Hi,
I think I'd prefer to have a Skoda main dealer over a non Skoda dealer to look after our Yeti Roy although I do understand what you mean; a top guy can make a good job using poor tools but a poor guy using top quality tools could so easily make a mess of it.
Years ago during my vintage radio restoring days I worked on PYE MM; it's tuning gang spindle had broken it being made of aluminium; at the time I had my big Colchester lathe so made a new spindle out of brass; no big deal for me it taking a morning but it had to be very accurate and involved flats and a bit of drilling and tapping; turning to diameter was easy but the flats needed to be at angles; I used a woodworkers sliding bevel having adjusted it to the original and with an end mill chucked it was very easy to use the cross slide to machine the flats; drilling and tapping no problem; it fitted perfectly.
By contrast on the forum was a member who liked to pick me up before I fell and he did this a number of times much to my annoyance; strangely he too ended up having to make one of these spindles; his friend was to restore the wooden cabinet he was to restore the chassis; like me he also had a Colchester lathe but he also had a vertical slide and dividing head; further he could use Auto CAD which I couldn't; on the forum he posted a diagram of the spindle but then showed his true colours; I wonder if he ever did make the spindle because he played around forever with it using all his fancy gear.
During the time he was playing around attempting to make the spindle I decided to test him because by now he was full of himself; my friend calls such people "Tall poppies" I've forgotten the actual job I was doing but in one post I purposely made two mistakes; not easily spotted unless used to things like lathe work; I remember one of the mistakes as a micrometer reading stating "three thou" as 0.0003" sure enough he was straight onto both gleefully pointing them out on the forum; I left the forum at this point having had enough. He still hadn't completed the spindle.
I'm not the sharpest tool in the kit and never will be but I was trained by top class coal mining mechanical engineers to make just about anything if the part wasn't in the stores or unavailable. One very complicated restoration I tackled was a very old seized solid AVO Wave Winder as used for winding special tuning coils. Not only was it rusted scrap but it was missing a few parts including a full set of change wheels; I think the full set was 45 and I didn't have a single change wheel to work from; as I say this was a very complicated restoration;
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I dreamt up an entirely new way of indexing for making these change wheels on my very rough Myford lathe; I'd sold the Colchester it proving too big for the small amount of space in my workshop. Here's a picture of the actual method I used; unlike the guy on the forum having all the kit I didn't even have a vertical slide so I made a vertical slide out of lumps of metal I had to hand; here I'm cutting two identical cast iron gears (Meeanite) with the saddle locked it worked perfectly. Teeth aren't cut it's the waste between the teeth which is cut.
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I needed a full set of change wheels so made a full set using basic methods; Having made them then they needed looking after.
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With the new box made from Meranti hardwood I stained it then french polished it but still not finished; I decided to make a brass nameplate by cutting out each individual letter from brass sheet then gluing them in place; this restoration like many others took a great deal of time but were worth it and very well received on forums; I was honoured with top restoration award in 2009 by The British Vintage Wireless Society.
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I used to like making things from scratch here's one of two power supplies I designed and made to power vintage wireless battery sets the batteries long gone; it has 2 x high tension; 2 x low tension positive and 2 x low tension negative outputs; I even designed and wound the transformers.
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More parts I made for the Wave Winder. The top spindle is actually a live center.
As I say I'm not at all smart but in my day apprentices were taught to make things from scratch and now I like to encourage others to have a go. I wonder these days if apprentices are taught to be engineers or fitters there's a world of difference between the two?
Just passing a bit of time away because I've had a session strimming the middle meadow this morning and now having a rest; it's about time I started to ease off a bit after all I've been retired 22 years but still working as hard as ever; hope I'm not boring anyone.
Now what was this thread about? Oh yes rustproofing our Yeti; there's so much activity near the Yeti with builders directly across the street involving a number of visiting large vans and also visitors visiting next door where we believe sadly there's been a bereavement; when it quietens down then I'll resume the rustproofing.
Nice one RogerS very funny. Not so much soft in my case but I can't apply rustproofing onto wet surfaces; we too get plenty of rain coming down like pencils often here on the exposed valley side we also enjoy horizontal rain.
Kind regards, Colin.