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![]() wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 2:57 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 10, 2:54 pm, wrote: On Jun 10, 1:53 pm, wrote: On Jun 10, 1:10 pm, wrote: On Jun 10, 11:44 am, wrote: On Jun 10, 10:42 am, wrote: On Jun 10, 10:29 am, wrote: On Jun 10, 8:50 am, wrote: On Jun 10, 7:58 am, wrote: On Jun 9, 5:12 pm, wrote: On Jun 9, 2:25 pm, wrote: Hey, my daughter just called (I'm away from the house for awhile) and said a Rowdy Mouse T-shirt came! She really, really likes it!! She's very thankful to have it, so thanks, dude! The mouse says "whatever..." ![]() So she asked if you owned a race car, told her it was MX racing. Now, here she is with both arms in casts up to her pits, and her response was, "can we go to Conn. to go MXing?!!! That's my girl! Tell here, anytime.! But tell here I require full pads, even a 96 degrees like sunday afternoon.. It's not reaally that bad, unless you slow down ![]() visit in the meantime. RowdyMouseRacing.com is where we have a couple of vids Some pics here http://trip-reports.com/coppermine/t...s.php?album=10 and this is one of the tracks we ride is ctmotocross.com Have fun, hurry up before we tear up all the equipment ![]() She's got a lot of her dad in her, she loves speed. I've done my share of MXing, I had a Suzuki TM250 among others. Of course my first was a Honda Super 90, made for street but we used them in the woods.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, hurry up, the new brake hub will be here thursday.. man, If it ain't gas in the boat, it's parts on the bikes... yikes! Heeeeere comes summer!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I like wrenching on them as much as running them. Same with cars. When we had old beater bikes for the woods, man did we cobble some stuff up!!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Wrenching on these is the easy part. Finding parts that can be modified to fit is another. We don't ride red, yellow, blue, green, or $$orange$$, so parts require some r+d ![]() I think I will require is welding, or just find a cheap local shop that is willing to barter..- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Stick welding is pretty easy to learn, but if you are going to weld aluminum and such, things get harder! I grew up in the country on a farm, so when things broke down you didn't take it to a shop, you fixed it yourself. We had everything but a machine shop, so that's the only outside sort of work we had anybody else do.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would just like to be able to lay on metal, re-enforce frames, stick steel to steel, etc... Aluminum and other alloy work I knew was a little more complicated. Stick welding? Is that gas, like torches?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - No, arc welding. I like AC myself: http://tinyurl.com/43pe42 Now my uncle the aviation machinist, was a gas welding god! He could do anything with an acetylene torch set! For great arc welding you need a DC machine. Much nicer welds. Better selection of rods. Most AC machines use 6013 low hydrogen rod. I grew up in a machine shop, so learned to arc weld before I was 10 years old. As well as using milling machines, lathes, etc. So the people who taught me to weld were extremely good welders. Most had learned the trade building Liberty and Victory ships at the Richmond, CA Kaiser yards. Later in my teenage years I met the inventor of Heliarc, Russell Meredith. He lived near where I did and Linde Air had a junior engineer with him at all times to write down any ideas he came up with.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - There's almost as much variety in rod for AC as there is for DC. I learned to weld at about the same age as you! AC welding is better at removing impurities and also deep penetration. Then why are all the good commercial welders DC? |
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