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#1
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Hi Tony
Have you check with your friendly motorcycle shop for a throttle or brake cable boot? Mine came from the brake cable of a 1978 Yamaha 125 Trail bike if I remember correctly. Boot is about 2" long but can be cut down. As for the used the little tiny hair pin style carburetor linkage clips. Cheers Phil
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Phil Waterman `41 C60L Pattern 12 `42 C60S Radio Pattern 13 `45 HUP http://canadianmilitarypattern.com/ New e-mail Philip@canadianmilitarypattern.com |
#2
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Phil, That's a grand idea!
I will look into that tomorrow. Thanks,
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Ford CMP, 115" WB,1942 (Under Restoration...still) Medium sized, half fake, artillery piece project. (The 1/4 Pounder) |
#3
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Tony, check your PM's
HH
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Howard Holgate F15 #12 F15A #13 (stretched) F60S #13 C15A #13 Wireless (incomplete) |
#4
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Just completed a 'birthday' order for MacsAuto parts, including the battery hold down thingy. Mostly brake stuff. Those bits will be going onto the chassis ASAP, that is once I get it back and paint it.
I love the current exchange rate! ![]() It is looking quite possible that I may do the blasting myself, in the engineering co. booth. I can do that on a Saturday when they don't normally use the blasting booth. Won't be this weekend. It's the Gympie swap meet. That must come first!!!!
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Ford CMP, 115" WB,1942 (Under Restoration...still) Medium sized, half fake, artillery piece project. (The 1/4 Pounder) Last edited by Private_collector; 04-09-12 at 22:29. |
#5
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Today I went to 2 motorcycle shops and 1 bicycle shop, in search for suitable dust boot for front of vac booster. The bicycle shop were helpful but had nothing suitable, despite looking through a number of storage locations for me. Strike #1
One of the motorcycle shops was staffed by some unkempt, tattooed, greasy haired, gap toothed old crone who was not interested in being any help at all once she ascertained I wasn't there to buy one of their crappy imported quadbikes (Chinese built, of course). Strike #2 The other motorcycle shop had a guy that was too lazy to check what was available and insisted the boots would only come as a set with the applicable cable, no matter which brand of manufacture. Not at all helpful, and couldn't seem to grasp the concept that it was for something other than a cycle. He strangely had a face quite red in color. Not sure if he had tremendously high blood pressure, embarrased about his apathy, or got horribly sunburnt somehow. Whatever the cause, it was redder than a smacked arse! Anyhoo, no joy there with the part request. Strike #3 Then it occured to me, just wait until the Gympie swap meet, this Saturday!! If I don't get something suitable there, i'll be very surprised. Must wear a hat! Learnt my lesson from the motorbike shop guy ![]()
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Ford CMP, 115" WB,1942 (Under Restoration...still) Medium sized, half fake, artillery piece project. (The 1/4 Pounder) |
#6
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Hi Tony,
Liked your tale of chasing rubber boots at motorcycle shops. I sometimes thought I was the only one who had to deal with indifferent, lazy, or aggressive counter people. I think my benchmark of poor service was trying to hire a chain saw a few years ago. The counter man was rather belligerent to anyone except his tradie mates it seemed. He asked me "what was I going to use the chain saw for?" "To cut down a few trees" was my obvious reply. He then went into a tirade about using it for that purpose because there are a lot of ants in this area that carry sand up into the hollowed trunks and it dulls the chain. I noticed a sign above him that said "All chain saws will incur a $20 sharpening fee when returned" and said "so I pay the $20 when I bring it back, what's the problem? He got quite nasty and outright refused to hire me one. Needless to say I never went there again and told everyone I knew about their crappy attitude towards customers. A few years later the business folded. I wonder why? Brgds,
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F15-A 1942 Battery Staff Jacques Reed |
#7
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Tony, I must be lucky, as I work for a company where the boss recons " if man made it, man can fix it. ". The boss will spend time making bits or repairing a part that saves the customer having to replace the whole unit, EG turn up a piston for a hydraulic ram, rather than spend $3,000 on a complete ram. recut a keyway, or make an unobtainable bush. Don is an old school Toolmaker.
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macca C15 C15A |
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