg
Redoing the floor sucks. I had a drain leak in the wall and ruin the floor in the kitchen. Floor was one surface from the kitchen, through the dining area and into the laundry/utility room. I had to remove all the lower cabinets and a wall between the dining area and laundry room to remove the floor. 1960 construction with 3 layers of flooring on the plywood, but that bottom layer looked like the asbestos stuff, so I used a magnet to find the nails though all of those layers and removed the plywood sheets with all the flooring layers still on them, minus the holes I punched through to get the nails out. The nails were the forged masonry nails. I used an automotive floor jack to lift them and find any of the nails I missed. Under the plywood most of the 1x8 tongue and groove was good, but I found as area there the plywood was replace, but the tongue and groove under it was not and was rotted in the laundry area. So, I had to replace a bit more there than I had planned on. I replaced the 3/4" ply with 1/2" ply so I still have 1 1/4" structure than did a leveling concrete pour with metal lathe for substrate and installing tile on that. My whole body hurts most days from that.
 

subquark

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Jan 28, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
4,544
Reaction score
23,071
Location
Portsmouth, NH
Website
subQuark.com
Vehicle(s)
Soupie! Race Red '22 XL 101A Scab 4X2 w/steelies
Occupation
game publisher
Redoing the floor sucks. I had a drain leak in the wall and ruin the floor in the kitchen. Floor was one surface from the kitchen, through the dining area and into the laundry/utility room. I had to remove all the lower cabinets and a wall between the dining area and laundry room to remove the floor. 1960 construction with 3 layers of flooring on the plywood, but that bottom layer looked like the asbestos stuff, so I used a magnet to find the nails though all of those layers and removed the plywood sheets with all the flooring layers still on them, minus the holes I punched through to get the nails out. The nails were the forged masonry nails. I used an automotive floor jack to lift them and find any of the nails I missed. Under the plywood most of the 1x8 tongue and groove was good, but I found as area there the plywood was replace, but the tongue and groove under it was not and was rotted in the laundry area. So, I had to replace a bit more there than I had planned on. I replaced the 3/4" ply with 1/2" ply so I still have 1 1/4" structure than did a leveling concrete pour with metal lathe for substrate and installing tile on that. My whole body hurts most days from that.
Wow, I'm in no place to moan and groan, your situation was far more challenging. For 10 years I accepted that the flange was cracked per home inspection and 2 plumbers looking from the basement.

I changed the wax ring a few times over the years and changed the toilet too a few yeats ago (it was a beautiful 1950's mint green!).

Now that I became a master plumber because I used a twist-n-set flange in our basement bathroom, and I've watched every YouTube video on flanges, I now see that this current flange is too high. There's no crack and I'll cut off 1/2" with a tiny cut-off saw.

LOL, the good thing out of these two projects, which are way out of our wheelhouse, is that I've replaced many ancient power tools with easy-to-wield M12 ones. =)

BUT ... @ControlNode you are far more skilled in your work. That's really clever with the magnet and I think you handled the asbestos cleverly.

And I think they sell recovered forged nails on eBay as haunted coffin nails for wanna be witches! =D

I tell ya, if a witch could deal with my aching body, I'd go for it. =p

Thanks for the inspiration, I needed a good kick in the seat! =D

drilling out the lead but the oakum was long gone
PXL_20241017_193206251.jpg


M12 cut-off saw works great
PXL_20241017_195042502.MP.jpg
 
Last edited:

Fordup

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ed
Joined
Jun 3, 2022
Threads
17
Messages
1,941
Reaction score
9,596
Location
NY
Website
youtube.com
Vehicle(s)
2022 Black Lariat Crew , 1966 Chevrolet Biscayne
Occupation
Retired YouTube Creator
But I still did a trucky thing, picked up a sheet of 5/8" plywood and a 2x6 to sister up some joists. Had sLowe's cut the plywood to close to the final size which allowed it to fit the Soupie's bed. =)

1000003682.jpg
I would not quite call that fits :inspect:. That's like me putting on a tight pair of pants and saying they fit with my belly hanging over my belt :D
 

shovelhd

Well-Known Member
First Name
Chris
Joined
Jul 16, 2024
Threads
3
Messages
243
Reaction score
688
Location
Cape Cod, MA
Vehicle(s)
2021 Ford Ranger Lariat
Occupation
retired electrical engineer
A while back, in the old house in western MA, We decided on a complete mudroom, kitchen, half bath, and foyer renovation. The mudroom and half bath had commercial ceramic tile on the floors that was in great shape. However, the kitchen and foyer, about 200sf, had what was essentially wall tile on luan over a 3/4" ply subfloor. Rather than hire someone or rent a demo hammer, my son and I set up my pancake compressor and an air chisel and went at it. He was having so much fun being Demo Man that I just him have at it while I cleaned up behind him. It took us two days. It took another two days to pull out all of the loose subfloor nails and screw it down properly, and replace sketchy sections along the way. On top of that, I put 1/4" Hardie Backer, screwed and cemented, and then did the smart thing and had a tile shop install high traffic ceramic tile.
 

pbethel

Well-Known Member
First Name
Patrick
Joined
Aug 9, 2021
Threads
5
Messages
836
Reaction score
2,093
Location
kingman az
Vehicle(s)
2021 Ranger XLT Sport 4x4, 2016 Ford t250 Transit
Occupation
retired
I'm running out of big trees so the Milwaukees work good for me. Wish there was a standardized battery that worked with all brands to make switching easy. Most my trees are under 24 inches and that's all my sawmill will handle. When I started milling I designed and built an automatic log arch that is only good for up to 24 inches. Here's an old video
Handling the logs with tiny equipment is the hardest part. Nothing like wood heat. We love our Jotul Oslo. Sorry for hijacking this thread. Back to Ranger stuff.
google 'ceenr'
 

AzScorpion

Moderator
First Name
Dave
Joined
Jul 25, 2019
Threads
335
Messages
26,279
Reaction score
132,361
Location
Back Home In AZ!
Vehicle(s)
2023 Ford Ranger Tremor
Occupation
Retired...Full Time Slacker
A while back, in the old house in western MA, We decided on a complete mudroom, kitchen, half bath, and foyer renovation. The mudroom and half bath had commercial ceramic tile on the floors that was in great shape. However, the kitchen and foyer, about 200sf, had what was essentially wall tile on luan over a 3/4" ply subfloor. Rather than hire someone or rent a demo hammer, my son and I set up my pancake compressor and an air chisel and went at it. He was having so much fun being Demo Man that I just him have at it while I cleaned up behind him. It took us two days. It took another two days to pull out all of the loose subfloor nails and screw it down properly, and replace sketchy sections along the way. On top of that, I put 1/4" Hardie Backer, screwed and cemented, and then did the smart thing and had a tile shop install high traffic ceramic tile.
Where in WMA were you? I grew up in Wilbraham and lived there for 50 years then built my 2 houses in Monson before moving to AZ in 2015. When I remodeled my bath I did the tile demo myself but only had a flat bar and ice scrapper. ?‍♂ I swear they put 5,000 staples in that darn luan and I was pulling them out for hours. I let me buddy (who's a remodeler/builder) finish the rest. I could make more money at my normal job and it was easier work. lol
Sponsored

 
 








Top