Saturday, October 13, 2012
Homemade Forks For Tractor
I had previously made forks to use on my tractor for the main purpose of moving large sheets of steel. I recently modified them so that they could be used for a standard pallet giving me a fork lift functin for my tractor. I had to add some length to them and I changed the attachment part so that they could be placed at different widths for different items.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Homemade Charcoal or Wood Grill from Hot Water Tank
This week I made a grill from an old hot water tank (not galvanized). I also used parts from lawnmowers and training wheel frames. We had a grate from an old stove and I had some scrap steel pieces lying around. I still plan to paint it but we used it for cooking dinner last night over wood. It worked great!
Monday, August 13, 2012
Seasoning and Cooking with Old Cast Iron Pans
Rusty Old Cast Iron Skillets |
Sandblasting the old cast iron skillets |
All cleaned up and seasoned |
Three of the Skillets in our kitchen |
Getting the fire ready for cooking |
Bacon, Egg and Toast Breakfast |
Bacon Cheeseburger Dinner |
Labels:
cast iron pans,
cast iron skillets,
cooking on open fire,
cooking with cast iron,
sandblasting,
seasoning cast iron
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Homemade Wheel Hoe
I made this wheel hoe from bicycle handle bars, bicycle forks, a lawn mower tire, a piece of pipe and an old farm tool. It works great for keeping the garden weeded between the rows and is easier to use than a standard garden hoe.
Labels:
bicycle parts,
garden tool,
hoe,
Homemade wheel hoe,
lawnmower parts,
weeding
Sunday, January 29, 2012
1940s Ford Pickup Truck Rat Rod
The two mid-1940s Ford pickup trucks in the woods where they had been
for the past 15 years after being salvaged from a farm by the previous owner.
This is the truck body I used for this project. The other body is for my son for a future project.
This became the new frame.
This is the cab after sandblasting and priming it.
This is the hood after sandblasting, priming and painting it.
This was just a protective paint, not the intended final color.
This is the front end.
The rat rod with mock-up for the truck bed and a motor.
Mock-up of how I intended the final project to look.
I had the chance to get these two old trucks and intended to have one rat rod project for myself and one for me to do with my son. I got this one to the final point you see here, and I decided to sell it. I had fun working on it, but I had other things I needed to do instead of this. I will work on the other truck with my son once we can get started on it.
Labels:
1940s Ford Pickup,
ford pickup truck,
project truck,
rat rod
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