- Location
- Michigan
I like that color, and those wheels look soooo good.
Welcome back, looks like a nice rig.
Welcome back, looks like a nice rig.
Looks good, but what's up with the MT/R's on the rear, the tread looks "finer" than the fronts.
Had a pretty good first week:
New NAPA Legend Battery
Fixed battery lugs
Broken factory roof rack removed
Dents somewhat taken out of the roof
Repainted the roof part where the rack was ripped out
New power steering hose
Factory air box installed
Rear hatch struts
Turn down on the semi broken exhaust.
Also a pretty good weekend:
New front motor mount... Old was in 3 pieces!
Installed a hood safety latch from pick a part
Soldered on a new aux. fan connector from pick a part
Installed Pats roof gutter protection system
Rotated tires
License plate light
Interior dome light
Third brake light
Battery hold down from the pick a part
Sitting next to Pats
Close view of the tree guards
Sampling the expedition rig setup
And another
Big"glad to be back"Hank
i like those roof sliders, kinda want to ditch my basket on top
I literally LOL'ed at this.You are dead to me.
http://www.naxja.org/forum/showthread.php?t=984963&highlight=toys
here ya go Nate. This was from a few years back, before they were repainted and cleaned up.
The budget for my Uhaul toterhome conversion is about that. We were going to buy just a trailer, but that still left me borrowing a 1/2 ton tow rig. Uhaul (Mehaul?) is not much more and solves all of those problems. And I'll have a nice dry, heated space to sleep/work on stuff at the campground.Wish I had the cash to buy one of those HEMMTs! They are truly badass. My 5 ton should do ok once I finish putting it back together though. I get horrible gas mileage but will still be dollars ahead on a diesel pickup + trailer for several years since I only have about 3500 into the rig. Might be 4k including the steel I had to buy to build loading ramps.
Josh had some, they worked well offroad and in the rocks, weren't horrible on the street. I drove it from CO to OH anyway on those tires.Retreads are in the rear. Hopefully everything that says good year will be gone soon! I'm really liking the idea of Firestone Destination M/T's.
I can see pats hand prints all over the side of that tree guard Gene!![]()
Thanks to all for sharing your brake info...Heres what I'm gonna try.Installing a brake booster and pedal assy from a 98 XJ.This will allow me to use a Master cylinder from a 1999 Dodge Ram.
Nick
have you tried gutting the proportioning valve?
ugh. agreed x1000. I hate getting the old cap out and cleaning the pads up more than installing the new one.have you tried gutting the proportioning valve?
a side note, I hate recapping PCB's. it's so PITA.
Mine is ffuuuuuuuuuuNope,I havn't ruled anything out..I'll add your idea to the list.
Nick
ugh. agreed x1000. I hate getting the old cap out and cleaning the pads up more than installing the new one.
When I can, I clip the part off and then use heat and a quick blast of compressed air (if I've no idea where the compressor is, as usual, that means I blow hard on it myself, make sure to put the iron on the OTHER side of the board if using this method!) to blow what's left of the lead and most of the solder out of the hole. Then I clean up with solder wick and install the new part. Caps are a pain though because there usually isn't space under them to get the clippers in.I cheat, I use my desoldering iron, heat the pad up from the back and stick the lead from the new one into the pad and up into the desoldering iron tip. Saves all that tedious work cleaning up the holes and making the new ones go in proper. It's still PITA.
When I can, I clip the part off and then use heat and a quick blast of compressed air (if I've no idea where the compressor is, as usual, that means I blow hard on it myself, make sure to put the iron on the OTHER side of the board if using this method!) to blow what's left of the lead and most of the solder out of the hole. Then I clean up with solder wick and install the new part. Caps are a pain though because there usually isn't space under them to get the clippers in.
Last time I did that it was on a shitty quality PCB and I ripped the pads out. It was a multilayer board, so no repairs were economical enough... into the trash it went! Been reluctant to use that method again since then.just jerk the caps off with a pair of pliers. The leads will pull right out of most of them, leaves you with a PCB that just has a bunch of leads sticking out. You'll still have to clip them, because most of the time they have flat bits in the cap.
If it were anything more than a video card, or something that I REALLY cared about and wanted to be clean I would use a solder pump and get the holes opened up and clean, but to be honest, this was on a Geforce 6200 video card, so it's not the end of the world if it looks a little nasty around the caps. A dab of flux and the old solder sticks to the caps just fine and voila, done.
Last time I did that it was on a shitty quality PCB and I ripped the pads out. It was a multilayer board, so no repairs were economical enough... into the trash it went! Been reluctant to use that method again since then.