Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
#21
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> Hi Will,
> Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> before I finally found it open.
Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
got geared up too.
--
DougW
> Hi Will,
> Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> before I finally found it open.
Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
got geared up too.
--
DougW
#22
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> Hi Will,
> Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> before I finally found it open.
Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
got geared up too.
--
DougW
> Hi Will,
> Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> before I finally found it open.
Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
got geared up too.
--
DougW
#23
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
When I think of some of the stuff I pulled out of Dad's barn after he
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
#24
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
When I think of some of the stuff I pulled out of Dad's barn after he
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
#25
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
When I think of some of the stuff I pulled out of Dad's barn after he
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
passed away, I shuuder. Of course, the merest whiff of malathion is
enough to send me running after flying cover for the Ranch Hand
missions in 'Nam.
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 23:43:11 UTC "DougW"
<post.replies@invalid.address> wrote:
> L.W. ("ßill") ------ III did pass the time by typing:
> > Hi Will,
> > Maybe some of that is all the old people on oxygen.
> > I tired throw away a small Television, it fit within the garbage
> > container that is mechanically lifted to the truck, the driver got out,
> > fished it out, and left it on the curb with a note to take it to their
> > hazardous materials depot, and that's only open for a couple of hours
> > two or three days a week. It sat in the back of my Bronco for ten days
> > before I finally found it open.
>
> Gas here is expensive. Even the teeny bottles I use in my OxyMapp rig.
> Expensive enought to make me start looking at the Miller MIG welder
>
> I gave my old TV away to a charity that rebuilds things (if they can).
> The old PC montior just went with the trash. Taped the glass well
> and set it out for pickup. The trash folk here will take anything
> but prefer not to have suprises in the bin.
>
> Chemicals and oil (even filters) have to go to the hazmat drop-off
> but they are open till 6pm and some times on Saturday.
>
> They had fun when I brought down an old, rusty, but still charged
> 12oz fogger can of Baygone and some other slightly lethal
> kritterkiller chemicals. :) I was wearing a chemical suit and
> they thought I was kidding till the unloading started. Then they
> got geared up too.
>
--
Will Honea
#26
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
#27
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
#28
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
pain in the butt than they are worth.
After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
muffler shop is cheap!
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
"Mel P." wrote:
>
> Any hints? Is it as straightforward as it seems?
>
> --
> Mel
>
> 96 Cherokee
#29
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
Except it's not a hundred anymore. A friend's '63 Merc with Flow
Masters was over twenty five hundred, excluding headers.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
>
> I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
> pain in the butt than they are worth.
>
> After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
> ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
> more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
> without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
> muffler shop is cheap!
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Masters was over twenty five hundred, excluding headers.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
>
> I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
> pain in the butt than they are worth.
>
> After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
> ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
> more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
> without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
> muffler shop is cheap!
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#30
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Replacing Cat converter, muffler & tailpipe
Except it's not a hundred anymore. A friend's '63 Merc with Flow
Masters was over twenty five hundred, excluding headers.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
>
> I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
> pain in the butt than they are worth.
>
> After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
> ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
> more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
> without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
> muffler shop is cheap!
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Masters was over twenty five hundred, excluding headers.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> Have you ever done an exhaust system before?
>
> I gave up on doing them because they normally end up being 'WAY' more
> pain in the butt than they are worth.
>
> After 6 or 8 hours, or by the second day and with dead saw blades,
> ripped knuckles, stripped bolt/nut heads, cursing, jacking then cursing
> more when you figure no way that @#$%^ tailpipe is going over that axle
> without it being on a hoist, that $100.00 labor they wanted at the
> muffler shop is cheap!
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's