Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
#12
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
#13
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to remove
> any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen bolts/nuts
> once he gets the parts off.
> Many years ago I did this with a buddies rust bucket '72 CJ-5 parts donor.
> In order to make it easier to take to the dump, after we were done we old
> rotted tub up into 1' square pieces & loaded them into the bed of a little
> Nissan pickup. The old rotten frame literally fell apart once the body came
> off, but an hour or so with a torch and it, too, became confetti for the
> smelter. This was actually great sport (and a lot of fun noise making)
> cutting the thing up with two Sawzalls and a torch!
>
> We then had a pile of tagged parts ready to be installed on a clean frame
> and a fiberglass tub. (That was the point when the fun ended and the cursing
> began in earnest.) My motto: "Ye Shall Own No Jeep CJ That Has Crossed Any
> State Line North of the Red River, or Come Within 100 miles of any Sea
> Coast."|
>
>
LOL!
I just did something like that with my donor Toyota pickup for the
driveline in the Frankenwillys. I cut damn near the whole truck up in
pieces small enough that the whole body including the cab and bed went
out in the trash. I also bought a couple pair of heavy leather work
gloves for the garbagemen and put them on the pile of metal with a note
that the gloves were for their protection and they should keep them.
They took every piece.
It was a lot of fun going at a rustbucket using a grinder, Sawzall and
an air hammer with a cutting bit. It was LOTS of fun!
=8D
Woo-Hoo!!!
Cheers,
- Jeff G
http://jeffgross.com/******
#14
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
> Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
good for cutting through bolts.
----------------------------------------------------
Del Rawlins- del@_kills_spammers_rawlinsbrothers.org
Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email.
Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website:
http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
On Fri, 2 Apr 2004, Del Rawlins wrote:
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!
#19
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
On Fri, 2 Apr 2004, Del Rawlins wrote:
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!
#20
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: CJ tub swap - bad omen
On Fri, 2 Apr 2004, Del Rawlins wrote:
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!
> In <c4hnls0lri@enews4.newsguy.com> Jerry McG wrote:
> > Just an idea, since he's tossing the old tub, he may just want to
> > remove any rust-frozen stuff with a Sawzall, then grind off the frozen
> > bolts/nuts once he gets the parts off.
>
> If the wholesale slaughter of sheetmetal is desired, the tool for the
> job is a 4.5" electric angle grinder fitted with a fiberglass reinforced
> cutoff wheel. It will slice through sheetmetal like butter, and is also
> good for cutting through bolts.
My favorite tool!