What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
-
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 277
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 2:25 pm
- Town: Harkerville WC
- Vehicle: 1990 Hilux 4Y
- Real Name: Peter
What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Hi Forumites,
All of a sudden this forum has just died a sudden death. I am wondering if it because no one is at work and Hiluxers are maybe just too cheapskate to use their private internet connections, or is that they are so community minded that they have no time left to post? Other forums that I partake in are spiking, presumably as people have more time on their hands. Me, I am looking forward to the opportunity to catch up on plenty of home projects that I have been putting off for ages. Cleaning up and organising my workshop, for one
All of a sudden this forum has just died a sudden death. I am wondering if it because no one is at work and Hiluxers are maybe just too cheapskate to use their private internet connections, or is that they are so community minded that they have no time left to post? Other forums that I partake in are spiking, presumably as people have more time on their hands. Me, I am looking forward to the opportunity to catch up on plenty of home projects that I have been putting off for ages. Cleaning up and organising my workshop, for one
- The Legend
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 3558
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 6:53 am
- Town: Kempton Park
- Vehicle: 1994 2.2 4y 4x4 D/C Toyota Hi-Lux
- Real Name: Dawie
- Club VHF Licence: X93-
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Hi Peter , i am also worried why the forum is so quiet.
“A BAD DAYS FISHING IS BETTER THAN A GOOD DAYS WORK”
“Do what you do so well, that the people that see you do it, will want to see you do it again,and will bring others to see you do it”
“Do what you do so well, that the people that see you do it, will want to see you do it again,and will bring others to see you do it”
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Yep, also thought that there would be more traffic here since everyone sitting at home .......
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Ja Nee. Is dead quiet., not even somebody splitting on his neighbour for not staying inside.
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
-
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 277
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 2:25 pm
- Town: Harkerville WC
- Vehicle: 1990 Hilux 4Y
- Real Name: Peter
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Ah, good to see some of us are still alive. Thanks for the responses, and let's hope everything gets back to normal soon. Stay safe
- Family_Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 12699
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 10:09 am
- Town: Klerksdorp
- Vehicle: Hilux DC SFA, Hilux 2.7 DC, Hilux 2.7 SC, Prado 95 VX
- Real Name: Eric
- Club VHF Licence: HC101
- Location: Klerksdorp, NW
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
People are busy with other tasks at home. Yesterday - before the damn WACS snapped yet again - I updated my old workshop computer from Windows 7 to Windows 10. I figured this would be a case in futility, as the PC was built in 2011 and features only 4GB RAM and a dual-core CPU. Yet it worked perfectly, took a while to do with all the updates (as it always does).
Today I installed Foxit, Free Office, Avast, Networx, and tried to install Malwarebytes but the internet problem reared its ugly head and my download conked out. Internet is working fine now though, will continue tomorrow.
This computer is only used for anything technical where I might require a schematic or other servicing information. The graphics display is by means on a 32" TV via HDMI.
Why the upgrade to Win10? Figured I might as well try it although I am a fan of Windows 7, by far one of the best OS's that MS had ever released. But I was keen to see whether the upgrade would still be free - it was! But I imagine this only applies if your previous versions of Windows OS was legal as well, mine was.
-F_D
Today I installed Foxit, Free Office, Avast, Networx, and tried to install Malwarebytes but the internet problem reared its ugly head and my download conked out. Internet is working fine now though, will continue tomorrow.
This computer is only used for anything technical where I might require a schematic or other servicing information. The graphics display is by means on a 32" TV via HDMI.
Why the upgrade to Win10? Figured I might as well try it although I am a fan of Windows 7, by far one of the best OS's that MS had ever released. But I was keen to see whether the upgrade would still be free - it was! But I imagine this only applies if your previous versions of Windows OS was legal as well, mine was.
-F_D
White Fang: 1999 2.7i DC Raider 4x4
Bull Dog: 1987 4Y-EFI 2.2 DC 4x4
Pra Dog: 1998 Prado VX 3.4
Hound Dog: 2000 2.7i SC 4x4
One Staffie, One Jack Russell, One Ring Neck Screecher, 17 Fish of questionable heritage
-
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 5271
- Joined: Sun Aug 19, 2007 10:43 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '02 'Lux KZ
- Real Name: Thabo
- Club VHF Licence: x223
- Location: Garsfontein
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Ja wel,
What I have seen/experienced, Friday everybody was just sleeping in, relaxing, knowing there is another 20 days ahead to work on the honey-do list.
Saturday there was a bit more movement but still very quiet.
Today I heard more movement and saw a car or 2 pass. I reinstalled the reconditioned idler arm on the new old Hilux, installed a new speedo drive gear and new oil in the transfer case - although it is not the recommended 85w-140, since I only had 80w-90. Will change this as soon as I can smuggle the correct oil from somewhere.
Tomorrow, I guess some might mow the lawn, wash cars, etc.
I will attend to 2 plumbing emergencies - one is at an abattoir where there main water supply pipe has a nasty crack that has forced shut their operation until fixed. Then off to a pressure valve that is spraying water all over the property.
Somewhere in the next 19 days I have a mess of a garage to sort out, install shelves, reorganize, etc.
What I have seen/experienced, Friday everybody was just sleeping in, relaxing, knowing there is another 20 days ahead to work on the honey-do list.
Saturday there was a bit more movement but still very quiet.
Today I heard more movement and saw a car or 2 pass. I reinstalled the reconditioned idler arm on the new old Hilux, installed a new speedo drive gear and new oil in the transfer case - although it is not the recommended 85w-140, since I only had 80w-90. Will change this as soon as I can smuggle the correct oil from somewhere.
Tomorrow, I guess some might mow the lawn, wash cars, etc.
I will attend to 2 plumbing emergencies - one is at an abattoir where there main water supply pipe has a nasty crack that has forced shut their operation until fixed. Then off to a pressure valve that is spraying water all over the property.
Somewhere in the next 19 days I have a mess of a garage to sort out, install shelves, reorganize, etc.
'02 KZ 'Lux. Cooled. Chipped. Onca'd. Cherished!
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
-
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 5271
- Joined: Sun Aug 19, 2007 10:43 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '02 'Lux KZ
- Real Name: Thabo
- Club VHF Licence: x223
- Location: Garsfontein
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
O ja, I did make use of the forums search function to see the oil capacity.
'02 KZ 'Lux. Cooled. Chipped. Onca'd. Cherished!
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
-
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 5271
- Joined: Sun Aug 19, 2007 10:43 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '02 'Lux KZ
- Real Name: Thabo
- Club VHF Licence: x223
- Location: Garsfontein
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
And Peter,
I was on holiday in Wittedrift during December 2018/2019. If only I knew...
I was on holiday in Wittedrift during December 2018/2019. If only I knew...
'02 KZ 'Lux. Cooled. Chipped. Onca'd. Cherished!
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
-
- LR 4WD Full Lockers
- Posts: 601
- Joined: Thu Jan 24, 2008 10:31 pm
- Town: Gordons Bay
- Vehicle: 2011 Hilux DC 3.0 D4D
- Real Name: Luke
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Family Dog, you should install an SSD harddrive,, expensive but so worth it. Makes an old machine feel faster then the new machines you can buy.Family_Dog wrote: ↑Sun Mar 29, 2020 8:01 pm People are busy with other tasks at home. Yesterday - before the damn WACS snapped yet again - I updated my old workshop computer from Windows 7 to Windows 10. I figured this would be a case in futility, as the PC was built in 2011 and features only 4GB RAM and a dual-core CPU. Yet it worked perfectly, took a while to do with all the updates (as it always does).
Today I installed Foxit, Free Office, Avast, Networx, and tried to install Malwarebytes but the internet problem reared its ugly head and my download conked out. Internet is working fine now though, will continue tomorrow.
This computer is only used for anything technical where I might require a schematic or other servicing information. The graphics display is by means on a 32" TV via HDMI.
Why the upgrade to Win10? Figured I might as well try it although I am a fan of Windows 7, by far one of the best OS's that MS had ever released. But I was keen to see whether the upgrade would still be free - it was! But I imagine this only applies if your previous versions of Windows OS was legal as well, mine was.
-F_D
With each replacement of parts, a car slowly becomes Chinese.
- Family_Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 12699
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 10:09 am
- Town: Klerksdorp
- Vehicle: Hilux DC SFA, Hilux 2.7 DC, Hilux 2.7 SC, Prado 95 VX
- Real Name: Eric
- Club VHF Licence: HC101
- Location: Klerksdorp, NW
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Luke, this particular PC is not mission critical, only for workshop use so not a consideration.
I have considered it with my main PC at home, but somehow I always have that nagging doubt about reliability issues with a SSD. Hard drives on average do me 7 years before I replace them and in all this time I have only had one HD die on me by itself. I do believe SSDs are more reliable now than the early ones, but still...?
Remember, I still own old Hiluxes, my newest model is a 2000 model while Bulldog is a 1987 model, yet it just keeps plodding on... See where I'm going here?
If ever I decide on a new Home Desktop, I figure I will then more than likely give it a go.
-F_D
I have considered it with my main PC at home, but somehow I always have that nagging doubt about reliability issues with a SSD. Hard drives on average do me 7 years before I replace them and in all this time I have only had one HD die on me by itself. I do believe SSDs are more reliable now than the early ones, but still...?
Remember, I still own old Hiluxes, my newest model is a 2000 model while Bulldog is a 1987 model, yet it just keeps plodding on... See where I'm going here?
If ever I decide on a new Home Desktop, I figure I will then more than likely give it a go.
-F_D
White Fang: 1999 2.7i DC Raider 4x4
Bull Dog: 1987 4Y-EFI 2.2 DC 4x4
Pra Dog: 1998 Prado VX 3.4
Hound Dog: 2000 2.7i SC 4x4
One Staffie, One Jack Russell, One Ring Neck Screecher, 17 Fish of questionable heritage
-
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 277
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 2:25 pm
- Town: Harkerville WC
- Vehicle: 1990 Hilux 4Y
- Real Name: Peter
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Hi Thabo, bummer, if we survive this crisis, maybe I'll see you at the end of this year.Thabogrobler wrote: ↑Sun Mar 29, 2020 9:29 pm And Peter,
I was on holiday in Wittedrift during December 2018/2019. If only I knew...
Ditto on the SSD story. I have a tablet running windows. It can only accept a maximum of 2Gb RAM and came out with Win 7. Lately I tried to upgrade to Win 10, but just wouldn't accept it. My local computer shop swapped out the old hard drive for a 512Gb SSD, and viola, working like a dream
- Tim86
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 299
- Joined: Tue Apr 12, 2016 10:33 pm
- Town: Cape Town
- Vehicle: Hilux
- Real Name: Tim
Re: Forum come to a standstill
So far the lux has got a full valet.
Next up is service time (bought all the consumables the day before shutdown), fix choke, paint shocks black, and install some lekker diff breathers.
This puppy is going to be glowing by the time three weeks are up!
Next up is service time (bought all the consumables the day before shutdown), fix choke, paint shocks black, and install some lekker diff breathers.
This puppy is going to be glowing by the time three weeks are up!
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
My list is so long I think 3 weeks will be too short.
Today I sprayed down the whole house with high pressure washer.
Tomorrow will start painting. Will paint outside, inside, boundry walls, etc.
Have two balconies to chop off the tiles, re seal and put new tiles.
Been finding excuses not to do it for the past 2 years, now I have to do it.
Told myself that if I can finish this before the 3 weeks are over I can then play with my toys.
Today I sprayed down the whole house with high pressure washer.
Tomorrow will start painting. Will paint outside, inside, boundry walls, etc.
Have two balconies to chop off the tiles, re seal and put new tiles.
Been finding excuses not to do it for the past 2 years, now I have to do it.
Told myself that if I can finish this before the 3 weeks are over I can then play with my toys.
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
-
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 5271
- Joined: Sun Aug 19, 2007 10:43 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '02 'Lux KZ
- Real Name: Thabo
- Club VHF Licence: x223
- Location: Garsfontein
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Pieter,
Maybe change this threads name to 'My 3 week working holiday' or something?
Today was a buggerup of note. Only some of my suplliers is open and only certain hours.
One from 08:00 to 09:00 and again 14:00 to 15:00
The other, Monday, Wednesday and Friday 08:00 to 10:00.
And the biggest 09:00 to 12:00.
Small domestic spares are plenty all over but the bigger commercial stuff is pretty scares now.
Now imagine I have to check stock with the guys who only open at 09:00 but can get it as the guy who closes at 09:00.... and then when.on site figuring out it is the wrong size!
Today I drove more than 250km just to get the correct parts(even the client went to fetch spares at one point) and still.could not finish tje job. Hopefull tomorrow will be more productive.
Maybe change this threads name to 'My 3 week working holiday' or something?
Today was a buggerup of note. Only some of my suplliers is open and only certain hours.
One from 08:00 to 09:00 and again 14:00 to 15:00
The other, Monday, Wednesday and Friday 08:00 to 10:00.
And the biggest 09:00 to 12:00.
Small domestic spares are plenty all over but the bigger commercial stuff is pretty scares now.
Now imagine I have to check stock with the guys who only open at 09:00 but can get it as the guy who closes at 09:00.... and then when.on site figuring out it is the wrong size!
Today I drove more than 250km just to get the correct parts(even the client went to fetch spares at one point) and still.could not finish tje job. Hopefull tomorrow will be more productive.
'02 KZ 'Lux. Cooled. Chipped. Onca'd. Cherished!
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
If you are a diesel fan, raise your hand.
If you aren't raising your hand, raise your standards!
A 4x4 is merely a machine that enables you to get stuck further away from civilization.
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Peter, is it OK with you if we change your thread's name?
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
-
- Low Range 4WD
- Posts: 140
- Joined: Wed Jan 06, 2016 2:50 pm
- Town: Brackenfell
- Vehicle: Toyota Hilux D/cab 3.0KZ-TE
- Real Name: Jaco
- Club VHF Licence: HC355
- Location: Brackenfell
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Dink die manne is almal besig om aan hulle Hilux'e te werk! Verander, verbeter etc
-
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 277
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 2:25 pm
- Town: Harkerville WC
- Vehicle: 1990 Hilux 4Y
- Real Name: Peter
Re: Forum come to a standstill
Pieter, absolutely, I think it is a good idea. I always find it difficult deciding on a topic name and this one was just the 1st to come to mind, so please, go aheadpietpetoors wrote: ↑Mon Mar 30, 2020 9:04 pm Peter, is it OK with you if we change your thread's name?
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Done.
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
- Stef
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 3125
- Joined: Mon Jan 25, 2010 12:54 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '98 LTD
- Real Name: Stefan
- Club VHF Licence: X107
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
cleaned the 1st garage, found a lot of electrical stuff I didn't know I had...got bored with that so carried on building my new sliding gate but ran out of steel. Took a chainsaw to a real pain in the behind tree, that was kinda fun...lots of frustration vented there. Completely cut down it's little brother pushing out my lime tree....and nearly got arrested for stacking the aftermath outside, the SOB had his 9mm service pistol unclipped and one hand on it, so I decided not to pick a fight, damn idiot...common sense really isn't that common it seems...
The chainsaw worked such a treat that 8 shrubs also met an early demise 4 of them scratched my Hilux so they had to go....
Today the neighbor's frangipani tree that is lurking over the wall lost half its foliage , washing line is now getting sun from 2 directions
Cleaned out the back garage; discovered enough material to start 5 projects but not enough to complete one.
Built a rocket stove..
Got the pool pump going with a temporary McGuyver fix, pipe between the weir and pump is sucking air somewhere, but with everything closed....bushfix
Killed at least 2 rats that I'm aware of.
Replaced a faulty solenoid valve on the irrigation system
Sanded the rubberising on the hilux level so that the canopy rubber seals better
Still to come:
Re-route the conduit to meet up with new gate motor anchor /track
Put a WiFi node in the garage and hook up all the outside lights to my server
Build some extra poles for the patio roof with leftover steel (part of an upcoming winter project)
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Sheesh! You've been busy boet!
Also had to get out one of the three chain saws ..... decided on the electric one ..... quieter and no starting issues after lying dormant for so long. Reason was an old loquat tree that had two large branches break and fall into the neighbour's yard after some strong winds. The tree should come out altogether but I just never had the heart to deprive the large variety of birds, fruit bats and dassies that come to feed.
No great shakes other than that, besides the regular stuff like cutting grass, walking around with a leaf-vac, a little pool cleaning and picking up the dog crap.
Just been feeling too lazy to tackle any of the projects on my list, so the most notable achievement over the past 3 weeks is probably the new depression in the sofa .... blame Netflix and YouTube.
Also had to get out one of the three chain saws ..... decided on the electric one ..... quieter and no starting issues after lying dormant for so long. Reason was an old loquat tree that had two large branches break and fall into the neighbour's yard after some strong winds. The tree should come out altogether but I just never had the heart to deprive the large variety of birds, fruit bats and dassies that come to feed.
No great shakes other than that, besides the regular stuff like cutting grass, walking around with a leaf-vac, a little pool cleaning and picking up the dog crap.
Just been feeling too lazy to tackle any of the projects on my list, so the most notable achievement over the past 3 weeks is probably the new depression in the sofa .... blame Netflix and YouTube.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
My Solar panels has been fitted. Orienatation is Nort West because I attached it to the wall. I made it adjustable so I can change the angle.
I used a 150 watt panel which is way too big to charge my 105Ah battery for the house's lights, but the extra size makes up for the imperfect orientation. Actually Nort West is not so bad by us because we have this sunset which lasts for ever. When I fitted the cable from garage to the roof about 8 months back I only had 2.5mm cable with me and fitted it. It is about 8 meters long and my voltage drop is only 0.5 volts. Having a 22 volt panel, I still get more than enough volts downstairs. O ja and at the moment i use a LiFePo battery. The LiFePo worked great while I was charging it with the normal battery charger on mains as I only had to charge it on average once in 5 days. But now that the panel will keep it fully charged during the day and it only slightly discharge during the evening I am not sure if the constant charging will damage the battery. If I see it doesn't work well I will rather revert back to my old Lead Acid. At least the lead acid will discharge more during the evening's use and the panel can fully charge it during the day.
The stoep has been tiled. The original tiles were too high and leaked between the tiles and wall. So I had to remove the tiles and the original screet. I first sealed between the wall and floor with Sika's Cemflex and then did the tiling
Roof painted - Some of you handymen will find this interresting. My roof is a concrete slab which has those bituman sheets on. Normally they paint those with that terrible aluminium paint which always gives off and which is very expensive and time consuming to paint. The house has these little pillars sticking out on the roof and the top of those pillars are also seald with the sheets. Since the first time I painted the house I sommer paintdr those sealed tops with the same paint as the walls and I painted on top of the shiny paint. At some stage I had to repaint the roof with the shiny stuff and it was damn expensive and a mess.
By the time the roof needed repainting again I realised that the wall paint I've put on the pillar tops are lasting longer than the shiny stuff. So the next time the roof needed repainting I used wall paint. It lasted very long and all of the sudden the roof was always clean so that you can actually walk on the roof and go back into the house without getting scolded. So during the lock down I repainted the whole roof again and this time with pure white which is far cooler the previous cream colour and even cooler than the shiny stuff used to be.
Also revamped and replanted by roof top veggie garden.
I used a 150 watt panel which is way too big to charge my 105Ah battery for the house's lights, but the extra size makes up for the imperfect orientation. Actually Nort West is not so bad by us because we have this sunset which lasts for ever. When I fitted the cable from garage to the roof about 8 months back I only had 2.5mm cable with me and fitted it. It is about 8 meters long and my voltage drop is only 0.5 volts. Having a 22 volt panel, I still get more than enough volts downstairs. O ja and at the moment i use a LiFePo battery. The LiFePo worked great while I was charging it with the normal battery charger on mains as I only had to charge it on average once in 5 days. But now that the panel will keep it fully charged during the day and it only slightly discharge during the evening I am not sure if the constant charging will damage the battery. If I see it doesn't work well I will rather revert back to my old Lead Acid. At least the lead acid will discharge more during the evening's use and the panel can fully charge it during the day.
The stoep has been tiled. The original tiles were too high and leaked between the tiles and wall. So I had to remove the tiles and the original screet. I first sealed between the wall and floor with Sika's Cemflex and then did the tiling
Roof painted - Some of you handymen will find this interresting. My roof is a concrete slab which has those bituman sheets on. Normally they paint those with that terrible aluminium paint which always gives off and which is very expensive and time consuming to paint. The house has these little pillars sticking out on the roof and the top of those pillars are also seald with the sheets. Since the first time I painted the house I sommer paintdr those sealed tops with the same paint as the walls and I painted on top of the shiny paint. At some stage I had to repaint the roof with the shiny stuff and it was damn expensive and a mess.
By the time the roof needed repainting again I realised that the wall paint I've put on the pillar tops are lasting longer than the shiny stuff. So the next time the roof needed repainting I used wall paint. It lasted very long and all of the sudden the roof was always clean so that you can actually walk on the roof and go back into the house without getting scolded. So during the lock down I repainted the whole roof again and this time with pure white which is far cooler the previous cream colour and even cooler than the shiny stuff used to be.
Also revamped and replanted by roof top veggie garden.
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
- Family_Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 12699
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 10:09 am
- Town: Klerksdorp
- Vehicle: Hilux DC SFA, Hilux 2.7 DC, Hilux 2.7 SC, Prado 95 VX
- Real Name: Eric
- Club VHF Licence: HC101
- Location: Klerksdorp, NW
- Contact:
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Pieter, seems you are living permanently in Paradise! If I lived there, I would never leave my house :)
-F_D
-F_D
White Fang: 1999 2.7i DC Raider 4x4
Bull Dog: 1987 4Y-EFI 2.2 DC 4x4
Pra Dog: 1998 Prado VX 3.4
Hound Dog: 2000 2.7i SC 4x4
One Staffie, One Jack Russell, One Ring Neck Screecher, 17 Fish of questionable heritage
- Tim86
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 299
- Joined: Tue Apr 12, 2016 10:33 pm
- Town: Cape Town
- Vehicle: Hilux
- Real Name: Tim
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
I like your tiling Pieter, very neat!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Nice work!
ABE (African Bitumen Emulsions) used to make the old "Malthoid" sheeting that was used on flat roofs as well as the primer for both wood and concrete substrates (BituSeal), in addition they made numerous other bituminous products to maintain the Mallhoid sheeting including that silver paint you mention. Actually there were two silver paints that they made, "Silvakote Bituminous Aluminium" and "Silvershine". Silvershine was not meant for Malthoid maintenance but was often used by unscrupulous contractors because it was cheaper and the result over time was disastrous.
So much for the history lesson but I am 99.9% sure that what you have there is not Malthoid but rather either a product called "TorchOn" or "ABE Unigum" which are far hardier and much more forgiving. Silvakote (not Silvershine) is a good product for "TorchOn" but not if you're going to be walking over it all the time. I understand why the PVA has lasted well by comparison in your case and it certainly is an option for you. Heat reflection is important, hence the silver and also why the white works well too. Something else you might want to consider in future is either ABE Super Lacryl which is now available in white as well or alternatively Sika Raincoat which is also available in white. Not overly expensive either. Better quality Sika products would be "BlackSeal" but only available in black and then Sikalastic 601 BC available in white but these are more pricey products.
ABE (African Bitumen Emulsions) used to make the old "Malthoid" sheeting that was used on flat roofs as well as the primer for both wood and concrete substrates (BituSeal), in addition they made numerous other bituminous products to maintain the Mallhoid sheeting including that silver paint you mention. Actually there were two silver paints that they made, "Silvakote Bituminous Aluminium" and "Silvershine". Silvershine was not meant for Malthoid maintenance but was often used by unscrupulous contractors because it was cheaper and the result over time was disastrous.
So much for the history lesson but I am 99.9% sure that what you have there is not Malthoid but rather either a product called "TorchOn" or "ABE Unigum" which are far hardier and much more forgiving. Silvakote (not Silvershine) is a good product for "TorchOn" but not if you're going to be walking over it all the time. I understand why the PVA has lasted well by comparison in your case and it certainly is an option for you. Heat reflection is important, hence the silver and also why the white works well too. Something else you might want to consider in future is either ABE Super Lacryl which is now available in white as well or alternatively Sika Raincoat which is also available in white. Not overly expensive either. Better quality Sika products would be "BlackSeal" but only available in black and then Sikalastic 601 BC available in white but these are more pricey products.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
-
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 277
- Joined: Sat Jan 24, 2009 2:25 pm
- Town: Harkerville WC
- Vehicle: 1990 Hilux 4Y
- Real Name: Peter
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Hell, you guys have been far too busy. Just reading this post has exhausted me. I'm going back to bed.
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Evening gents
Since I bought this hilux this bull bar has been a eye sore. I have been playing around with a few idea's and this is where I am at now
Since I bought this hilux this bull bar has been a eye sore. I have been playing around with a few idea's and this is where I am at now
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Hi Tristin. As I said on our local watsapp group, that bumper is too bulky and looks like it belongs on a big-rig. Probably weighs a ton as well. Glad to see that you're progressing with the replacement. You got your winch box done, now maybe just finish it off with pipes. Something like this .......
.
.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Agreed definitely for a bigger rig,I'm working towards something similar to this. The roller for the winch cable will be recessed, or else it will stick out to far and will be hit
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
If you recess the fairlead rollers it means that you will have to enlarge the winch box further forward .... then the whole bumper protrudes further forward. Not ideal as it will significantly impact the approach angle. I would still mount the fairlead outside with a narrower winch box .... those fairleads are tough enough to take a huge whack, ask me, I know. (You'll bend the bumper before damaging the fairlead.)
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
I'm not worried about bending the bumper it's going to be solid
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Small update to the bumber...the angle iron underneath took forever , as you have to line up the holes and still be able to take the bumber out in one piece
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Tristin, why are you using such heavy gauge material? That looks like 5 or 6 mm plate .... way too heavy .... 2.1mm would be more than sufficient. That would be OK for the winch base plate .... you must minimise any extra weight possible. Remember that any weight addition beyond the axle has a downward leverage factor that, besides the weight itself, is negatively affected the further forward it is. This is right in front and is compounded by the weight of the winch itself. I think you're creating a problem for yourself.
Not too late to turn around now.
Not too late to turn around now.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Hi Andy yes I do agree with what you said,I mite have gone a little over board.That is the main structure and everything else will be skinned in 2mm or 3mm plate
- Stef
- Monster Truck
- Posts: 3125
- Joined: Mon Jan 25, 2010 12:54 pm
- Town: Pretoria
- Vehicle: '98 LTD
- Real Name: Stefan
- Club VHF Licence: X107
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
If memory serves the main mounts and winch box on the LTD bumper is 8 mm plate...
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Small update after yesterday afternoon
- Harm JR.
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Thu Jan 05, 2012 10:47 pm
- Town: Durban
- Vehicle: 1989 Toyota Hilux
- Real Name: Abdullah
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
I thought it was just me noticing how awfully quiet the forum has gotten. Good to see everyone awake again, even tho I am finding this thread a bit late.
Being an apprenticing knifemaker with my father and our workshop being built into the house, we've got work as usual thankfully but we are hindered by the fact that international shipments are closed completely. (Hopefully that should ease up now)
That aside, I have been working on some side projects. Started off neatening up the outside of the house and throwing away all the unnecessary garbage (which is currently in a pile hidden away waiting to go to the dump) followed by random stuff around the house and finally, work on the Thunderbolt (my 1uz powered 89 D/C)
I have mentioned on another thread that I have been having issues with the diff so that's going to be my next big fix second to building a bracket for my fairlead where the bumper was cut away to fit the winch (done by previous owner.) I'll post pics of that hopefully this weekend when I get down to it. I'm not too fond of the overall design of the bumper so I'm planning on either chopping most of it away and rebuilding it or just starting from scratch. For now its fine so I'm not too concerned with that
I have built a bracket to mount my spotlights to the roof rack which I know might not be completely legal but i do have the covers for them so I'm hoping I won't have any issues. Then again it doesn't see much normal road so that should be okay. They haven't been wired up yet as I'm waiting my switch panel and wiring harnesses to be delivered. Also meaning to mount the other two rear facing and two mini light bars on either side. Don't have the ones for the side yet but everything else I had acquired pretty easily so they'll do for now. They are pretty ancient but I've bought some newer bulbs which I hope will make things better. The reflectors are pretty mint as well. Haven't taken any pics of that. Can you tell I'm obsessed with lighting?
Original plan was to weld the bracket to the rack but then I realized it was aluminium so that plan went out the window and now it's bolted on. The bracket is overkill but we love overbuilding and that's the steel I had. Started by drilling out the holes, cut out the shape on the bandsaw and ground everything neat on one of our belt grinders. Sprayed hammerite as a base coat waiting to get some black paint but I couldn't wait to see how it turned out.
The next plan for the roof rack is to mount it to the gutters above the body. Right now it's bolted to the canopy.
Apart from the mods, I've got a lot of work to do because from what I can tell, the entire build wasn't done very well so there's a lot of things I need to address. Don't want to bore anyone just yet (but I'm sure I have already)
I must apologise for the long stories but in my defence, I joined this forum as a very young kid admiring the builds of everyone here, asking stupid questions and longing to have a magically built SFA of my own which mostly stemmed from my dads love for them. I've always loved his 97 22r but it never got modded in any way and only now do I actually appreciate that. I'm finally living my dream and it feels good to be able to share that with a community with the same interests as myself.
Thanks for the read
Sent from my SM-G965F using Tapatalk
Being an apprenticing knifemaker with my father and our workshop being built into the house, we've got work as usual thankfully but we are hindered by the fact that international shipments are closed completely. (Hopefully that should ease up now)
That aside, I have been working on some side projects. Started off neatening up the outside of the house and throwing away all the unnecessary garbage (which is currently in a pile hidden away waiting to go to the dump) followed by random stuff around the house and finally, work on the Thunderbolt (my 1uz powered 89 D/C)
I have mentioned on another thread that I have been having issues with the diff so that's going to be my next big fix second to building a bracket for my fairlead where the bumper was cut away to fit the winch (done by previous owner.) I'll post pics of that hopefully this weekend when I get down to it. I'm not too fond of the overall design of the bumper so I'm planning on either chopping most of it away and rebuilding it or just starting from scratch. For now its fine so I'm not too concerned with that
I have built a bracket to mount my spotlights to the roof rack which I know might not be completely legal but i do have the covers for them so I'm hoping I won't have any issues. Then again it doesn't see much normal road so that should be okay. They haven't been wired up yet as I'm waiting my switch panel and wiring harnesses to be delivered. Also meaning to mount the other two rear facing and two mini light bars on either side. Don't have the ones for the side yet but everything else I had acquired pretty easily so they'll do for now. They are pretty ancient but I've bought some newer bulbs which I hope will make things better. The reflectors are pretty mint as well. Haven't taken any pics of that. Can you tell I'm obsessed with lighting?
Original plan was to weld the bracket to the rack but then I realized it was aluminium so that plan went out the window and now it's bolted on. The bracket is overkill but we love overbuilding and that's the steel I had. Started by drilling out the holes, cut out the shape on the bandsaw and ground everything neat on one of our belt grinders. Sprayed hammerite as a base coat waiting to get some black paint but I couldn't wait to see how it turned out.
The next plan for the roof rack is to mount it to the gutters above the body. Right now it's bolted to the canopy.
Apart from the mods, I've got a lot of work to do because from what I can tell, the entire build wasn't done very well so there's a lot of things I need to address. Don't want to bore anyone just yet (but I'm sure I have already)
I must apologise for the long stories but in my defence, I joined this forum as a very young kid admiring the builds of everyone here, asking stupid questions and longing to have a magically built SFA of my own which mostly stemmed from my dads love for them. I've always loved his 97 22r but it never got modded in any way and only now do I actually appreciate that. I'm finally living my dream and it feels good to be able to share that with a community with the same interests as myself.
Thanks for the read
Sent from my SM-G965F using Tapatalk
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Update on the bull bar
After many hours later, I finally had to accept that the fiberglass cab is not built down to the last millimeter.
After many hours later, I finally had to accept that the fiberglass cab is not built down to the last millimeter.
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Looking good.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
-
- Newbie
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Wed Apr 22, 2020 8:45 pm
- Town: Port louis
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux vigo 2010
- Real Name: Patrick
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
viewtopic.php?f=14&t=44548
Sorry to intrude i asked a question about central lock . Can anyone help please. Thank you
Sorry to intrude i asked a question about central lock . Can anyone help please. Thank you
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Wasn't going to post this and it's a bit late now but seeing as the forum is so quiet .......
Was buggering about in my workshop over lock-down with some menial stuff and then decided replace my old buggered weather vane with a new one and a completely different concept.
Rummaged through my off-cuts and scrap iron. Pulled out these rusty bits and cleaned them off
. The round bar is 8mm, the pieces of round tubing are 13mm i/d and 16mm o/d the square tubing is 20mm.
I split the sq tube from corner to corner to give me a thin walled, light weight angle iron and cut the now 4 pieces to equal lengths (longest that I could get out of those pieces) and treated with rust converter.
. I cut 4 pieces of the 8mm round bar, each exactly 90mm long and marked back 12mm on one end of each. These were welded to the inside of the angle iron with the internal overlap up to the 12mm mark. This would be my four "vanes" which I then trimmed ever so slightly to get back to exactly equal weights on each of them.
. From there I cut an 80mm length of the 16mm tubing and welded a 6mm thick end cap over one end. That gave me a sleeve of 13mm i/d with one end closed. I ran a 13mm drill bit down the inside on a drill press, just enough to create a small depression on the inside of that end cap. A drill press is not a lathe or milling machine, but the depression should be very close to centre. I then followed that with a 6mm drill bit to clean up the depression and give it a sharper "V" point.
I welded the four "vanes" perpendicular to the 80mm sleeve at 90° apart and 70mm off the open end.
Open end Capped end This 'rotor' is very close to perfect balance (I used a long nail with cleaned sharp point to check it's balance point).
Was buggering about in my workshop over lock-down with some menial stuff and then decided replace my old buggered weather vane with a new one and a completely different concept.
Rummaged through my off-cuts and scrap iron. Pulled out these rusty bits and cleaned them off
. The round bar is 8mm, the pieces of round tubing are 13mm i/d and 16mm o/d the square tubing is 20mm.
I split the sq tube from corner to corner to give me a thin walled, light weight angle iron and cut the now 4 pieces to equal lengths (longest that I could get out of those pieces) and treated with rust converter.
. I cut 4 pieces of the 8mm round bar, each exactly 90mm long and marked back 12mm on one end of each. These were welded to the inside of the angle iron with the internal overlap up to the 12mm mark. This would be my four "vanes" which I then trimmed ever so slightly to get back to exactly equal weights on each of them.
. From there I cut an 80mm length of the 16mm tubing and welded a 6mm thick end cap over one end. That gave me a sleeve of 13mm i/d with one end closed. I ran a 13mm drill bit down the inside on a drill press, just enough to create a small depression on the inside of that end cap. A drill press is not a lathe or milling machine, but the depression should be very close to centre. I then followed that with a 6mm drill bit to clean up the depression and give it a sharper "V" point.
I welded the four "vanes" perpendicular to the 80mm sleeve at 90° apart and 70mm off the open end.
Open end Capped end This 'rotor' is very close to perfect balance (I used a long nail with cleaned sharp point to check it's balance point).
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
I then took a piece of 12mm round bar and cut a 45° tapered point on one end. Again, I have no lathe, so I used the drill press with a make-shift end "guide" to get the taper as true as I could.
The pic shows it already greased as I had tested it for functionality.
. Here is where I checked the rotor on the pointed shaft .... It turned so easily that just by blowing lightly on it would get it to turn.
.
The pic shows it already greased as I had tested it for functionality.
. Here is where I checked the rotor on the pointed shaft .... It turned so easily that just by blowing lightly on it would get it to turn.
.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
weather vane?
So if it turns it means the wind is blowing?
If water drips from it, it means it is raining?
So if it turns it means the wind is blowing?
If water drips from it, it means it is raining?
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
With that part complete, I took an off-cut of 114 x 38 meranti rafter wood (a scrap from when I built my porch awning about 18 yrs ago .... can you believe it! ). Cut it to the shape I wanted ...... (my band-saw blade had snapped prior to lock-down, so I used a jigsaw).
. I used meranti because it would last much better than pine out in the elements and I was looking for another adequately sized piece of meranti scrap wood from which to fashion the tail arm when I came across this old piece of an old broom handle ... it was sapele, also a hard wood, so I thought it would do.
. It wasn't perfectly round but more or less 23mm diameter. Drilled a 24mm at a slight angle and 100mm deep into the one end of the meranti piece with a spade bit ....
. .... and rather than glue it, I set the broom stick into the hole with Sikaflex. It ain't coming apart ever.
.
. I used meranti because it would last much better than pine out in the elements and I was looking for another adequately sized piece of meranti scrap wood from which to fashion the tail arm when I came across this old piece of an old broom handle ... it was sapele, also a hard wood, so I thought it would do.
. It wasn't perfectly round but more or less 23mm diameter. Drilled a 24mm at a slight angle and 100mm deep into the one end of the meranti piece with a spade bit ....
. .... and rather than glue it, I set the broom stick into the hole with Sikaflex. It ain't coming apart ever.
.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Update on the Bullbar
Got all the lights in place and drilled holes for the winch
Got all the lights in place and drilled holes for the winch
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
pietpetoors wrote: ↑Thu Jun 11, 2020 9:06 pm weather vane?
So if it turns it means the wind is blowing?
If water drips from it, it means it is raining?
Pretty much.
With the angle iron sections all pointed in the same rotational direction it behaves like the rotor of an anemometer in the breeze / wind with the air being separated over the pointed front edges (less drag) and trapped in the "V" shape of the rear edges (more drag). It works pretty well.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Looking good so far Tristin!
Proud of you!
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Thanks Andy
I took your advice about the weight of the bull bar previously mentioned.I used 2mm steel for the inserts and fog light surrounds.The bullbars dry weight meaning (no lights and no winch) stand at 42kgs,where the previous bullbar was 38.2kgs.
If all goes to plan, I am fitting the bull bar completed this weekend.
I took your advice about the weight of the bull bar previously mentioned.I used 2mm steel for the inserts and fog light surrounds.The bullbars dry weight meaning (no lights and no winch) stand at 42kgs,where the previous bullbar was 38.2kgs.
If all goes to plan, I am fitting the bull bar completed this weekend.
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Nice going Tristin! But you see how quickly the weight builds up!
Whenever I cut a 45° end off a piece of flat steel I throw the off cut into a tub and use those as gussets when I need one. In this case I welded a small one to the end of a piece of 8mm round bar and the shank of an 8mm coach bolt (some folk call then carriage bolts) to the the other end.
. Screwed it into the other end of the meranti block (also with Sikaflex to seal and set it).
. I never took any pics of the next steps but I cut a vane fin from some old bits of sheet metal and set it into a groove which I cut into the end of the broomstick tail arm. Again I used Sikaflex to set it in place.
I used some more 8mm bar to make a set of skegs. Before positioning and fitting the skegs I checked the weight distribution so that the COG of the overall unit would still be in the wide portion of the meranti body.
. There is a piece of that 16mm tube running through the main body at the exact COG. Again, perfectly balanced.
I set up a temporary post and slipped the two parts onto the sharpened 12mm bar ....
. The weather vane turns nice and freely / smoothly, pointing into the wind with even a very light breeze. I was chuffed that it worked so well.
Whenever I cut a 45° end off a piece of flat steel I throw the off cut into a tub and use those as gussets when I need one. In this case I welded a small one to the end of a piece of 8mm round bar and the shank of an 8mm coach bolt (some folk call then carriage bolts) to the the other end.
. Screwed it into the other end of the meranti block (also with Sikaflex to seal and set it).
. I never took any pics of the next steps but I cut a vane fin from some old bits of sheet metal and set it into a groove which I cut into the end of the broomstick tail arm. Again I used Sikaflex to set it in place.
I used some more 8mm bar to make a set of skegs. Before positioning and fitting the skegs I checked the weight distribution so that the COG of the overall unit would still be in the wide portion of the meranti body.
. There is a piece of that 16mm tube running through the main body at the exact COG. Again, perfectly balanced.
I set up a temporary post and slipped the two parts onto the sharpened 12mm bar ....
. The weather vane turns nice and freely / smoothly, pointing into the wind with even a very light breeze. I was chuffed that it worked so well.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Next was painting .....
. Made a bracket for the post and after all the painting / sealing was done, I mounted it.
. Klaar gelag ... all done.
. Made a bracket for the post and after all the painting / sealing was done, I mounted it.
. Klaar gelag ... all done.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Maybe not .... that gable end looks like it could also use a touch of paint on the fascia and a lick of 'varnish' on the wood.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- pietpetoors
- Moderator
- Posts: 10650
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 9:12 pm
- Town: Langebaan
- Vehicle: 2.7 Hilux 4x4 DC
- Real Name: Pieter
- Club VHF Licence: X27
- Contact:
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
That is very cool Andy.
Tristan I like your bumper. Going to look awesome when done.
Tristan I like your bumper. Going to look awesome when done.
Only Dead Fish Go With The Flow!
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
1999 Hilux 2.7i 4x4 Raider DC with 3.4 Prado V6. Rear diff-lock, Bull Bar and rock sliders, 31" Cooper ST Maxx, Snorkel, Alu-Canopy, VHF Motorolla radio, West Coast Rust, Mikem Suspension, Ball Joint Spacers in front and Mikem extended shackles at the rear, 25watt LED Spots
- Gert Greeff
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Fri Sep 02, 2011 5:36 pm
- Town: Melkbosstrand
- Vehicle: Toyota Hilux, 3L D4D, 4x4
- Real Name: Gert
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Over and above stripping my vehicle completely inside for a propper deep clean, I have decided it is nou time to build a new shower/toilet cubical for the camping trips. This is now my 3rd design and I trust it will be the last.
Luckily I could still source the gazebo sides that I have usesed for the project. It fits onto my roofrack and it slides out and away from the vehicle. Size, 1.2m x 1.2m, complete with roof cover for the rainy days or fog along the west coast. What makes this material awesome is the fact that I have used a standard household machine for the stitching. The material is light, dries quicly and is not see through with a light inside in the evening, [IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... 02cdf7.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... f911da.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... e951e9.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... a3f6ba.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... 7918a5.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... d6e6f8.jpg[/IMG]
Sent from my VOG-L09 using Tapatalk
Luckily I could still source the gazebo sides that I have usesed for the project. It fits onto my roofrack and it slides out and away from the vehicle. Size, 1.2m x 1.2m, complete with roof cover for the rainy days or fog along the west coast. What makes this material awesome is the fact that I have used a standard household machine for the stitching. The material is light, dries quicly and is not see through with a light inside in the evening, [IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... 02cdf7.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... f911da.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... e951e9.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... a3f6ba.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... 7918a5.jpg[/IMG][IMG]//uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202006 ... d6e6f8.jpg[/IMG]
Sent from my VOG-L09 using Tapatalk
- smokintyres
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 329
- Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2010 10:18 am
- Town: Windhoek
- Vehicle: Hilux 4.0 V6, relatively standard; for now...
- Real Name: Gernot
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
That is a completely different outcome to what I had expected and oh so awesome! Must resist the urge to show the wive, else it just gets added to my honey do list
- smokintyres
- LR 4WD Rear Locker
- Posts: 329
- Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2010 10:18 am
- Town: Windhoek
- Vehicle: Hilux 4.0 V6, relatively standard; for now...
- Real Name: Gernot
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Speaking of the "honey-do" list; this one had been on said list for two years.
Turned out ok, could have made it deeper, DVD player, or rather the cables barely fit... Shutterply and 32 and 25mm steel square tubing came to less than R500. Rollers, guides and tracks for the sliding doors were more than twice that Oh, and the TV is on a swing-out bracket that would normally be wall mounted. But the wife likes to move furniture around frequently, soooo the TV is fixed to the cupboard instead.- Gert Greeff
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Fri Sep 02, 2011 5:36 pm
- Town: Melkbosstrand
- Vehicle: Toyota Hilux, 3L D4D, 4x4
- Real Name: Gert
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Your cabinet looks good...smokintyres wrote:Speaking of the "honey-do" list; this one had been on said list for two years.Turned out ok, could have made it deeper, DVD player, or rather the cables barely fit... Shutterply and 32 and 25mm steel square tubing came to less than R500. Rollers, guides and tracks for the sliding doors were more than twice that Oh, and the TV is on a swing-out bracket that would normally be wall mounted. But the wife likes to move furniture around frequently, soooo the TV is fixed to the cupboard instead.
Sent from my VOG-L09 using Tapatalk
- Tristin
- High Range 4WD
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Apr 02, 2017 8:06 am
- Town: East london
- Vehicle: Toyota hilux
- Real Name: Tristin
- Club VHF Licence: HC359
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Update on the bull
Slowly coming together need to sort out the paint work where the original parks and indicators should sit.
Slowly coming together need to sort out the paint work where the original parks and indicators should sit.
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Turned out good.smokintyres wrote: ↑Fri Jun 12, 2020 3:31 pm Speaking of the "honey-do" list; this one had been on said list for two years. .......... But the wife likes to move furniture around frequently, soooo the TV is fixed to the cupboard instead.
Such a pity that one cannot get decent solid timber board any more unless you do special orders and are prepared to pay through the nose. Glue-lam was trash in my day, but then became more acceptable as the industry moved to chip board / composition board. Personally I preferred using the untreated shutter ply like you did .... no ugly mismatched grain / timber colour and the unsightly lightning joints. I suppose the glue-lam is ok for internal bases and shelves.
Fibre board is not too bad an option either but can give a very "busy" appearance. I recall a job many years ago where I panelled out a restaurant / bar from floor to ceiling with the stuff after remodelling all the internal walls (it had been a bakery before). Even the face panels on the bar counter and cabinet door panels were made using the stuff. I didn't like the busy result but the customer wanted it and was happy with it.
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
- Mud Dog
- Moderator
- Posts: 29858
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:18 am
- Town: East London
- Vehicle: '90 SFA Hilux DC 4X4, Full OME, 110mm lift. Brospeed branch, 50mm ss freeflow exhaust. 30 x 9.5 Discoverer S/T's on Viper mags. L/R tank. (AWOL) '98 LTD 2.4 SFA, dual battery system. Dobinson suspension, LR tanks, 31" BF mud's.
- Real Name: Andy
- Club VHF Licence: HC103
Re: What are you doing during Lockdown? Show your projects.
Nice, Tristin! How are you going to access the change lever on the winch?
When your road comes to an end ...... you need a HILUX!.
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!
Life is like a jar of Jalapeño peppers ... what you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
Don't take life too seriously ..... no-one gets out alive.
It's not about waiting for storms to pass. It's about learning to dance in the rain.
And be yourself ..... everyone else is taken!